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WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
ARTICLE:
Volume XVII, No 4, WINTER 2000/01
Against
Russophobia
Anatol Lieven
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Ever since
the Cold War ended, Western officials and commentators have been
telling the Russians how they need to grow out of their Cold War
attitudes toward the West and Western institutions, and learn to
see things in a "modern" and "normal" way. And there is a good deal
of truth in this. At the same time, it would have been good if we
had subjected our own inherited attitudes toward Russia to a more
rigorous scrutiny. For like any other inherited hatred, blind, dogmatic
hostility toward Russia leads to bad policies, bad journalism, and
the corruption of honest debate-and there is all too much of this
hatred in Western portrayals of and comments on Russia.
From this point
of view, an analysis of Russophobia has implications that go far
beyond Russia. Much of the U.S. foreign policy debate, especially
on the Republican side, is structured around the belief that American
policy should be rooted in a robust defense of national interest-and
this is probably also the belief of most ordinary Americans. However,
this straightforward view coexists with another, equally widespread,
view that dominates the media. It is, in Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright's words, that "the United States stands taller than other
nations, and therefore sees further." The unspoken assumption here
is that America is not only wise but also objective, at least in
its perceptions: that U.S. policy is influenced by values, but never
by national prejudices. The assumption behind much American (and
Western) reporting of foreign conflicts is that the writer is morally
engaged but ethnically uncommitted and able to turn a benign, all-seeing
eye from above on the squabbles of humanity.
It is impossible
to exaggerate how irritating this attitude is elsewhere in the world,
or how misleading and dangerous it is for Western audiences who
believe it. Not only does it contribute to mistaken policies, but
it renders both policymakers and ordinary citizens incapable of
understanding the opposition of other nations to those policies.
Concerning the Middle East, it seems likely that most Americans
genuinely believe that the United States is a neutral and objective
broker in relations between Israelis and Palestinians-which can
only appear to an Arab as an almost fantastically bad joke. This
belief makes it much more difficult for Americans to comprehend
the reasons for Palestinian and Arab fury at both the United States
and Israel. It encourages a Western interpretation of this anger
as the manipulation of sheep-like masses by elites. At worst, it
can encourage a kind of racism, in which certain nations are classed
as irrationally, irredeemably savage and wicked.
Concerning
Russia, the main thrust of the official Western rhetoric with respect
to the enlargement of NATO, and Russia's response, has been that
the alliance is no longer a Cold War organization or a threat to
Russia, that NATO enlargement has nothing to do with Russia, that
Russia should welcome enlargement, and that Russian opposition is
not merely groundless but foolish and irrational. It is of course
true that Russian fears of NATO expansion have been exaggerated,
and some of the rhetoric has been wild. Still, given the attitudes
toward Russia reflected in much of the Western media (especially
among the many supporters of NATO enlargement), a Russian would
have to be a moron or a traitor to approve the expansion of NATO
without demanding guarantees of Russian interests and security.1
This is not
to deny that there has been a great deal to condemn in many aspects
of Russian behavior over the past decade, the war in Chechnya being
the most ghastly example. But justifiable Western criticism has
all too often been marred by attacks that have been hysterical and
one-sided, and it has taken too little account of the genuine problems
and threats with which Russians have had to struggle. This has been
especially true of comment on the latest Chechen war, which began
in the summer of 1999.
Outworn
Stereotypes
Western Russophobia has various roots. One shoot is the continuing
influence of what the political scientist Michael Mandelbaum has
called "residual elites": groups and individuals who rose to prominence
during the Cold War and have lacked the flexibility to adapt to
a new reality. To these can be added others who have sought to carve
out careers by advocating the expansion of U.S. influence into the
lands of the former Soviet Union, in direct competition with Russia.
Then there are various ethnic lobbies, whose members hate and distrust
Russia for historical reasons and whose sole remaining raison d'être
is to urge an anti-Russian geopolitical agenda. Finally, there are
those individuals who need a great enemy, whether from some collective
interest or out of personal psychological need.
