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Edition 13 Volume 4 - April 06, 2006

Russia and radical Islam

Ambiguity triumphs  - Konstantin von Eggert
Increasing numbers of young Russian Muslims have started to identify with their co-religionists in Chechnya, Afghanistan and Iraq.

Russia, sole winner of the Iran crisis  - Yin Gang
Why is Putin extending an olive branch to the Islamic world?

The situation inside Russia  - Alexey Malashenko
An entire mythology has developed around Islamism in Russia, created by forces within the state.


Ambiguity triumphs
 Konstantin von Eggert

It would be hard to find an event that better characterizes Russia's convoluted Middle East diplomacy and uncertain attitude to political Islam than the visit last month to Moscow by a Hamas delegation.

To the incredulous questioning of the Israelis and the Americans--how would Moscow have reacted if Chechen terrorist commanders like Shamil Basayev were given a similar welcome in Washington or Jerusalem?--Moscow produced a somewhat feeble reply that Hamas had not committed any terrorist acts on Russian soil and hence it was not considered a terrorist organization by Moscow.

At the same time, Russia continues to lambaste any contacts, however innocuous, by the Europeans and the Americans with representatives of the Chechen separatist movement. According to the Russians, Chechen fighters form part of "an international terrorist network".

There are several reasons Moscow's attitude to radical Islam is so contradictory.

On the one hand, Russian foreign policy is driven by a very strong (and growing) complex of the former superpower that wants back in the limelight. Hence the general anti-western tenor of Russian foreign policy discourse in recent years, words not necessarily followed by action.

However, with the public mood in Russia increasingly isolationist and suspicious of outside influences, the Kremlin is keen to show the public that Russia is not kowtowing to the US and Europe. This frequently produces a policy that is based on countering US (and increasingly EU) attitudes just because they are American or European.

This is most visible in the case of Hamas' invitation to Moscow and the excruciatingly slow progress toward a common position vis-a-vis Iran--an Islamist state with radical ambitions that Russian officials tend to gloss over. Russia repeatedly refused to recognize links between Tehran and the Lebanese Hizballah as "sponsorship of terrorism" for fear of offending the Iranians. Moreover, until recently Russian officials admitted in private that they saw no danger coming from Shi'ite Iran as the majority of Russian Muslims are Sunnis.

This attitude panders to influential strata in Russian public opinion (the so-called Eurasians) that deny the European character of Russian civilization and see Islam as an ally in the fight against the perfidious West. This attitude creates strange bedfellows, incorporating ex-KGB friends of Russian President Vladimir Putin as well as Russian monarchists.

On the other hand, domestic concerns complicate the picture even more. Since the breakup of the USSR a stream of foreign preachers, literature and funds has been flowing into Russia and gradually changing the face of Russian Islam. Muslims have been living side by side with Russians since at least the mid-16th century, when Ivan IV crushed the Tartar khanates in the Volga region and Siberia. Russians still proudly point out that "their" Muslims have remained generally peaceful and loyal to the Russian state, as opposed to France or the UK.

However, the North Caucasus in general and Chechnya, Ingushetia and Dagestan in particular have already become a breeding ground for Islamic radicalism, fuelled by poverty, corruption, a dysfunctional economy and lack of coherent policies by Moscow. Like their counterparts in Europe and America, increasing numbers of young Russian Muslims have started to identify with their co-religionists in Chechnya, Afghanistan and Iraq. It is a slow process but it exists, and it pushes Muslim leaders in Russia to adopt higher political profiles. One mufti recently demanded that a post of vice-president be created in Russia and allocated to a Muslim, a demand that stunned the political class in Moscow.

Meanwhile, growing numbers of Russian nationalists, as well as the wider swathes of the general public, although no friends of the West, have started viewing Islam as the biggest potential threat to Russian identity. Increasing immigration from former Soviet republics with Muslim majorities (like Azerbaijan and Tajikistan) contributes to Russian hostility toward Islam and Muslims.

The Russian state seems to be confused about what to do. It prefers to pander to Muslim sentiments in foreign policy, showing support for Palestinians and Iran and striking up a relationship with the Organization of the Islamic Conference. At home official propaganda lumps Islam, Orthodox Christianity, Buddhism and Judaism together as "traditional religions of Russia" and accentuates their contribution to Russia's "distinct civilization"--a thinly veiled anti-western concept.

