Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 10 – In the last
ten days, the security situation in the North Caucasus has deteriorated badly
both because of increased activity by militant groups, so-called “sleeper
cells,” and the return of ISIS fighters from the Middle East and because of
increased activity by Russian security forces.
As a result, the number of casualties has gone up.
More worrisome still, ever larger
portions of the local population are involved in protests against the actions
of officials and their own increasingly difficult economic situation, a trend
the authorities are generally meeting with force rather than dialogue. (For a detailed survey of these developments,
see kavpolit.com/articles/vzaimnaja_aktivizatsija_nvf_i_silovikov-28711/.)
And
what is most alarming of all is that experts in the field like Aleksey
Malashenko of the Carnegie Moscow Center do not see any one cause that could be
addressed to solve the situation or any way out of this deteriorating situation
for Moscow in the foreseeable future (kavpolit.com/articles/novaja_volna_boevyh_stolknovenij_na_severnom_kavka-28693/).
After an increase in tension and
clashes in the region in 2011-2012, the North Caucasus became relatively quiet,
with both the population on the one hand and the government force structures on
the other backing off. But the authorities did nothing to change the underlying
conditions and so a new outburst was inevitable, Malashenko says.
Instead, during the last several
years when things appeared to be calm, tensions were building up, even if no
one wanted to talk about them. Both sides drew conclusions from this with the population
deciding it could act with relative impunity and the authorities concluding
that the time had come to crush their opponents forever.
Now, the violence has intensified;
and it is likely to continue for some time, the Moscow analyst says, adding
that he is “very worried” about several possibilities, including the spread of
these clashes “throughout Russia,” something that he suggests “cannot now be
excluded.” And he is worried too about the impact of those returning from
having fought for ISIS.
Malashenko says that outside
influence matters but so too do domestic conditions, and he urges that those
examining the situation recognize that it is especially explosive given the
difficult economic situation in which many of the people in the North Caucasus now
find themselves.
Those planning military actions
against the militants or harsh repression against demonstrations by the
population should recognize that in the current environment, there is a great
risk that these things will make the situation worse not better, whatever some
may have concluded only a few weeks or months ago.
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