Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 11 – Most people today are focusing on bidding farewell to Lyudmila
Alekseyeva, the great human rights activists that Vladimir Putin is trying to
coopt as one of his own, or to the centenary of the birth of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn,
whose slogan “live not by lies” played an essential role in unmasking and then destroying
the Soviet system.
But
those events should not obscure another one that may have played an even
greater role in the continuing Russian tragedy: On this day in 1994, Russian
forces on the order of Russian President Boris Yeltsin began their fateful and ultimately
unsuccessful attack on Chechnya.
Yeltsin’s
order was dated December 9. It prompted the government to issue a decree
calling for the disarming of Chechen armed formations. But only on December 11
did Russian forces begin, in the words of Mairbek Vachagayev, “a war that
changed the world” and became “the beginning of a tragedy for an entire people”
(www.kavkazr.com/a/voyna-izmenivshaya-mir/29648635.html).
Vachagayev, who served as
Chechnya-Icherkeria’s representative in Moscow, recalls that the Russian forces
attacked the Chechen capital from three directions, but one of them was blocked
by ordinary and unarmed people. The other two were able to reach the outskirts
of Grozny after hard fighting and much later.
In Russia itself, Russian leaders
like Yegor Gaidar, Grigory Yavlinskky, Sergey Yushenkov, Sergey Kovalyev,
Aleksandr Cherkasov and Valeriya Novodvorskaya, to name but a few, spoke out at
the brutal Russian punitive expeditions. And Boris Nemtsov, then governor of Nizhny
Novgorod, even “collected a million signatures” against the bloodletting.
“All of them understood,” Vachagayev
says, that “their country had passed a line beyond it one must no longer talk
about democracy. On the side of the Chechens rose almost the entire Russian
media: Every day, journalists reported about thousands of killed, including
federal forces who did not understand what they were being asked to give their
lives for.”
What must also be remembered, he
continues, is that “the Chechens did not feel hatred to the Russian army which
had come to kill them nor to Russia as a whole. They simply did not understand
what was happening and felt hurt and were offended.” They believed that a solution could be found.
Tragically for them and for Russia
they were wrong: the war against Chechnya and Chechens had begun as had the war against democracy in
Russia as well.
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