However, the Kremlin finds it more and more difficult to deal with the growth of radical Islam at home and also wants the West to look the other way in Chechnya, which is Moscow's official battleground against "international terrorism". This ambiguity will continue as long as Russia's political class remains undecided as to which way it wants to take Russia. The question of Islam has become inseparable from the painful search for Russia's new identity. - Published 6/4/2006 © bitterlemons-international.org



Konstantin von Eggert, MBE, is the Moscow Bureau Editor of the BBC Russian Service.


Russia, sole winner of the Iran crisis
 Yin Gang

Russian President Vladimir Putin invited Hamas to visit Moscow last month, and suggested that Iran transfer its uranium enrichment program to Russian territory. Both proposals exasperated the United States and surprised the world.

In June 2005, the Organization of the Islamic Conference consented to Russian membership with observer status. OIC and Arab League observers were present at Chechnya's recent parliamentary elections, thereby expressing a degree of recognition of Russia's policy on Chechnya and undercutting western criticism.

But why is Putin extending an olive branch to the Islamic world?

Historically, the Islamic world's attitude toward Russia has always been lukewarm or even hostile. Ever since the Tsar's time, relations between Moscow and Muslim regions were characterized by rebellion and repression. This hostility peaked in Stalin's time, when Islamic influence was completely repressed. According to an official document from 1926, Islam was defined as anti-Soviet. Moscow also issued in that year a document entitled Prohibition of Any Form of Islamic Religious Education. Ten thousand mosques and 500 seminaries all over the country were shut down, all estates belonging to mosques were confiscated, and thousands of Islamic religious leaders were sent to concentration camps.

The absolute prohibition of Islam and repression against Muslims was never relaxed until World War II. Although the Soviet regime resumed a policy of religious freedom after the war, religious professionals were still under strict control and all mosques were managed by the government.

During the Cold War, Arab countries were allied with both camps. The Soviet Union's allies were those controlled by Egypt's and Syria's secular regimes. These Arab countries fought against Israel with Soviet military aid. The United States' allies were Arab monarchies that opposed not only Israel but also communism. The war of 1973 marked the decline of Soviet influence. Egypt became America's non-NATO ally and Syria sought US help to realize an "honorable peace" with Israel.

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan irritated the World of Islam. Nowadays it is generally recognized that jihad against infidels first appeared in Afghanistan, with Russia the target. The United States acted as a firm supporter of this jihad, disregarding the long-term consequences.

In this war, Islamic radicalism spread rapidly. After Michael Gorbachev withdrew Soviet troops from Afghanistan, they not only destroyed the pro-Soviet regime there but also began to direct their aggression against the western infidels who had previously supported them. Ultimately, Afghanistan fell into the hands of the Taliban theocracy. Jihad fighters from all over the Middle East congregated there. Across the border Islamic radicalism expanded. Afghanistan became Bin Laden's jihadi headquarters.

Meanwhile, Russia itself was facing severe pressure from the Islamic world. In ten out of 89 federal entities the main population is Muslim. According to official statistics, the Muslim population constitutes about five percent of the total; unofficial statistics put this figure at 15 percent, or over 23 million Muslims. The disintegration of the Soviet Union and institutionalization of freedom of religion inspired religious enthusiasm and ethnic pride among Russian Muslims. Rebellious and terrorist activities emanating from Chechen-Ingush and North Ossetia have severely affected political stability and economic development in Russia, especially since the emergence of the extreme Islamic Truth Party in 1999. Moscow has to carefully consider the long-term consequences of developments among the Islamic population living in Russia.

It is not easy for Russia to build harmonious relations with the Islamic world. During the Balkan War in the 1990s, for example, Moscow was frequently accused by the OIC of supporting the Serbian anti-Muslim regime. A turning point for Russia was the sale of a high-powered nuclear reactor to Iran in 1995. This repaired relations between Russia and Iran and was followed by resumption of weapons exports to Syria, reflecting a Russian ambition to return to the Middle East.

Competing with the United States for the friendship of the Islamic world may become Putin's national policy for Russia. Russia is a convenient ally for Islam, which is under problematic pressure from the West to initiate democratic reform. The cooperation agenda between Russia and the OIC also includes anti-terrorism, meaning that Islamic radicals in Russia will face more pressure.