Much of the
intellectual basis for, and even the specific phraseology of, Russophobia
was put forward in Britain in the nineteenth century, growing out
of its rivalry with the Russian Empire.2 Given Britain's own record
of imperial aggression and suppression of national revolt (in Ireland,
let alone in India or Africa), the argument from the British side
was a notable example of the kettle calling the pot black. Many
contemporary Russophobe references to Russian expansionism are almost
word-for-word repetitions of nineteenth-century British propaganda3
(though many pre-1917 Russians were almost as bad, weeping copious
crocodile tears over Britain's defeat of the Boers shortly before
Russia itself crushed Polish aspirations for the fourth time in
a hundred years).
When it comes
to Western images of other nations and races, there has been an
effort in recent decades to move from hostile nineteenth-century
stereotypes, especially when linked to "essentialist" historical
and even quasi-racist stereotypes about the allegedly unchanging
nature and irredeemable wickedness of certain peoples (though it
seems that this enlightened attitude does not apply to widespread
American attitudes toward Arabs).
If outworn
stereotypes persist in the case of Russia, it is not only because
of Cold War hostility toward the Soviet Union (identified crudely
and unthinkingly with "Russia," although this was a gross oversimplification).
It is also the legacy of Soviet and Russian studies within Western
academe. Its practitioners were often deeply ideological (whether
to the right or left) and closely linked to Western policy debates
and to the Western intelligence and diplomatic communities. On the
right, there was a tendency, exemplified by the Harvard historian
Richard Pipes, to see Soviet communism as a uniquely Russian product,
produced and prefigured by a millennium of Russian history. In a
1996 article, Professor Pipes wrote of an apparently fixed and unchanging
"Russian political culture" leading both to the adoption of the
Leninist form of Marxism in 1917 and to the problems of Russian
democracy in 1996-as if this culture had not changed in the past
80 years, and as if the vote of ordinary Russians for the Communists
in 1996 was motivated by the same passions that possessed Lenin's
Red Guards.4 Even after the Soviet collapse, this tendency has persisted,
and developments in postSoviet Russia are seen as a seamless continuation
of specifically Soviet and tsarist patterns-patterns which, it goes
without saying, are also specifically and uniquely wicked.5
To be sure,
many of the crimes of communism in Russia and in the Soviet bloc
were uniquely wicked. But the behavior of the tsarist empire
and the dissolution of its Soviet version in the 1990s can only
be validly judged in the context of European and North American
imperialism, decolonization, and neo-colonialism. Pre-1917 imperial
Russia's expansionism was contemporaneous with that of Spain, France,
Holland, Belgium, Britain, and the United States. As far as the
Soviet Union's disintegration is concerned, Russophobes cannot have
it both ways. If the Soviet Union was to a considerable extent a
Russian empire, then the legitimate context for the study of its
disintegration is the retreat of other empires and their attempts
to create post- or neo-colonial systems. In this context-particularly
bearing in mind France's retreat from its Asian and African empire-the
notion that the Soviet/ Russian decolonization process has been
uniquely savage becomes absurd. Such comparisons are essential in
attempting to determine what has been specifically Soviet, or specifically
Russian, about this process, and what reflects wider historical
realities.
A Historicist
Approach
These comparisons are rarely made. References to allegedly
unique and unchanging historical patterns in Russian behavior are
an ongoing trope of much of Western journalistic and academic comment.
