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Backdrop of violence
The Caucasus conflict belies Putin's pleas for calm as it spreads to Tatarstan

As President Vladimir Putin arrived in Tatarstan late last month to repeat his recent call for ethnic harmony among Russia's multicultural population, a spate of violent killings spiked throughout the mainly Muslim North Caucasus region, leaving more than a dozen dead in one day and highlighting Russia's continuing struggle with a crippling Islamic insurgency.

Kazan Mosque and Other Landmarks in Tatarstan
file photo
In Dagestan, which has long since overshadowed neighboring Chechnya in its body count, seven people ­ including a leading Sufi cleric ­ were killed in a suicide bombing, while a border guard turned his automatic rifle on seven of his fellow soldiers before himself being killed.

The bloodshed cast an unsettling background to Putin's Tatarstan visit on Aug. 28, during which he presented the Order of Friendship to Mufti Ildus Faizov and the Order of Courage to the widow of the slain Valiullah Yakupov, two official religious leaders targeted by local Islamic extremists in coordinated attacks in Kazan, the capital, on July 19.

"Terrorists and militants of all kinds, whatever ideological slogans they hide behind, always act cynically, behind one's back, and have only one aim: to spread fear and mutual hatred," he said.

But Putin's comments, characteristic of a leader who has long placed a premium on stability, seemed to contradict the stark reality that, despite the official end of the federal counterterrorism operation in Chechnya in April 2009, the violence rages on in the neighboring republics of Dagestan, Ingushetia, and Kabardino-Balkaria, among others.

The Kabardino-Balkarian Interior Ministry said Sunday that an insurgent fighter, killed by security forces in the republic on Saturday night, was carrying a time bomb made of various chemicals mixed in a bucket and connected to a Casio watch.

"The power of the explosives was estimated to be 15 kilograms of TNT. Specialists believe there is no doubt that a terror attack was being prepared," a ministry press release said. The bomb was defused on the spot, and police also found a machine gun and pistol in the victim's car.

A low-intensity Islamic insurgency has plagued the volatile North Caucasus region in recent years. Once active in Chechnya, it has spread to the neighboring republics of Dagestan, Ingushetia and Kabardino-Balkaria, among others.

Background conflict

"It's a low-intensity conflict, and it's going to keep dragging on and on," said Simon Saradzhyan, a terrorism expert at Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.

While experts say that the Islamist insurgency, bound roughly by the self-proclaimed Caucasus Emirate under Chechen warlord Doku Umarov, has been weakened since Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov's consolidation of power, they also note that its low-level persistence has become almost a given in the area.

"They haven't been able to mount spectacular attacks, such as raids on entire cities, but they do manage to organize effective bombings in the North Caucasus and outside the North Caucasus now and then, to remind their supporters, themselves and the authorities that they can still do this," Saradzhyan said.

According to Kavkazky Uzel, a Russian news outlet focusing on the North Caucasus, 118 people fell victim to armed conflict in July alone, 78 of whom were killed. Dagestan ranked the bloodiest, with 54 deaths, while Ingushetia and Kabardino-Balkaria ranked second and third, with 10 and nine killed, respectively.

Chechnya had only four deaths, but experienced a relatively rare suicide bombing earlier this month in Grozny, the republic's capital, in which at least one suicide bomber killed three Russian soldiers and injured three other people.

Perhaps more disconcerting, however, is the apparent recent spread of radical Islam, or Salafism, even beyond its conventional borders in the North Caucasus. The July attack in Kazan that killed Yakupov and injured Faizov was a frightening indication of its growing appeal among the republic's youth, which some experts say have been wooed by the North Caucasus movement's brazenness and the perceived co-option of moderate Islam by the regional authorities.

'Religious protest'

Alexei Malashenko, an Islam expert at the Carnegie Moscow Center, says the past several years have seen an "accumulation of religious protest," in which an increasing number of people have turned to radicalism to spite the authorities.

"The confrontation [in Tatarstan] between those who share Islamic traditionalism and something else ­ a 'new' Islam, such as Salafism ­ is very, very explosive, like we see in the Caucasus and everywhere else," he said.

Malashenko also notes that the spread of fundamentalist Islam from the Caucasus and Central Asia, which plays host to such groups as the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and Hizb ut-Tahrir, adds to the "internationalization" of the trend.

This much became evident early last month, when two Chechen members of al-Qaeda, who are believed to be among the senior leadership of the organization in Europe, were charged by a Spanish judge with plotting a terrorist attack. The two men, Eldar Magomedov and Ankari Adamov, were arrested Aug. 1 in Spain, attempting to cross the French border.

Loose connections

Some experts, however, are careful to draw a line between the homegrown North Caucasian insurgency and Russian fundamentalists operating abroad. According to Mark Galeotti, a Russian security expert and clinical professor at New York University, the two operations are largely distinct from one another.

"This is what happened to al-Qaeda, generally ­ what once upon a time was a coordinated movement has been shattered," he said. "It has now become an ideology of loosely connected, but essentially autonomous, individuals and cells," bound to a certain degree by shared beliefs, resources and possibly clan connections.

However, Galeotti noted, whether at home or abroad, Chechens remain among the most popular candidates for the "global jihad."

"There are a lot of Chechens who feel particularly ignored, isolated, ruthless, and who therefore are more susceptible to the ideology of jihad, and to the idea that it's worth giving everything up to strike a blow to bring some kind of real change," he said.

