суббота, 25 апреля 2026 г.

Chechnya and the Road to Power, or the Revival of Empire According to Putin

 

This article was written before the first presidential election. Russian oligarchs, led by Berezovsky and Gusinsky, replaced the degenerate Yeltsin with Putin, believing that the executive security officer, a crony of Anatoly Sobchak, was the best option as a puppet. However, as it later turned out, they were gravely mistaken, failing to discern the patriot beneath the formal exterior.

 

Alik Bakhshi

 

Chechnya and the Road to Power, or the Revival of Empire According to Putin

 

 

 

“The villages are burning, they have no defence,

The sons of the fatherland are defeated by the enemy,

And the glow, like an eternal meteor,

Playing in the clouds, frightens the gaze.

Like a predatory beast, into the humble abode

The victor bursts with bayonets;

He kills the elderly and children,

Innocent maidens and young mothers.”

 

...............

 

“Two years have passed, and war still rages;

The barren tribes of the Caucasus

Fed by robbery and deceit;

And on a scorching day and under the night fog

Their courage is terrible for a Russian.”

 

                                       “Izmail Bey” by M.Yu. Lermontov

 

170 years have passed since the great poet wrote these lines, but time has not diminished their relevance in the least against the backdrop of the bloody events unfolding in the Caucasus today. The military actions in Chechnya and Dagestan can be seen as another episode in the Caucasian War—a war waged by Russia in the 19th century and which flared up again at the end of the 20th century. The war in the Caucasus didn't begin today or yesterday; it began 200 years ago, when the Russians decided to seize this heavenly corner of the earth. Note that it wasn't the highlanders (read: bandits, terrorists) who descended from the mountains onto the Russian plain; it was the Russians who came to them, and not with bread and salt, but with superior weapons, bringing death and destruction to the rebellious infidels. That the Russian classic did not exaggerate for the sake of rhyme is evidenced by the equally eloquent letter of the tsarist general A.P. Ermolov to Alexander in 1819 during military operations in the Caucasus: “I marched into the mountains, taking advantage of the general terror and flight, destroyed several villages, all the grain in the fields, and did not encounter a single person along the way; the enemy had dispersed to such an extent.” Also: “The order was to destroy the villages, and, among other things, a beautiful town of up to 800 houses, called Ulu-Aiya, was devastated. The inhabitants fled from here with such haste that they left behind several infants. The devastation was necessary as a monument to the punishment of a proud people who had never before surrendered to anyone; it was necessary as a warning to other peoples, for whom examples of terror alone are convenient to restrain.” (Notes by A.P. Ermolov, during his administration of Georgia).

 

Of all the colonial peoples of the Russian Empire, the Caucasians suffered the most for their love of freedom. Even then, the Russian authorities understood perfectly well that the desire for independence could only be destroyed along with the people, so they embarked on a systematic, historically unprecedented extermination of the highlanders, comparable to the Holocaust of European Jewry. Condemning the highlanders to starvation, all the fertile lands of the Kuban and Terek Rivers were confiscated and distributed to Cossack villages. This is where the Kuban and Terek Cossacks emerged, who today demand the revival of the Cossack army. Huge masses of highlanders were forcibly deported from their homes to settlements deep in Russia—or rather, not to settlements, but to death. What could be more telling than the following fact: In 1859, 159 people were sent to settle in the Novouzensky district of the Samara province. A year later, only 81 remained alive. (Central State Military Historical Archive, Moscow). In addition to forced deportation, highlanders were also disposed of by deception, namely, under the pretext of a pilgrimage to Mecca. According to the plan of the tsarist minister Milyutin, those wishing to make the pilgrimage were transported to Turkey free of charge on state-chartered steamships. Five hundred thousand people were deported from the Caucasus in this way. None of them were destined to see their homeland, as their return would be fraught with bureaucratic difficulties. Many of their passports expired during the pilgrimage, leaving them with no choice but to accept Turkish citizenship. Those who escaped the bureaucratic hurdles were sent in a convoy, bypassing the Caucasus, to the Ural steppes for settlement, under the pretext that returning to their homelands would inevitably result in clashes with the Cossacks. The fact is that during the highlanders' absence, their land and property had been confiscated in favor of the Don Cossacks resettled in the Caucasus. Even in Soviet times, the "father of all nations" continued the physical extermination of the mountaineers, ordering them to be deported in packed trains to Siberia and Kazakhstan like cattle. It's not hard to guess what fate awaited them there. Moreover, Stalin carried out this deportation of the peoples of the Caucasus twice: before and during World War II.

 

No matter how beautiful the ideology behind which the Evil Empire disguised its predatory nature, its end came. Stuck for eight years in another mountainous country, to which the Kremlin ideologists wanted to bring prosperity, By ploughing its soil with exploding bombs and shells, Russia suffered a crushing defeat. An Afghan bandit, a mujahideen, a spirit—in short, a terrorist—with a homemade machine gun and a donkey instead of an armoured personnel carrier, defended his freedom, prevented his homeland from being turned into another cotton-growing appendage of the Russian Empire, and buried the Kremlin's long-held dream of reaching the Indian Ocean. After all, two tank marches through Pakistan remained, and the Russian soldier would have been rinsing his footcloths in the waters of the Indian Ocean with a sense of fulfilled international duty.