Take for example a recent statement by Henry Kissinger: "For four
centuries, imperialism has been Russia's basic foreign policy as
it has expanded from the region around Moscow to the shores of the
Pacific, the gates of the Middle East and the center of Europe,
relentlessly subjugating weaker neighbors and seeking to overawe
those not under its direct control."6 This not only implies that
expansionism was uniquely Russian but that it represents an unchangeable
pattern. Yet for virtually this entire period, the same remark could
have been made about the British, the French, or (within North and
Central America at least) the United States. It is also extremely
odd that in 1989-93, "Russia" conducted what was probably the greatest,
and most bloodless imperial retreats in history and that this has
simply vanished from Kissinger's account. At worst, such attitudes
can approach a kind of racism, as in the conservative political
commentator George Will's statement that "expansionism is in the
Russians' DNA."7
Another example
of such thinking is former national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski's
statement that "[the Russians] have denied many, many times now
that they have committed atrocities [in Chechnya].¼ In 1941, they
killed 15,000 Polish prisoners, officers in Katyn, and they denied
that for 50 years."8 In his account, "the Russians" as a collectivity
are fully responsible for the crimes committed by the Soviet Union
under the Communist dictatorship of Joseph Stalin-an ethnic Georgian
who at the time of the massacre at Katyn was also responsible for
murdering or imprisoning millions of ethnic Russians who were accused
of hostility toward communism or toward Stalin himself. This Stalinist
past is then made part of a seamless continuity of "Russian" behavior,
running unchanged through the years since Stalin's death. The condemnation
of Stalinism by Nikita Khrushchev, the reforms of Mikhail Gorbachev,
the peaceful Soviet withdrawal from Poland, the Russian recognition
of the independence of the other Soviet republics-all this is ignored.
As Brzezinski's
statement illustrates, this essentialist attitude toward Russia
has played a major part in the reporting of and commentary on, the
latest Chechen war. Take, for example, a recent editorial in the
Los Angeles Times: "Russians also fight brutally because
that is part of the Russian military ethos, a tradition of total
war fought with every means and without moral restraints."9 Unlike,
of course, the exquisite care for civilian lives displayed by the
French and American air forces during the wars in Indo-China, Korea,
and Algeria, the strict adherence to legality in the treatment of
prisoners, and so on. The editorial read as if the wars against
guerrillas and partisans involving Western powers had been wiped
from the record. (What was most depressing was that it followed
two articles on Russian and Chechen atrocities by Maura Reynolds
and Robyn Dixon in the same newspaper that were the very models
of careful, objective-and utterly harrowing-reportage).10
This historicist
approach toward Russia also reflects the decline of history as an
area of study, an ignorance of history on the part of international
relations scholars, and the unwillingness of too many historians
themselves to step beyond their own narrow fields. The attitudes
it reveals also spring from a widespread feeling that Russophobia
is somehow legitimized by the past Western struggle against Communist
totalitarianism, a struggle I strongly supported. This is deeply
mistaken. With communism dead as a world ideology, dealing with
Russia-or China for that matter-has become the much more familiar,
historically commonplace question of dealing with nations and states,
which we on occasion may have to oppose and condemn, but whose behavior
is governed by the same interests and patterns that historically
have influenced the behavior of our own countries. In fact, both
the policy and the statements of Russian generals with respect to
Chechnya not only recall those of French generals during the Algerian
War of Independence (1954-62), but of Turkish generals during the
recent war against the Kurdish PKK: the ruthless prosecution of
the war (including in the Turkish case major attacks on PKK bases
in Iraq); a refusal to negotiate with the enemy; no role whatsoever
for international organizations. None of this is, or ever was, praiseworthy,
but "communism" plays no role in it.
I might add
that many old hard-line Cold Warriors-turned-Russophobes like Brzezinski
and Kissinger have in any case rendered their pretensions to anticommunist
morality dubious by the warmth with which they embrace the Chinese
state, as well as their wooing of hard-line ex-Communist dictators
in Central Asia and elsewhere.11
Architectures
of Hatred
Russophobia today is therefore rooted not in ideological differences
but in national hatred of a kind that is sadly too common. In these
architectures of hatred, selected or invented historical "facts"
about the "enemy" nation, its culture, and its racial nature are
taken out of context and slotted into prearranged intellectual structures
to arraign the unchanging wickedness of the other side. Meanwhile,
any counterarguments, or memories of the crimes of one's own are
suppressed. This is no more legitimate when directed by Russophobes
against Russia than when it is directed by Serb, Greek, or Armenian
chauvinists against Turkey, Arabs against Jews, or Jews against
Arabs.