Keywords: Russia, Chechnya - Russia, Terrorism - Russia, Assassinations - Russian News - Russia - Johnson's Russia List

 

As President Vladimir Putin arrived in Tatarstan late last month to repeat his recent call for ethnic harmony among Russia's multicultural population, a spate of violent killings spiked throughout the mainly Muslim North Caucasus region, leaving more than a dozen dead in one day and highlighting Russia's continuing struggle with a crippling Islamic insurgency.

Kazan Mosque and Other Landmarks in Tatarstan
file photo
In Dagestan, which has long since overshadowed neighboring Chechnya in its body count, seven people ­ including a leading Sufi cleric ­ were killed in a suicide bombing, while a border guard turned his automatic rifle on seven of his fellow soldiers before himself being killed.

The bloodshed cast an unsettling background to Putin's Tatarstan visit on Aug. 28, during which he presented the Order of Friendship to Mufti Ildus Faizov and the Order of Courage to the widow of the slain Valiullah Yakupov, two official religious leaders targeted by local Islamic extremists in coordinated attacks in Kazan, the capital, on July 19.

"Terrorists and militants of all kinds, whatever ideological slogans they hide behind, always act cynically, behind one's back, and have only one aim: to spread fear and mutual hatred," he said.

But Putin's comments, characteristic of a leader who has long placed a premium on stability, seemed to contradict the stark reality that, despite the official end of the federal counterterrorism operation in Chechnya in April 2009, the violence rages on in the neighboring republics of Dagestan, Ingushetia, and Kabardino-Balkaria, among others.

The Kabardino-Balkarian Interior Ministry said Sunday that an insurgent fighter, killed by security forces in the republic on Saturday night, was carrying a time bomb made of various chemicals mixed in a bucket and connected to a Casio watch.

"The power of the explosives was estimated to be 15 kilograms of TNT. Specialists believe there is no doubt that a terror attack was being prepared," a ministry press release said. The bomb was defused on the spot, and police also found a machine gun and pistol in the victim's car.

A low-intensity Islamic insurgency has plagued the volatile North Caucasus region in recent years. Once active in Chechnya, it has spread to the neighboring republics of Dagestan, Ingushetia and Kabardino-Balkaria, among others.

Background conflict

"It's a low-intensity conflict, and it's going to keep dragging on and on," said Simon Saradzhyan, a terrorism expert at Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.

While experts say that the Islamist insurgency, bound roughly by the self-proclaimed Caucasus Emirate under Chechen warlord Doku Umarov, has been weakened since Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov's consolidation of power, they also note that its low-level persistence has become almost a given in the area.

"They haven't been able to mount spectacular attacks, such as raids on entire cities, but they do manage to organize effective bombings in the North Caucasus and outside the North Caucasus now and then, to remind their supporters, themselves and the authorities that they can still do this," Saradzhyan said.

According to Kavkazky Uzel, a Russian news outlet focusing on the North Caucasus, 118 people fell victim to armed conflict in July alone, 78 of whom were killed. Dagestan ranked the bloodiest, with 54 deaths, while Ingushetia and Kabardino-Balkaria ranked second and third, with 10 and nine killed, respectively.

Chechnya had only four deaths, but experienced a relatively rare suicide bombing earlier this month in Grozny, the republic's capital, in which at least one suicide bomber killed three Russian soldiers and injured three other people.

Perhaps more disconcerting, however, is the apparent recent spread of radical Islam, or Salafism, even beyond its conventional borders in the North Caucasus. The July attack in Kazan that killed Yakupov and injured Faizov was a frightening indication of its growing appeal among the republic's youth, which some experts say have been wooed by the North Caucasus movement's brazenness and the perceived co-option of moderate Islam by the regional authorities.

'Religious protest'

Alexei Malashenko, an Islam expert at the Carnegie Moscow Center, says the past several years have seen an "accumulation of religious protest," in which an increasing number of people have turned to radicalism to spite the authorities.

"The confrontation [in Tatarstan] between those who share Islamic traditionalism and something else ­ a 'new' Islam, such as Salafism ­ is very, very explosive, like we see in the Caucasus and everywhere else," he said.

Malashenko also notes that the spread of fundamentalist Islam from the Caucasus and Central Asia, which plays host to such groups as the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and Hizb ut-Tahrir, adds to the "internationalization" of the trend.

This much became evident early last month, when two Chechen members of al-Qaeda, who are believed to be among the senior leadership of the organization in Europe, were charged by a Spanish judge with plotting a terrorist attack. The two men, Eldar Magomedov and Ankari Adamov, were arrested Aug. 1 in Spain, attempting to cross the French border.

Loose connections

Some experts, however, are careful to draw a line between the homegrown North Caucasian insurgency and Russian fundamentalists operating abroad. According to Mark Galeotti, a Russian security expert and clinical professor at New York University, the two operations are largely distinct from one another.

"This is what happened to al-Qaeda, generally ­ what once upon a time was a coordinated movement has been shattered," he said. "It has now become an ideology of loosely connected, but essentially autonomous, individuals and cells," bound to a certain degree by shared beliefs, resources and possibly clan connections.

However, Galeotti noted, whether at home or abroad, Chechens remain among the most popular candidates for the "global jihad."

"There are a lot of Chechens who feel particularly ignored, isolated, ruthless, and who therefore are more susceptible to the ideology of jihad, and to the idea that it's worth giving everything up to strike a blow to bring some kind of real change," he said.


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