 

A vast country with the world's largest army, armed with supersonic aircraft, powerful tanks, artillery of every calibre, the world's best Kalashnikov assault rifles, homing missiles, and other electronic gadgets, was unable to cope with the Afghan people. Afghanistan turned out to be that last extra piece that gave the dragon, suffering from internal diseases, indigestion. It turns out that Alexander Nevsky's words, "Whoever comes to us with the sword will perish by the sword," are true not only on Russian soil.

 

The failed military adventure in Afghanistan had far-reaching political consequences. The undeclared, shameful war exposed all the lies and hypocrisy with which the Kremlin communists had buried their citizens. It was impossible to seal the truth, along with those who died, for unknown reasons, into the zinc coffins that were arriving in ever-increasing numbers in response to the all-out war unleashed by the Soviet Union against the Afghan people. The very first democratic reforms that Mikhail Gorbachev was forced to introduce to give a civilized face to the Soviet system so shaken the patchwork empire that it began to disintegrate. Moscow did attempt to drown this march toward freedom in blood—events in Tbilisi, Riga, Vilnius, and Baku—but as Mikhail Gorbachev, the architect of perestroika, aptly put it, without realizing what it would lead to, "the process has begun."

 

The collapse of the Russian colonial empire did not end with the independence of the former Soviet republics, as demonstrated by the example of Chechnya. But while freedom for the Soviet republics cost little bloodshed, it cost Chechnya 100,000 lives. Following a well-known tradition, having labelled the Chechens bandits and the people's militias gangs, Russia is once again unleashing a war in the Caucasus, arguing that this is inherently Russian territory and that it wants to avoid setting a precedent for other peoples it has conquered. Frankly, it defies rational explanation to explain how, for example, Chechnya or Dagestan differ from Azerbaijan or Moldova, which have now achieved independent status. Can anyone answer the question: why did Georgia have the status of a union republic, while Ingushetia, Tuva, and Chechnya are autonomous republics? How was this distinction determined? Georgia supposedly asked to join Russia—or so the legend goes, at Moscow's instigation. Ukraine even signed Bohdan Khmelnytsky's famous "Together Forever" treaty. Belarus, which had never known statehood, suddenly received independence as a gift and still doesn't know what to do with it. The peoples of the Caucasus, who fought for hundreds of years against the Russian presence on their land, were not granted such a privilege of freedom. Two years of war completely destroyed the oil production and refining industries. The ruins of Grozny are reminiscent of Stalingrad during World War II, and the razed towns of Bamut and Samashki differ from the tragedies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki only in the scale of the devastation and the absence of radiation. But just as in Afghanistan, despite the fact that Russian troops had complete control of the operational space, they suffered defeat. A small nation of 1.5 million, challenging the empire, forced Moscow to initiate peace negotiations, which culminated in the Khasavyurt Agreement. Although Russia did not officially recognize Chechnya's independence, the Chechen people effectively gained independence at the cost of incredible hardship.

 

However, after a flurry of prime ministers, the Russian government was led by former Chekist Vladimir Putin, who differs from his liberal, intelligentsia predecessors in his formal, gray appearance, typical of KGB officers, and, as soon became clear, in the crude speech of a repeat offender. What, then, is the reason for the rise to power of such a figure—a sort of Russian version of Augusto Pinochet? But unlike the Chilean general, who seized power himself, V. Putin is still a protégé of Russian oligarchs, who, fearing a communist victory in the upcoming elections, brought him to power to replace the progressively deteriorating and ailing President B. Yeltsin.

 

Yeltsin, who considered himself the guarantor of a Constitution that is a hollow phrase in Russia, was in fact the guarantor of the oligarchs' financial well-being. It was under Yeltsin that the symbiosis of power and money reached its peak. The new regime that replaced the communists offered opportunities for easy enrichment, so corruption instantly permeated all levels of power. Under the current circumstances in Russia, money and power acquired unlimited possibilities. Oligarchs used money to buy seats in the State Duma and positions in the government. Boris Berezovsky, the richest man in Russia and an Israeli citizen, became Secretary of the Security Council. True, Berezovsky later renounced his Israeli citizenship after becoming Secretary, but this fact only underscores the uniqueness of the situation. Can you imagine a similar position in Israel held by someone of Russian descent, let alone Russian citizenship? The oligarchs saw Putin, as a traditionally executive KGB official, as a weak-willed puppet who would allow them to further enrich themselves by selling the country's raw materials without establishing any production facilities. This economic trend could have left Russia in the position of being a raw materials appendage of the West and Japan. Russia, a former dictatorship of the proletariat, could have transformed into a dictatorship of oligarchs. The new nouveau riche did not associate their future with Russia. Above all, they did not see it as their homeland. They had all prepared their rear areas in advance in Israel and other countries, transferring their capital there whenever possible. For them, Russia was merely a means of enrichment. However, they failed to recognize the other side of Putin's nature in time. Like a true security officer, he managed to conceal his future ambitions, steeped in intense patriotism. At that time, the oligarchs did not foresee the danger Putin posed to their financial empire.

