Page 19 - bne_newspaper_April_07_2017
P. 19
Opinion
April 7, 2017 www.intellinews.com I Page 19
STOLYPIN:
Terrorism back at the top of Moscow’s agenda
Mark Galeotti of the Institute of International Relations Prague
An explosion on a St Petersburg metro kills 10 people, injures dozens more. A second, larger bomb is disarmed. Despite the encouragingly quick and candid coverage on Russian TV – something of a contrast with past practice – inevitably in the first hours and in the absence of adequate hard information, people fall back on their default assumptions: the start of a campaign of jihadist attacks? (maybe); terrorism by Alexei Navalny’s supporters? (no); false flag attacks
by the Russian state as a pretext for attacks on Ukraine? (likewise unsubstantiated).
Beyond whodunit, though, the real question is what next?
We know what to expect on day one: a sternly paternal statement from President Vladimir Putin; a massive investigation by the security agencies; more bag checks, dogs, and men in uniform in
the metro and railway stations (to comfort worried civilians rather than because they are likely to have much real security impact); pointlessly belligerent fulminations in the Duma; triumphalist claims from jihadists.
What really matters is what follows. First of all, was this a single incident or the beginning of something? Interestingly, this was not a suicide attack, which has been the hallmark of previous atrocities linked with the North Caucasus. It certainly does not rule out jihadism by any means, but does at least raise the possibility that it could be some unhinged individual or other force.
Does tragedy become opportunity for the Kremlin?
Nonetheless, the odds are that the jihadist claims are accurate, and this was a product of the festering conflicts in the North Caucasus and the newer transnational challenges of Al-Qaeda and Islamic State (IS). The latter is a particular concern, given that of the estimated 4,000-5,000 Russian citizens fighting for IS in Syria and Iraq, a growing number are trickling home as their prospects of victory in the Middle East dwindle.
This, after all, has been the nightmare of the security agencies for the past few years. In 2013- 14, there was relief when many young militants swapped the hopeless skirmishes in the North Caucasus for what seemed to be imminent triumph to the south. Some local Federal Security Service (FSB) offices even connived at this, happy to export the problem, especially before the Sochi Winter Olympics.
Last year, an FSB veteran complained to me
that, contrary to his hopes and expectations, “the Americans just hadn’t killed enough of them”. Seduced by the techno-fantasies of omniscient, omnipotent, omni-murderous counter-insurgency, drone-style, they had initially thought the problem solved. Even by late 2015, though, they had come to realise that they had merely postponed it,
and sooner or later the militants – now more experienced, battle-hardened, and maybe with new foreign friends and backers – would be coming home.
If this is planned as part of the start of the