A demonstration against the Chechen War in central Moscow on Feb. 1
attracted just a few hundred people. Wet snow fell on the yellow robes of
Buddhists beating a tambourine that somehow made a particularly mournful
and lonely sound. The state TV channels either ignored the demonstration
altogether or emphasized the small number of people it drew.
On the Chechen War's foreign-propaganda front, the authorities can proudly
claim a few victories. Former head of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe Lord Judd has been defeated. Just remember Dmitry
Rogozin's happy smirk on the first day of the "Nord-Ost" hostage tragedy
and his quip, "What will Lord Judd say now?" The extradition process
against Chechen separatist leader Aslan Maskhadov's aide, Akhmed Zakayev,
is now underway in Britain, though it won't bring Moscow the result it
hopes for. Finally, the Kremlin spokesman on Chechnya, Sergei
Yastrzhembsky, flew to Washington at state expense to give another of his
press conferences there rather than in Moscow.
But all these successes on the domestic and foreign fronts can't hide the
fact that Moscow has once again lost the Chechen war. First, it lost the
war for the hearts and minds of the Chechen people, trying to convince them
that they are Russian citizens by bombing them, murdering them, torturing
them, abducting them and subjecting them to "cleansing" operations.
Back in the autumn of 1999, Russia had for the first time, perhaps, a real
chance at winning its war. The Chechens were fed up with their own
gangsters and would have accepted federal authority in the hope of seeing
some order brought to their republic.
By the autumn of 2002, Moscow had already lost its three-year long Chechen
War in the hearts and minds of a majority of Russians. For the first time
since the war began, surveys showed that the number of people supporting an
end to the war and negotiations with the rebels had broken the halfway mark
to reach 60 percent.
True, people don't go to anti-war demonstrations, or any demonstrations,
for that matter, because they're disillusioned, passive and don't believe
they have the power to change anything. But public opinion has already
rejected this war.
What's particularly worrying for authorities are the signs of change among
the elite, which is forced to react to shifts of mood among the population.
Previously, the only people to consistently support negotiations were
human-rights activists and one prominent politician, Yabloko leader Grigory
Yavlinsky. But they are now beginning to be joined by others. The very
party that swept into the Duma on a wave of patriotic fervor, with its
leaders proclaiming the Russian Army would be reborn in Chechnya and that
those who thought otherwise were traitors, is now organizing and sponsoring
anti-war conferences. Last September and October, even such conservative
and cautious politicians as head of the Russian Union of Industrialists and
Entrepreneurs Arkady Volsky and former Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov, who
belong to the "mainstream" of the Russian elite, spoke in favor of a change
in Russian policy on Chechnya.
Hawks in both Chechnya and Moscow used the "Nord-Ost" tragedy to stop this
peace movement from swelling. But, despite the immense propaganda effort,
the effect has been short-lived. By the beginning of the year, the level of
support for negotiations with the Chechen rebels led by Maskhadov had
returned to its October 2002 level and will inevitably increase.
Now the authorities have their attention taken by another new toy - the
self-deception of their plans to hold a referendum in Chechnya on March 23.
Before this date, they don't want to hear about anything else, so the
sooner the referendum takes place, the better. It will have just as
triumphant a result as the election of Doku Zavgayev as Chechen president
in December 1995. But the very first day after the referendum, this
soap-bubble illusion will burst, and the authorities will find themselves
facing the same old problems in Chechnya and having to deal with an
increasingly alienated public opinion.
See also:
War in Chechnya
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