Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 23 – Several Russian
nationalist portals have segments with the title “the new is the well-forgotten
old.” That is certainly proving to be true with some of the ideological tropes
that Russian commentators are trying out now.
Much of what they say appears to be little more than an updated version
of an earlier Russian propaganda theme.
Two decades ago, Moscow
propagandists in 1994-1995 the notion that Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania had
organized a group of “Baltic amazons” to fight on the side of the Chechens
against the Russian Federation. Now, the
descendants of these propagandists are talking about Lithuania taking the lead
in forming what they call “a Baltic caliphate.”
On the Russian nationalist portal
about the Baltic region, Aleksandr Nosovich says that Lithuania’s offer to take
in Crimean Tatars who refuse to live “’under Russian occupation’” in fact is
nothing but a plot to receive and organize “representatives of radical Islamism”
(rubaltic.ru/article/politika-i-obshchestvo/baltiyskiy-khalifat-litva-priglashaet-k-sebe-zhit-islamskikh-ekstremistov22042014/).
Such a step, he continues, “is nothing
new” for the Lithuanians.
Gediminas Kirkilas, the vice speaker
of the Lithuanian parliament, on March 24, asked the Lithuanian government to
take in several dozen Crimean Tatars s refugees. The next day, Adas
Yakubauskas, the head of the Lithuanian Union of Tatar Communities who
represents the Crimean Tatar Mejlis in Vilnius, said such a step was absolutely
necessary given Russian oppression.
But according to Nosovich, the
people Lithuania plans to take in are not real refugees but rather “supporters
of radical Islam.” He cited in support
of that contention the statement of one Crimean Tatar official who supports the
new Russian order who said that any Crimean Tatar who leaves now “is not a
Tatar or a Muslim” but rather an Islamist radical.
They are motivated, this Crimean
Tatar reportedly said, by the fact that groups like the Islamic Party of
Liberation and Hizb ut-Tahrir, which have operated more or less freely in
Crimea when it was part of Ukraine, are banned in Russia and thus will be
closed down by the new Russian authorities.
Because of these Russian laws,
Nosovich says, activists from Hizb ut-Tahrir “have sought to find countries,
special services and in general governments who are more tolerant of the ideas
of radical Islamism, and it is not surprising that one of these countries is
Lithuania, for whose leadership support of Islamist fanatics is already a
tradition.”
In support of that contention, Nosovich cites
the case of a Lithuanian who was arrested in Moscow “on the eve of the
terrorist acts in the Moscow metro,” who said he wanted to blow himself up and
kill as many people as possible, and who when extradited to Lithuania served
only ten months instead of ten years for his crimes. The Lithuanian in
question, the Russian writer says, had been recruited by Islamists in his home
country.
Earlier, in 2001, Nosovich
continues, Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus gave the son of Chechen leader
Dzhokhar Dudayev Lithuanian citizenship “for special services.” When that came out, the Russian commentator
says, there was outrage because it turned out that the other son of Dudayev had
been printing up and distributing false Lithuanian and EU passports.
And the Russian commentator
continues, one should not forget “the extremist site, ‘Kavkaz-tsentr,’ which
was based at one time in Estonia and another in Lithuania,” the willingness of
Baltic countries to take in Chechen fighters, and the renaming of streets and
squares there in honor of Dudayev.
Obviously, it is not so much that
the Baltic governments are partisans of Islamist extremism, Nosovich says.
Rather they are prepared to make use of anyone who will conduct “an
anti-Russian policy.” And he notes that some
Ukrainians of the “Right Sector” now have a training camp outside of Riga, one
that US Senator John McCain “recently visited.”
Nosovich’s
article is intended to discredit the Crimean Tatars, to isolate Lithuania and
the other Baltic states from the West, and to spark anger within these
countries among groups Moscow may seek to exploit against the Baltic governments.
As such, they should be monitored and rejected as false just as earlier Moscow claims
about the “Baltic amazons” were.
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