simon, nabi, and shamil
today monica and ivan had
interviews in the morning and late afternoon. in the morning we met with two
alums of harvard's kennedy school. in the afternoon it was shamil beno, the
former chechen foreign minister under dudayev.
Another early morning, but
cooler than
yesterday.Today the
day began with me taking care of Ingrid while Mom, Monica, and Sam slept. Ingrid
and I played silly games until Sam woke up. I made coffee, but I'm tired of
scrambled eggs and toast so I kind of ditched making breakfast until Monica got
up and made, well, scrambled eggs and
toast.Our first
interview was scheduled for 10:30 a.m.; and we met at Academia cafe, which is
right around the corner from us. We actually made it right on time too. The
hardest part was leaving, because Ingrid has started to make it a habit to fuss
and cry and carry on as if we were being exiled and she'd never see us again
(Mom later told us that after we left she went right into our bedroom and laid
down for a solid protest
nap).
Our morning meeting
was marked by good coffee (Academia was closed so we moved down to a place
called Zen Coffee of all things) and good conversation about Chechnya and the
Russian Federation. Monica and I were surprised to learn that our interviewees
had only recently (in the last few years) attended the Kennedy School's master's
program. How had we missed them? Needless to say their English was impeccable.
Both men were from Central Asia and both were experts on issues relating to
Chechnya and Daghestan and the Russian
Federation.The
interview itself was a bit less interesting for me than for Monica. Essentially,
these two confirmed much of what we'd already learned from other sources. The
situation after the first Chechen war was a catch-22: Chechens desperately
needed reconstruction (and lots of it) aid to improve their security and give
local fighters and youth jobs, but foreign donors were reluctant to send aid in
an insecure environment. Russian defeat had been due mainly to incompetence and
to applying the wrong type of forces to combat Dudayev's fighters. Its human
rights abuses were incidental to that mix of forces, lack of training and
discipline, and above all lack of proper supply. Western countries were also
reluctant to recognize Chechen independence because of the general preference of
states to support the standard of sovereign immunity for fear of setting a
dangerous precedent (most of the world's states are multinational, which means
allowing one national group to hive off may inadvertently encourage others to
try it, starting a chain reaction that disintegrates the state). Simon confirmed
something else that nagged me: the Russian Federation has no system in place to
properly train and retain professional non-commissioned officers; which means it
is nearly impossible for its troops to maintain hard-learned lessons from past
combat. Essentially, each unit has a baptism of fire, learns by trial and error
how to survive and increase effectiveness, and then the enlisted men quit and go
home, leaving the next group of recruits to learn everything all over again
under a different set of junior
officers.We parted at
lunchtime, and returned to the apartment to see how the kids were doing. Were
they asleep or awake? Ingrid woke as soon as we arrived and Sam had cabin fever
(so did Mom I think); so we decided to try the lunch special at Academia (now
open).
The meal was
fantastic as usual; and afterward I walked Mom (with Ingrid) to a local
bookstore to stock her up on more pulp fiction (she's already burned through
what she brought with her). Monica took Sam home for a nap (a very tired boy he
was).Our next
interview was scheduled for 5:00 p.m. at the old hotel Rossiya, just northeast
of the Kremlin complex. Before that though, we needed a resupply mission (water,
milk, and so on), so Mom agreed to watch Sam as he slept while Monica and I took
Ingrid up to Yeliseev's (we bought more eggs, but this time cereal as
well).We arrived home
with just enough time to put the groceries away before heading out to our final
interview of the day with Shamil Beno; a figure as colorful as he was legendary.
This time the walk was a relatively short 15 minutes, and as we walked I snapped
a few photos in Red Square (Russia's independence day celebration is Saturday,
so normal restrictions in the square are suspended while workmen prepare a huge
scaffolding and stage for the speeches). If you look closely at the photo of me
in front of the Lenin Mausoleum you can just make out the reflections of the
coats of arms of all the component regions of the Russian Federation in the
marble.
We arrived at the
Rossiya (dingy looking hotel on the right) on time, but Shamil did not meet us
in the lobby. After Monica phoned him, however, he came right down. We moved off
to a small bar in the hotel where Monica and I indelicately (unwisely too: the
thing nearly put me to sleep) ordered beers while Shamil (a Muslim) had coffee.
But the interview was wonderful. We asked questions in English (slowly) and
Shamil answered them in (rapid) Russian. I confess my Russian is so rusty I only
got about two-thirds of his answers to Monica's questions. But it was clear she
challenged him on several counts. For example, Shamil characterized Basayev (the
charismatic terrorist leader du jour in Chechnya) as a frustrated separatist
whose relations with fundamentalist Islamists (Jihadis and Wahabbis, many from
Saudi Arabia) were purely pragmatic. Monica asked "if this is true, why carry
the war to Daghestan and Ingushetia (as was done last year and the year
before)?As to the
military situation, I asked only one question: was Russia's "success" in the
second war due to better Russian training and strategy, or to a shift in
political objectives from the original goal of re-establishing the status quo
prior to the first war (a stable Chechen state subservient to Moscow), to the
simpler objective of punishing the Chechens (and perhaps setting an example for
other separatist wanna-be's)? His answer was to read an interview by Ivan
Rybkin, a former member of Russia's Parliament, in Nezavisimaya Gazyeta (1996);
which revealed all. I will do that, but Shamil seemed to support the "lowered
political objectives"
argument.A final faux
pas was that I paid our bar tab as we left the bar (Shamil protested and
appeared genuinely put out). Shamil invited us to a Caucasian dinner later in
our stay (Mom and the kids will go too: very
exciting).By now over
two hours had elapsed and so Monica and I rushed home to relieve Mom and get
dinner made. Dinner, it turned out, would be home made chicken soup, with fresh
cabbage and carrots, and hearty brown bread with raisins and nuts. It took
Monica about half an hour to finish making dinner and it was the best
yet.I have no idea
what we're doing tomorrow. Everyone's asleep already but me. It's 11:15 p.m. and
the sun is only now just starting to set.
Posted: Thu - June 9, 2005 at 11:19 PM
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Published On: Jun 10, 2005 11:05 PM
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