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Caucasus
Profits of Doom
2003-11-26
Andrei Petrov (not this soldier’s real name) knew he’d never have a better chance than this. It was a scorching August day in 1999 and Petrov — commander of a Russian special-ops team in Dagestan, a Russian republic bordering Chechnya — had Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev in his sights. Earlier that month, Basayev had led an invasion of Dagestan and called upon local separatists to help in the fight against Russia. With a simple squeeze of his finger, Petrov could take out Basayev, the Chechens’ most effective guerrilla general and the man responsible for some of the conflict’s worst terrorist attacks. But Petrov says he received the following order over his walkie-talkie: "Hold your fire."
What?
"We just watched Basayev’s long column of trucks and jeeps withdraw from Dagestan back to Chechnya under cover provided by our own attack helicopters," Petrov recalls. "We could have wiped him out then and there, but the bosses in Moscow wanted him alive. They want the war to go on indefinitely [because of] the money: millions made in oil, millions made in the arms trade, millions siphoned off from funds earmarked for reconstruction. That’s why the war can never end."
I'm not too sure that statement makes any sense. Sounds like a war story to me...
Though a senior Russian Federal official dismisses Petrov’s story as "improbable," other Chechnya vets have told similar tales, and in his book Forgotten Chechnya the late State Duma Deputy Yuri Shchekochikhin stated that the Basayev column was escorted out of Dagestan by Russian choppers. President Vladimir Putin, who came to power in 1999 vowing to quell the Chechen insurgency, says that the battle there is part of the global war against terrorism. But for many Moscow officials and Russian soldiers on the front lines, it has become a form of government-sanctioned organized crime. Last May, General Victor Kazantsev, Putin’s envoy to the Southern Federal District that includes Chechnya, said that $6 million earmarked for Chechnya had been siphoned off by officials in Moscow. According to Usman Masayev, deputy head of the pro-Moscow Chechen administration, only 20% of $148 million earmarked to reconstruct Chechnya last year made it to the republic.
That part sounds likely enough. Not too sure about the ratios, but I'm not surprised somebody's raking off...
The Chechen war is a deadly business, but according to confidential government reports, the Russian military estimates that 75% of Russian casualties are due to friendly fire. "Russian losses, allegedly caused by friendly fire, often result from showdowns between rival army and police forces," says Mitrophanov. They clash over the right to fleece the Chechens coming through lucrative checkpoints, or over "protection" rights for tank trucks smuggling oil across the Chechen border. Or, says Petrov, they just clash when too much vodka releases the traditional enmity between soldiers and cops. "Russian soldiers guard oil rigs that are run by the very Chechen warlords they’re supposed to be fighting," Mitrophanov says. The payoff — up to $10,000 for a common riot police trooper serving a three-month-long stint — is too big to ignore for starving and ill-equipped conscripts who normally make $100 to $160 a month in Chechnya. The Russians also do a brisk trade as arms merchants, selling their own weapons to the Chechens. "The Chechens have state-of-the art, Russian-made weapons, including sharp shooters’ rifles and automatic rifles that we don’t have," Petrov says. "They even have choppers, now hidden in the mountains. Guess who sells them all that matériel."
Posted by:Paul Moloney

#3  The widespread army corruption problem has existed since BEFORE WW II. There have always been Russians - from lowly privates to Field Marshalls - that did their bit to siphon off whatever they could in order to have a bit more enjoyment. A quarter of all gasoline, alcohol, and anything else easily converted to non-military use disappeared in Germany on a routine basis. There was a constant 'investigation' ongoing, and people were caught, but it didn't stop the corruption.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2003-11-26 10:45:54 AM  

#2  IIRC, this widespread army corruption problem was already quite present during the first chechen war. I wonder what Poutin is willing/able to do about it?
Posted by: Anonymous   2003-11-26 7:27:07 AM  

#1  Catch Twenty Two, No?
Posted by: Lucky   2003-11-26 1:33:24 AM  

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