September 07, 2004
Russia: On Beslan, Putin Looks Beyond Chechnya, Sees International Terror
by Mark Baker
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Russia has been fighting a brutal war in Chechnya the past five years. Over the same period, Chechen militants have carried out multiple acts of terrorism on Russian soil. Yet to hear Russian President Vladimir Putin in recent days, the Russia-Chechnya conflict seemingly had little to do with the school hostage crisis in Beslan. In spite of claims by the hostage takers they were acting for an independent Chechnya, Putin -- instead -- pinned the blame on "international terrorists." RFE/RL reports Putin may be hoping to legitimize the Chechen war as part of the wider global struggle against terrorism -- and at the same time discrediting Chechens' aspirations for independence.
Prague, 7 September (RFE/RL) -- Putin, in recent days, has tried to separate the school siege in North Ossetia from Russia's policy in Chechnya.
In a major address on 4 September -- the day after Russian troops stormed the school held by gunmen in the southern city of Beslan -- Putin made no mention of Chechnya at all. Instead, he put the blame on what he called "international terrorism."
"We are dealing not just with individual, isolated acts of terrorism. We are dealing with a direct intervention of 'international terror' against Russia, with a total, cruel, and all-powerful war, which again and again takes the lives of our fellow countrymen," Putin said.
He made this claim in spite of strong evidence that the hostage taking was done in the name of Chechen independence -- and very likely with some Chechen participation.