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Re: Amaunet post# 4767

Monday, 07/18/2005 11:36:53 PM

Monday, July 18, 2005 11:36:53 PM

Post# of 9338
Bush is killing Russian soldiers in Dagestan through ‘secret sects’



Russia has proposed a Caspian flotilla which would be a task group of the littoral states’ ships, and as such billed as a regional force.

As Russia eyes stronger clout in the Caspian region it becomes even more imperative that Bush takeover Dagestan. Bush requires Dagestan along with Azerbaijan the only pro West country that borders the Caspian Sea. He must get more littoral states under Washington’s control.
#msg-7000730

On April 11, John J Fialka of the Wall Street Journal revealed that the US Department of Defense will spend $100 million over the next few years to establish the "Caspian Guard", a network of police forces and special operations units "that can respond to various emergencies, including attacks on oil facilities". Russia is also expanding its Caspian Fleet, as it too presses its claims to offshore fields in the region. Under such circumstances, it is all too easy to imagine how a minor confrontation could erupt into something much more serious, involving the US, Russia, Iran, and other countries.
#msg-6368606

Bush needs the Caspian. The Dagestan violence is a ripple effect from Chechen unrest. We back the Chechen turbulence against Russia.
#msg-3953878

Abdulmanap Musayev, a spokesman at the Interior Ministry, said that the militants are Wahhabites — local Islamic fundamentalists with foreign backers who want to end Russian rule far beyond Dagestan and neighbouring Chechnya.

The Russian Defense Minister has accused the U.S. of wanting the "permanent smoldering of a manageable armed conflict" in this region.
#msg-3775550

-Am

Secret sects threatening to put a match to tinderbox republic


From Sebastian Smith in Makhachkala, Russia

OFF DUTY and two weeks into a deployment to the badlands of Dagestan on the border of Chechnya, the Russian Special Forces men thought that they were going to a relaxing bath.

Three lorries carrying the 50 troops had just pulled up at the Ariel public bath-house in Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, when a homemade bomb detonated. Shrapnel killed ten soldiers and wounded more than twenty other servicemen and civilian bystanders.

The bombing was the latest indication that Dagestan, an ancient Muslim region between Chechnya and the Caspian Sea, is spinning out of control — and threatening to pull down the rest of Russia’s turbulent North Caucasus.

Dagestan is not only the biggest and most populous of the seven semi-autonomous republics of the North Caucasus — a region dominated by impoverished, non-Russian Muslim peoples — it is also the most strategic: a large chunk of the Russian Caspian coast lies here, making Dagestan a key transport route for trade and oil.

A collapse of security would stretch Russia’s Armed Forces, already bogged down in Chechnya, to the limit and galvanise the underground Islamic movements now stirring further west across the region.

There were 70 terrorist attacks in Dagestan in the first half of this year, compared with just 30 in 2004, according to a study by an expert from the Russian Academy of Sciences.

President Putin betrayed the Kremlin’s growing alarm when he made a surprise visit to the region last Friday, telling his military chief of staff, Defence Minister and FSB security service director to accelerate planned troop build-ups.

The Special Forces unit decimated this month had itself been sent as reinforcement, only to fall victim to an increasingly brazen Islamic insurgency.

In the past few weeks secret organisations such as Sharia Jamaat, which claimed the bath-house bombing, have been blamed for killing or wounding more than a dozen policemen, shooting dead a police chief, blowing up a high-ranking politician and derailing a train.

When the leader of Sharia Jamaat was killed on July 6 in a shoot-out, the militants threatened to extend attacks to police officers’ families. At least 32 policemen have been killed and more than 40 wounded this year, officials say. The rebels do not strike blindly: one captured this spring carried a list of more than 100 officials’ addresses and telephone numbers.

Abdulmanap Musayev, a spokesman at the Interior Ministry, said that the militants are Wahhabites — local Islamic fundamentalists with foreign backers who want to end Russian rule far beyond Dagestan and neighbouring Chechnya.

“For them Dagestan is the tactical key to the strategic goal of destabilising the whole North Caucasus,” he said. While acknowledging that these are serious opponents, Mr Musayev said that the situation was under control and pointed to the surprisingly laid-back atmosphere on Makhachkala’s streets as proof.


True, the Dagestani capital hardly feels under siege. Cows wander along main roads, drivers cheerfully disregard traffic rules and the oil-rich Caspian Sea twinkles at the city edge.

But people are cynical, not confident. The police, seen as answering to the corrupt political and business elite, are widely detested. In some quarters, the bombings are almost welcomed.

Few of Dagestan’s 2.5 million people want independence from Russia. Amid mass unemployment, Moscow provides nearly all the local budget revenue. The Russian language is often the only way in which even neighbours in this ethnic jigsaw can communicate.

And although Islam’s roots here stretch to the 8th century, there is little appetite for the rebels’ dream of an Islamic caliphate. Yet hatred for the Kremlin-backed politicians and businessmen running Dagestan can translate into sympathy for the rebels.

Isalmagomed Khabiyev, the leader of an independent small business union, said: “The Wahhabis and bombers are not really all about caliphates, but about unhappiness with the local authorities, with this criminal regime.”

The decade-old conflict in Chechnya, bringing radicalisation, lawlessness and a flood of black market weapons, fuels the discontent.

At a mosque in Makhachkala, the elderly imam, surrounded by young followers, clenched his fists in anger.

“The rich couldn’t care because they have all the power and money,” he said. “The poor couldn’t care because they have lost trust in everything. It’s a terrible situation. It’s a volcano.”

DAGESTAN: LAND OF MOUNTAINS

Dagestan (Land of Mountains) is one of the most ethnically diverse places on Earth. Of 34 distinct groups, the biggest are the Avars, at about 500,000, and among the smallest are the Mountain Jews, who number about 5,000. Russian is the principal language

Almost 60 per cent of the 2.5 million population is rural. More than 30 per cent of the economy is agricultural. Unemployment is 32 per cent

In 1999 Dagestani and Chechen fundamentalists attempted an insurrection but were defeated after heavy fighting

Recent violent incidents include: 17 killed in attack on soldiers in January 2001; seven soldiers killed by bomb in January 2002; 43 people, including children, killed by bomb on parade in May 2002





http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-1699086,00.html




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