|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
When Vladimir Putin became President of Russia in 2000, his first
priority was to reestablish the intelligence agencies' grip on the
country by portraying himself as a strongman protecting Russian
citizens from security threats. Despite condemnation by the United
Nations, the European Parliament, and European Union, the policy of
brutal "ethnic cleansing" in Chechnya continued. For Putin,
Islamist attacks on the United States of September 11, 2001, were a
welcome opportunity to rebrand the war against Chechen
independence, not as the crushing of a democracy, but as a
contribution to President George W. Bush's "War on Terror." In the
years that followed, Putin's regime covertly supported and
manipulated extremist factions in Chechnya and stage-managed
terrorist attacks on its own citizens to justify continuing
aggression. US and European condemnation of Russian atrocities in
Chechnya dwindled as Russia continued to portray Chechen
independence as an international terrorist threat. Chechnya's Prime
Minister-in-Exile Akhmed Zakaev, who had to escape Chechnya, faced
Russian calls for his extradition from the United Kingdom, which
instead granted him political asylum as Russia's increased its
oppressive operations.
Subjugate or Exterminate! is an authoritative first-hand account of
the Russo-Chechen conflict by a Chechen leader who played a central
role in all the main events. Akhmed Zakayev rose rapidly from an
actor of Shakespearean roles to Commander of the Western Group for
the Defense of Ichkeria, and later served as Deputy Prime Minister
of Chechnya and, in exile, as Prime Minister of the Chechen
Republic of Ichkeria (ChRI). It describes how the Kremlin set about
discrediting and destroying a democratic government by interacting
with criminal gangs and fomenting Islamist forces to split the
Chechen independence movement in a perverse reversal of the "War on
Terror." Akhmed Zakayev's memoir begins with a historical survey of
the fraught relations between the Chechens and the Russian Empire
and Soviet Union, up to the collapse of the USSR. The advent of
Gorbachev's Perestroika raised hopes that independence might enable
Chechnya to end centuries of oppression and exploitation. Russia's
first war against Chechnya (1994-1996), initially conceived by the
military as a way of disguising the large-scale theft and
embezzlement of funds from illegal sales of Soviet armaments during
the withdrawal from East Germany, ended in humiliating defeat for
Russia. Thereafter, Russia set about subverting the democratically
elected government of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria by
instigating the gruesome murder of Western humanitarian aid workers
and business partners, and by financing criminal gangs and
anti-democratic Islamist groups that the ChRI police were unable to
subdue. Interference by nationals of countries in the Middle East
caused further disruption. In August 1999, Russia launched a brutal
second war in Chechnya, on grounds widely believed to be fabricated
and characterized by widespread war crimes. The West did not
intervene. This is an eyewitness account of the dangers faced by
the Chechen leaders as they tried to resist and negotiate with a
treacherous opponent. It ends in the year 2000, with Vladimir
Putin's election as Russia's president.
Subjugate or Exterminate! is an authoritative first-hand account of
the Russo-Chechen conflict by a Chechen leader who played a central
role in all the main events. Akhmed Zakayev rose rapidly from an
actor of Shakespearean roles to Commander of the Western Group for
the Defense of Ichkeria, and later served as Deputy Prime Minister
of Chechnya and, in exile, as Prime Minister of the Chechen
Republic of Ichkeria (ChRI). It describes how the Kremlin set about
discrediting and destroying a democratic government by interacting
with criminal gangs and fomenting Islamist forces to split the
Chechen independence movement in a perverse reversal of the "War on
Terror." Akhmed Zakayev's memoir begins with a historical survey of
the fraught relations between the Chechens and the Russian Empire
and Soviet Union, up to the collapse of the USSR. The advent of
Gorbachev's Perestroika raised hopes that independence might enable
Chechnya to end centuries of oppression and exploitation. Russia's
first war against Chechnya (1994-1996), initially conceived by the
military as a way of disguising the large-scale theft and
embezzlement of funds from illegal sales of Soviet armaments during
the withdrawal from East Germany, ended in humiliating defeat for
Russia. Thereafter, Russia set about subverting the democratically
elected government of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria by
instigating the gruesome murder of Western humanitarian aid workers
and business partners, and by financing criminal gangs and
anti-democratic Islamist groups that the ChRI police were unable to
subdue. Interference by nationals of countries in the Middle East
caused further disruption. In August 1999, Russia launched a brutal
second war in Chechnya, on grounds widely believed to be fabricated
and characterized by widespread war crimes. The West did not
intervene. This is an eyewitness account of the dangers faced by
the Chechen leaders as they tried to resist and negotiate with a
treacherous opponent. It ends in the year 2000, with Vladimir
Putin's election as Russia's president.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
|