'Anytime, Anywhere'
Suicide bombings kill the idea the West is winning the war on terror
Death in Chechnya
Will the bombs hurt Putin?
Morocco
Round up the unusual suspects
Saudi Arabia
Royals find themselves in al-Qaeda's crosshairs
War Without End
Even on the run, al-Qaeda is a resilient threat to the West
Hammas Goes Global
The terror group considers attacking U.S. interests in Iraq

Can Al-Qaeda ever be beaten?

Yes
No
Perhaps



After Bali
The battle to break up Al-Qaeda's plots
[10/20/2002]
Theatre of War
Inside the Moscow Seige
[11/4/2002]

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SERGEI GUNEYEV FOR TIME
AVERTING HIS EYES: Putin says Chechen unrest is "behind us now."


No End In Sight
The war in Chechnya helped Putin win the Russian presidency. With a wave of new suicide bombings, could it now become his downfall?
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Posted Sunday, May 18, 2003; 13.05BST
Bombings and gunfire are constant features of life in Chechnya. But even by those standards, the carnage last week in the breakaway Russian republic was heavy. On Monday a truck packed with explosives rumbled into a compound of offices and homes in the northern district of Nadterechny and exploded, killing 59 people and injuring over 200.

Two days later, another bomb killed 18 and injured over 100 as it ripped through a crowd of 15,000 gathered for festivities marking the birth of the Prophet Muhammad in a field near a religious shrine in Iliskhan-Yurt, a village 30 km east of the capital, Grozny. That afternoon in Moscow, 2,000 km north of Grozny, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell — fresh from his tour of a bombed-out residential compound in Riyadh — condemned the Chechen attacks. Standing beside him, Russian President Vladimir Putin found parallels among the Chechen and Saudi atrocities, saying they were all "links in the same chain of acts by international terrorists."

Although al-Qaeda has infiltrated Chechnya, there's no evidence it orchestrated last week's Chechen attacks. And if Putin was looking for parallels he might have found a better one in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Like the Palestinians, the Chechens believe they are fighting an occupying power rather than carrying out an al-Qaeda-style, ideologically motivated jihad. Chechen resistance to Russian domination dates back centuries, and the population — said by Russia to be more than 1 million, but estimated by human-rights groups at around half that — remains largely hostile to Russian rule.

The disaffection of ethnic Chechens, who are Sunni Muslims, has created openings for international terrorist groups like al-Qaeda. But Putin, who faces re-election next year, was right on another point. The outcome of Russia's and the U.S.'s respective wars on terror will have a lot to do with whom each country elects as President in 2004. "The bombings effectively mark the beginning of the election campaign," says Alexei Mitrophanov, Deputy of the State Duma, the lower house of the Russian parliament.

Putin swept to power in 1999 on a wave of public support for his tough stance against Chechen insurgents, who were alleged to have killed more than 300 people in a series of apartment-building bombings within Russia. Now, as the violence in Chechnya intensifies, Putin faces a stark political reality. "If the Chechen war made Putin President, the same war can undo him," says Yuri Shchekhochikhin, Deputy Chair of the Duma's Security Committee. Adds Salambek Maigov, the Moscow-based representative of rebel Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov: "Putin has manacled himself to a hell-bound train and can't get off. He has made himself a hostage to the situation."

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The Year of The Nuke
A rundown of the world's nuclear powerhouses, and what to expect in the coming months
QUICK LINKS: Intro | Chechnya | Morocco | Saudi Arabia | Back to TIMEeurope.com Home
FROM THE MAY 26, 2003 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2003

BANNER PHOTO BY MUSA SADULAYEV/AP

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