The most worrying
aspect of Western Russophobia is that it demonstrates the capacity
of too many Western journalists and intellectuals to betray their
own professed standards and behave like Victorian jingoists or Balkan
nationalists when their own national loyalties and hatreds are involved.
And these tendencies in turn serve wider needs. Overall, we are
living in an exceptionally benign period in human history so far
as our own interests are concerned. Yet one cannot live in Washington
without becoming aware of the desperate need of certain members
of Western elites for new enemies, or resuscitated old ones. This
is certainly not the wish of most Americans-nor of any other Westerners-and
it is dangerous. For of one thing we can be sure: a country that
is seen to need enemies will sooner or later find them everywhere.
As an antidote,
Western journalists and commentators writing on the Chechen wars
might read Alistair Horne's A Savage War of Peace (about
the French war in Algeria), Max Hastings's Korean War (especially
the passages dealing with the capture of Seoul in 1950 and the U.S.
air campaign), any serious book on the U.S. war in Vietnam or French
policies in Africa, or more general works like V. G. Kiernan's Colonial
Empires and Armies. With regard to Russian crimes in Chechnya,
they could also read some of the remarks on the inherent cruelty
of urban warfare by Western officers in journals like the Marine
Corps Gazette and Parameters. Neither Horne nor Hastings
(both patriotic conservatives) were "soft on communism"; nor are
most military writers "soft on Russia." They are true professionals
with a commitment to present the facts, however uncomfortable-and
they have the moral courage to do so. Concerning the pre-1917 Russian
Empire in the context of European imperial expansion in general,
I could also recommend (by way of a family advertisement and to
reveal my own intellectual influences) my brother Dominic Lieven's
recent book, Empire: The Russian Empire and Its Rivals.12
A familiar
counterargument to this approach is that Western colonial and neocolonial
crimes are long past, and that we have atoned for them. To this
there are a number of responses, the first of which is that some
allowance has to be made for the fact that Russia only emerged from
Communist isolation about ten years ago, whereas at the time of
their crimes the Western colonial powers were democracies and longstanding
members of the "free world." And while some have excused the crimes
of other former communist states on the nature of the system they
have abjured, such leniency has not been shown toward Russia.
Then there
is geography. Western powers escaped involvement in ex-colonial
conflicts by putting the sea between themselves and their former
colonies. Britain, for examples, was not directly affected by wars
in any former colonies except Ireland, because they occurred at
a distance. Russia thought it was making a similar break when it
withdrew from Chechnya in 1996-but in its case of course there was
no ocean in between. If France had had a land border with Algeria,
the war there might well have gone on far longer than it did.
I believe that
the Russian invasion of Chechnya in October 1999 was a terrible
mistake, and that the government in Moscow ought to have done everything
in its power to find other ways of dealing with the Chechen threat.
At the same time, any honest account must recognize that forces
based in Chechnya had carried out attacks on Russia that would have
provoked most other states in the world-including the United States-to
respond forcefully. How would France have reacted if the French
withdrawal from Algeria had been immediately followed by Algerian
raids into France?13
And then there
is the question of the brutal way in which the Russians conducted
the war, especially the destruction of Grozny. Since the early 1970s,
it has been difficult to say whether the Western conduct of antipartisan
wars or urban operations has improved because, as a result of Vietnam,
Americans have taken enormous care to avoid involvement in such
wars-and once again, geography has given the United States that
option. But when American soldiers became involved in a lethal urban
fight in Mogadishu in 1994, the indiscriminate way in which retaliatory
firepower was used meant that Somali casualties (the great majority
of them civilian) outnumbered U.S. casualties by between twenty-five
and fifty to one.14 In other words, to some extent the degree of
carnage in Chechnya reflects not inherent and historical Russian
brutality, but the nature of urban warfare.
