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Emboldened Putin May Hit Chechen Fighters Harder 

Emboldened Putin

MOSCOW, October 27 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Warning that “Russia cannot be brought to its knees”, President Vladimir Putin appeared Sunday, October 27, ready to use the bloody hostage drama in a Moscow theatre to bolster his hard-line stance on Chechen fighters and to strengthen his grip on power.

A pre-dawn assault on the theater by Russian forces on Saturday, October 26, left more than 118 hostages and 50 of their Chechen captors dead, but officials insisted the rescue of more than 700 others showed they had averted even greater fatalities, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

The leading hostage-taker, Movsar Barayev, aged 23, was among those killed when Russian elite special forces burst into the auditorium after first pumping a potent sleeping gas into the building, according to witnesses.

The operation represented a high-risk gamble by Putin, who had resolutely refused throughout the crisis to cede to the Chechens’ demands that he end Russia’s bloody three-year war in their republic.

The president, in a televised address late Saturday, appealed to Russians to “forgive” the authorities for failing to save all the hostages but warned that Russia would never yield to “terrorists.”

“We achieved the near impossible, saving hundreds, hundreds of people,” Putin said.

“We proved that Russia can not be brought to its knees.

“But now I want to address the families and friends of those who died. We were not able to save everyone. Forgive us.”

Putin expressed thanks for messages received from foreign leaders lending “moral and practical support in the fight against our common enemy.”

He said he had spoken with one of the survivors in hospital, and had been told by the man: “I wasn’t afraid. I was sure the terrorists would have no future.”

Putin added: “He was right. They have no future. But we do.”

The comments reflected the opinion of analysts who warned that Putin could use the event to strengthen his grip on the country and launch a tougher strategy against the Chechen independence fighters.

Andrey Piontkovsky of the Center for Strategic Studies said the president could use the hostage crisis to justify launching a new front in the Chechen war, as he did in October 1999 when, as prime minister, he sent troops to the republic following a series of apartment bombings in Moscow.

“It was clear from the beginning that no matter how the hostage-taking ended, there would be a toughened stance on Chechnya,” he said.

The Kremlin’s new tough line may encounter little resistance from Europe and the United States who have muted their concern over human rights and their criticism of Russian policy in Chechnya, deeming it part of the global war on terror.

Many world leaders Saturday expressed understanding for Putin’s use of force, and were unanimous in stressing “terrorism” could not be condoned for any cause and required a firm response.

But some, such as French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin, said the crisis showed the need for a political solution to the conflict between Moscow and largely Muslim Chechnya.

Following the operation, Russian Interior Minister Boris Gryzlov maintained heightened security levels around Moscow and ordered a wide-ranging security operation to uncover an alleged Chechen “terrorist network” he said there was “every reason” to believe existed in the region.

Meanwhile, Deputy Interior Minister Vladimir Vasilyev denied a report by Moscow Echo radio that the gas released by the special forces, which he described as “special substances”, had caused some of the hostage deaths.

The radio had quoted doctors as saying some of the surviving hostages were in a poor state after breathing the gas and that those who died may have choked on their own vomit.

A web news service, gazeta.ru, reported that at least 546 of the freed hostages had been hospitalized, many in serious condition from the gas.

It said that a check of Moscow hospitals revealed that only “four or five” of the injured had received bullet wounds.

Authorities said earlier that 349 hostages had been hospitalized, many of them in serious condition.

Putin dealt with the Moscow hostage crisis in the only way he could and will come out stronger as a result, Britain’s press concluded Sunday.

Britain’s right-wing Sunday Telegraph said the bloody incident had “strengthened Mr Putin’s hand abroad in his determination to portray Russia’s conflict with the rebels as part of the international war on terror.”

The Sunday Times added: “Far from withdrawing, President Putin is almost certain now to intensify activity, both to crack down on the terror threat... and more cynically, to recover some of the personal authority lost after this week's events in Moscow.”

The Observer said Putin should be “strongly discouraged” from extending his campaign in Chechnya, asserting “it would be a fatal error that would pile tragedy on tragedy, continuing in the same mistaken path that Russia has pursued for almost a decade.

“Yet with America seeking support for its own war on Iraq, it seems certain that Russia will not be deterred and, in the short term, will ape the U.S. position of attacking terrorists wherever it finds them.”

The Mail on Sunday said the ruthless manner in which Russia brought an end to the siege was a “reminder that Russia is still a long way from becoming the pluralist European democracy we would all like her to be.”

 

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