 

Undoubtedly, there are many opponents in Russia to relinquishing Chechnya, even among the intelligentsia, Putin, in order to secure popular support in the upcoming presidential elections, is banking on a new war with Chechnya. To this end, immediately after the nationalist Putin took office, a war was launched in Dagestan. Suddenly, the rebellious Wahhabis, who had been defying Moscow's protégés in Makhachkala for two years, were remembered. The Wahhabis were supplied with weapons from Chechnya and supported by volunteers there—not, mind you, from official Grozny. But for the Russians, this was enough to start a war in Chechnya. Accusations are being levelled at Georgia and Azerbaijan, through whose territories military aid to Chechnya may be flowing. So, if necessary, neither Georgia nor Azerbaijan is immune from encroachment by Kremlin politicians. A similar situation comes to mind: Afghan guerrillas had camps in Pakistan, but the Russians didn't dare bomb the territory of a neutral state. Or another example. Volunteers from Russia fought in Bosnia on the side of their co-religionists, but the Bosnians didn't declare war on Russia for this.

 

Furthermore, apartment buildings in Moscow itself are blown up at the right moment. Hysteria against Chechnya is whipped up across the country. Immediately, literally in the first hours after the terrorist attacks, dozens of Chechens involved are caught, and hundreds of kilograms of RDX are found. However, in Ryazan, the FSB suffered a blunder: residents of the building the terrorists allegedly wanted to blow up discovered that the sacks contained ordinary sugar instead of RDX. To smooth over their blunder, the FSB explains that it was a vigilance test. Russian investigative agencies, having failed to solve a single one of a series of high-profile contract killings—such as those of Kholodov, Menya, Listyev, and Starovoitova—are suddenly displaying such alacrity. All this seems, to say the least, rather strange. Chechen President A. Maskhadov, while denying Grozny's involvement in the bombings, not without reason mentioned Berezovsky's name, emphasizing the danger this man poses to both Chechnya and Russia. For some reason, Maskhadov's account is more credible, especially given Berezovsky's well-known ties to Chechen criminals.

 

By occupying Chechnya, Putin certainly didn't solve the Chechen problem. Quite the contrary, Russia has reopened a bleeding wound that brings suffering to both peoples. But Putin, on the other hand, appeared triumphant, a sort of rallying cry for the "Russian land," which is what allowed him to enter the Kremlin gates as such. From this moment on, the countdown can begin for oligarchs, freedom of speech, and Western-style democracy in general, for all of this is detrimental to the Russian Empire, which Putin wants to preserve, if not restore, within its former borders. During his four years as president, Putin has achieved much: by persecuting the oligarchs, Putin has deprived them of their ability to influence Kremlin policy. Moreover, the oligarchs have been stripped of their possessions in Russia, and most importantly, the media has fallen into the hands of the president. Putin has gradually, effectively eliminated freedom of speech in the media. Television has become as mendacious, overregulated, and uninteresting as it was under communism, as the coverage of the Nord-Ost events vividly demonstrated. Freedom of speech, which brought down the totalitarian communist regime, is now preventing a specialist in "outhouse soaking" and, as it unexpectedly turns out, "circumcision," from successfully combating international terrorism and extremism. Using television, Putin is turning the Duma elections into a farce, and now, having secured an absolute majority in parliament, he can amend the Constitution. It's noteworthy that this absolute Duma majority is held by the pro-presidential Unity party, which has no program whatsoever, and, no less noteworthy, the president himself is not a member. It's important to note here that instead of the utterly failed democrats, who have nothing but ambition in their hearts, the current Duma is filled with deputies from openly nationalist parties. In the current political situation, it's entirely believable to hear President Putin claim that the upcoming elections will be his last, because they could be his last ever. This is all very reminiscent of the circumstances under which Hitler came to power in Germany.

 

Global democracy must understand that Russia was and remains a prison of nations, and that the rise to power of people like Putin indicates a trend toward reviving the former glory of the Soviet Union. The restoration of a totalitarian regime in Russia would once again bring the world to the brink of nuclear danger. The West's leniency toward what is happening in Chechnya unties the hands of Russian Nazis and poses the greatest danger to the world. Lermontov's lines could be relevant not only for the peoples of the Caucasus:

 

"Are they waiting for a Russian detachment,

To the point of bloodshed of the dainty guests?"

                                          "Hadji Abrek" by M.Yu. Lermontov

 

The 19th-century Russian poet was a far greater democrat than Russia's current president.

 

October 14, 1999

 


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