Putin's handling of Chechnya is back firing, like the US's handling of Iraq/Afghan/Pak. Now perhaps we see why he was so forceful with Georgia, he needs all the allies he can get in the region, since enemies are everywhere. Ronald Reagan's creation of Al Qaeda continues to give the world nightmares.
A week of extremist attacks on Russia’s seething southern flank climaxed Monday with a suicide truck bombing in Ingushetia that killed at least 20 and injured scores outside a police station in the tiny republic’s main city, Nazran.
The resulting explosion triggered a “raging fire†that destroyed a weapons room, incinerated nearby cars, and damaged nearby apartment buildings, according to an Associated Press (AP) report from Nazran. It was one of the deadliest attacks in the region in years, the AP said.
Violence by Islamist insurgents, once confined mainly to separatist Chechnya, has gradually spread throughout much of Russia’s northern Caucasus, leaving Russian authorities increasingly unable to guarantee order, or even protect pro-Moscow officials, in the mainly Muslim region. (See map.)
For Moscow, the stakes are huge. The northern Caucasus region is Russia’s gateway to the energy-rich and strategically vital southern Caucasus, which includes the former Soviet nations of Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia.
Worsening violence in the area could seriously disrupt the planned 2014 Winter Olympics in nearby Sochi, into which former President Vladimir Putin invested about $12 billion along with his own personal prestige.
Concerns Moscow could lose control
Long-simmering concerns that Moscow could lose control in the volatile northern Caucasus, where Chechen rebels have waged a persistent insurgency since 1991, are spiking again given the past week of attacks.
via Truck bomb signals trouble on Russia’s southern flank | csmonitor.com.
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- Suicide Bomber Kills 18 At Russian Police HQ (news.sky.com)
- Assassination attempt on YunusBek Yevkurov in Ingushetia (telegraph.co.uk)
- World Briefing | Europe: Russia: Gunmen Kill Government Official in Ingushetia (nytimes.com)
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