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Chechnya |
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Chechnya:
Separatism or Jihad?
examines the nature of Islam in the ongoing Chechen conflict. In early
1995 numerous foreign mujahadeen went to Chechnya to assist the separatist
movement—there
have been foreigners there ever since. Their contribution on the
battlefield and their influence on the political
situation within the Chechen resistance is not clear.
It
has been the subject of controversy, misinformation and political
finger-pointing by all sides in the conflict. More
disturbing, four large scale hostage-taking raids into Russia in the past
decade, Budyonnovsk (1995), Kizlar (1996), Moscow Theater (2002) and
Beslan (2004), now referred to as “spectaculars”, seem to parallel the
growing radicalization of the conflict. These increasingly audacious and
violent events also serve as a chronological timeline for the story as
they illustrate an evolution and escalation of militant Chechen tactics. At
the center of the conflict is Shamil Basayev, the last remaining field
commander from the beginning of war in 1994.
Has he become the face of Chechen separatism, of Islamic
radicalization in Chechnya, or both?
Will his voice dominate after the recent death of the more moderate
rebel leader, Aslan Maskhadov, at the hands of Russian commandos? Chechnya: Separatism or Jihad? explores the larger question of whether or not the Chechen independence movement has been hijacked by militant Islam. |
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