Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 24 – Chechen leader
Ramzan Kadyrov’s statement that his forces should attack anyone, “Muscovite or
Stavropol resident,” who might appear on the territory of the republic and
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s suggestion that the Islamic State is
Russia’s main enemy may presage the opening of a third post-Soviet Russian-Chechen
war.
The launching of such a conflict
would give Vladimir Putin three great advantages: First, it would distract the West’s
attention from his aggression in Ukraine and suggest to some in the West that
Moscow is on the same side as the West is when it comes to Islamist radicalism,
a shift that might be enough to end or at least soften the current sanctions
regime.
Second, it would allow him to
continue to exploit the patriotic hysteria he has generated among Russians with
his Anschluss of Crimea and his talk of a “Russian world” while backing away
from further moves in Ukraine or anywhere else beyond the borders of the
Russian Federation at least for some period of time.
And third, it would win him new
support within the Russian security agencies many of whom as the conflict over
the issue of who is to be held responsible for the murder of opposition leader
Boris Nemtsov showed by giving them the opportunity to take out Kadyrov and his
increasingly independent regime.
But if such a strategy has these
advantages, it has some very real risks, two of which are especially
noteworthy. On the one hand, few regional leaders have declared their loyalty
to Putin more fervently than Kadyrov has. Moving against him would send a clear
message that no one is safe no matter how loyal they may profess to be.
And on the other, in the event of a
war, the Chechens will fight and fight well and they will have the support not
only of others in the North Caucasus, including many in Daghestan, but also
that of ISIS forces and their allies elsewhere in the Russian Federation and
the former Soviet space, particularly those parts immediately adjoining
Afghanistan.
For background on these
possibilities, see Igor Eidman’s article “And Where Will They Kill Tomorrow?”
at kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5538C838735FF
and Yevgeny Ikhlov’s “An End to Anti-Western Hysteria?” at kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5538772074954
which examines Lavrov’s remarks at ntv.ru/novosti/1397407#ixzz3Y27xrPxJ.
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