Putin is smart. Whether or not Hamas is ready to change its position, Russia can claim to have done its best to fulfill its international obligation. Whether the Iran crisis leads to sanctions or a war, Moscow benefits from the outcome, which one way or another will raise the price of oil, thereby bringing more money to Russia, the number two oil-producing country in the world. A war with Iran might affect the Straits of Hormuz, a very important channel for oil transportation, but Russia does not need the straits for its oil exports, which totaled 250 million tons last year, almost twice that of Iran. So Russia would be the only beneficiary of the continuation or escalation of the Iran crisis.

In contrast, China, Japan and South Korea, as major consumers of Gulf oil, would be the ones who pay the bill. In 2005, China paid out ten billion dollars due to higher oil prices for its 130 million tons of imports, while Russia earned 20 billion dollars more.

So in looking at the benefits of the Iran crisis, China and Russia are not on the same boat, even though the two countries ostensibly have similar policies.- Published 6/4/2006 © bitterlemons-international.org


Yin Gang is a research professor of the Institute of West Asian and African Studies, under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. He also serves as deputy secretary general of the Chinese Association of Middle East Studies.


The situation inside Russia
 Alexey Malashenko

If on the map of Russia we were to mark the "wahhabi sites", the resulting spectacle would be more than impressive. The "wahhabi web" covers Russia from Kalinigrad to Vladivostok and from Murmansk to Orenburg. Manifestations of wahhabism have been noted in Tatarstan (in Naberezhnye Chelny, Al'met'evsk, Nizhnekamsk and Kukmor); in Bashkiria (Agidel', Baimak, Oktiabr'sk, Sibai and Ufa); in Mordvinia (Belozer'e); in Samara oblast (Togliatti); and in Kurgansk, Orenburg, Penza, Perm', Ul'ianovsk, Cheliabinsk, and Tiumen' oblasts; not to mention southern Russia from Rostov and Volgograd to the republics in the northern Caucasus. There are wahhabis in Moscow as well, although there are no signs that they engage in regular activity in the capital. (Wahhabi is the term used in Russia for all supporters of radical Islam, and above all those who subscribe to the normative Hanafi and Shaf'i schools that are traditional for Russia, as well as Sufiism.)

However, it is practically impossible to find precise data or even accurate approximations regarding the total number of wahhabis in Russia, or to determine just how strong are the networks of ties between them; nor has a united Russian "wahhabi bureau" been exposed. In general, the largest Russian cities, unlike those in Europe, do not contain Muslim quarters and are not prone to the spread of Islamic radicalism.

At press conferences, the representatives of the security services always talk about the cells of wahhabis that have been crushed and the seizure of field commanders. However, in doing so they confirm that the very phenomenon of wahhabism, or Islamism, has not disappeared, but on the contrary has become even more entrenched.

Some causes for the rise of Islamism are common to the entire Muslim space of Russia. The first and most notable is the global nature of Islam itself and its primordial aspiration to regiment social life. A second factor derives from the first--it is natural for discontent in any Muslim social unit to be expressed in a religious form. And there are more than enough reasons for such discontent in Russia.

The third factor is the lack of stability in the northern Caucasus, the source of which is not only Chechnya but, since 2003-2004, the general situation in the region. There is no need to dramatize its influence on the Russian Muslim population, but at the same time it should be acknowledged that the reverberations of the struggle against local Islamists have echoed throughout Muslim Russia.

A fourth factor is outside influence. After the fall of the Iron Curtain, Russia had the opportunity to fully savor more than just western cultural tradition. Russian Muslims underwent indoctrination from the south and exposure to ideas of "pure Islam" and Islamic fundamentalism--in other words, to other previously unknown types of Islam. In the eyes of certain segments of the Russian Muslim population, especially the youth, these ideas were attractive and seemed more genuine than the brand of Islam personified by the ignorant mullahs and imams, many of whom were reputed to have been agents of the KGB. The appearance of new ideas was accompanied by intensive penetration by foreign Islamic government and non-government organizations, as well as international organizations pursuing both humanitarian and political aims.

Notwithstanding the common factors that explain the revival of Islamism, some distinctions must be made between its appearance in the northern Caucasus and in other regions. Above all, there is a difference in intensity. The level of activity in the northern Caucasus region cannot be compared to what we have in the Volga region and the southern Urals. The Islamists of the northern Caucasus are firmly ensconced in a system of local political ties. They are covertly supported by a number of local politicians and take part in a system of political checks and balances.

In addition, Islamists can and do act according to their own logic and ambitions. They are capable of using Islam as a means of social and political mobilization and they exploit the support of the population that, even if it cannot exactly be described as massive, is sufficiently broad.

The responses to the question of how many wahhabis there are in the northern Caucasus are so diverse that it is impossible to reach a definitive conclusion about their popularity. Thus, in Dagestan the active members of jamaats number 20,000-100,000, and the Ingushetia jamaat has been said to include all adult men in the republic. Following the events in Nal'chik in December 2004 the local jamaat, which allegedly had been destroyed, numbered 20,000 members. True, there are statistics that present a very different picture, e.g., in Dagestan the number of wahhabis remaining is no more than 2,000, in Ingushetia several hundred, and in Chechnya in the range of 1,000. The truth seems closer to the first set of data.

In spite of the discrepancies cited above, it is impossible to ignore the presence in Dagestan of 12 and possibly even more jamaats (and here the data are precise). Hence the Islamists are viewed as a very real political force.

In the Russian Volga region, in the Urals and in Siberia, the Islamists are not very conspicuous. The sphere of their activity is limited and their popularity far less than in the northern Caucasus. At the end of the 1990s, it seemed the Islamists had no chance of gaining strength among the Russian Tatars and Bashkirs. However, at the beginning of the 21st century it became clear that the Islamic radicals had reserve forces. Returning to their homeland, graduates of Arab and Turkish institutes of higher education were able to consolidate in several dozen mosques and gather around them groups of radically inclined Muslim youth. They succeeded in establishing connections with similar-minded people from the Caucasus, as well as contacting radical groups from Central Asia, in particular Hizb al-Takhrir.

As in the northern Caucasus, it is impossible to determine the number of Islamists among Tatar and Bashkir youth. However, there is little doubt that radical Islam has become a more permanent fixture of religious ideology and, in a certain sense, of political practice not only in the south of Russia.

The Islamists have created a split in traditional Islam, having pitted the established Russian Islamic schools of Hanafism, Shafiism and the Tariqatism of the North Caucasus against a trend akin to the Hanbalist school, i.e., "Arab Islam". The conflict between traditional Islam and the Islamists has become ubiquitous. Apart from the northern Caucasus, where it can be observed in its most extreme form, including even armed clashes, it is present in Bashkiria, Volgograd, Ekaterinburg, Izhevsk, Moscow, Omsk, Perm, Petrozavodsk, Tiumen' and other Russian cities.

Unraveling the true potential of Islamism in Russia is a highly complicated task. An entire mythology has developed around it, created by forces within the state--above all, politicians and the special services--by journalists, and by the Islamists themselves. All of them, albeit for different reasons, tend to exaggerate the power of the Islamists. The special services inflate the power of the adversary, and by doing so accentuate their own strength and political significance; journalists traditionally tend to exaggerate in an effort to interest readers. As for the Islamists, including the Chechen insurgents, they are ready at all costs to build for themselves a profile of mujaheddin trying to shake the foundations of Russian statehood. This elevates their own self-image, gives them authority (and inspires terror) among Muslims and, in addition, creates a basis for receiving outside assistance. There are quite a few well known examples in which insurgents claimed responsibility for catastrophes with which they were totally unconnected, for example the 2004 Moscow power failure.

This mythology is disseminated by the experts, particularly in Europe and the US. Their publications and accounts are rife with citations from the Russian mass media, which in turn are based on Islamic websites and excerpts from personal conversations with Muslim politicians, including insurgents. This mythology is exemplified by the discussion about the prospects for "Islamic revolution" in Russia.

It would seem that there is no threat of any kind of Islamic revolution in the Russian Federation. But it does appear that Islamism has evolved into an enduring ideological and political factor. Its ultimate potential has yet to be determined, but it does appear to be on the rise. In any event, the Russian Islamic community considers itself to be a valuable part of the world umma; it shares the idea of Islamic solidarity; and no small portion of it, openly or clandestinely, sympathizes with the Islamists.- Published 6/4/2006 © bitterlemons-international.org


Alexey Malashenko is a professor at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation (MGIMO), and scholar-in-residence at the Carnegie Moscow Center. From 1986 to 2001 he headed the Islamic Department at the Institute of Oriental Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences.




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