That the Russian
have been extremely brutal in Chechnya is beyond questionbut explanations
for this should be sought less in Russian history than in the common
roots that produced U.S. atrocities in Vietnam-a demoralized army
under attack from hidden enemies operating from within the civilian
population. I have no doubt that even in Chechnya, Western troops
would have behaved much better than the Russians. But then again,
the West's soldiers come from proud, well-paid services, and are
honored and supported by their societies. If American, French, or
British troops had undergone the treatment by their own state that
Russian soldiers suffered in the 1990s (notably the catastrophic
decline in spending on the armed forces, and especially on military
pay), and were then thrown into a bloody partisan war, one would
not like to answer for their behavior.
Moreover, especially
with regard to the French and their sphere of influence in Africa,
it is not true that Western crimes are necessarily long in the past.
If one examines French "sphere-of-influence" policies toward Rwanda
before and during the 1994 genocide (as analyzed by Gerard Prunier,
Philip Gourevitch, and others), one finds a record uglier than anything
Russia has done since 1991 beyond its own borders. Why should Russians
listen to French lectures? In France, leading figures deeply implicated
in the Algerian debacle-like former president François Mitterrand-continued
to play leading roles until their deaths. In both Algeria and Vietnam
(and in British campaigns such as that against the Mau Mau), the
punishments meted out to Western officers accused of atrocities
were either derisory or nonexistent. Is this of no relevance to
present demands that Russia punish its soldiers for atrocities in
Chechnya?
To draw these
parallels in no way justifies Russian crimes in Chechnya or elsewhere-and
I firmly believe that the Russian state should try to punish some
of the officers directly responsible for crimes in Chechnya-both
as a matter of justice and morality, and as a means of reimposing
order on what too often resembles an armed rabble more than a modern
organized force. I also believe, however, that Western pressure
for this would be better phrased in the terms used by President
Clinton during a visit to Turkey. When he criticized the Turkish
government and military for their policies toward the Kurds, he
made it clear that he was doing so not from a position of moral
superiority but as the representative of a country which itself
had been guilty of racism and ethnic suppression.
This I believe
is a more honorable and effective way of making the point. In contrast,
I would condemn the statements of certain German and Belgian politicians
who oppose Turkish membership in the European Union-not for economic
reasons or because of particular actions by contemporary Turkish
governments, but because of supposedly innate, unchanging Turkish
national features such as adherence to a negatively stereotyped
Islam.
Rejecting
Bigotry
Rejecting this sort of bigotry with regard to Russia, and insisting
on proper balance and use of evidence, is what has led me to the
extremely unwelcome position of appearing to defend some aspects
of Russian policy in the Caucasus-not because I wish to defend Russian
crimes (which have been legion) but because I cannot accept that
Russia should be judged by utterly different standards than those
applied to other countries.
The crimes
of a General Massu against Algerian civilians in the 1950s do not
justify the crimes of a General Kvashnin in Chechnya, any more than
the crimes of a General Kitchener against South Africans during
the Boer War justified those of Massu. Nor do French sphere-of-influence
policies in Africa in themselves justify similar Russian policies
in its "Near Abroad." In fact, if the French (for example) who harangue
Russia on its sins would make some reference to their country's
own past crimes, it would actually make their arguments stronger.
Then, one could have a rational argument with a Russian about historical,
ethnic, political, and geographical similarities and differences
between, say, Algeria and Chechnya, and about what are Russian crimes,
what is truly in Russia's interest, and how Russia should reasonably
be expected to handle Chechnya.
Such a comparative
approach would eliminate the essentialist, or chauvinist/ historicist/racist
element in critiques of Russia. It would allows an analysis based
on common moral standards and, equally important, common standards
of evidence and logic in the reporting and analysis of Chechnya
and other issues involving Russia. This, in turn, would permit a
policy toward Russia based on reason and Western interest, not on
bigotry, hysteria, and nationalist lobbies.
An example
of how blind hostility toward Russia-and the absence of any comparison
to other postcolonial situationscan warp Western reporting may be
seen in the following passage from the Economist of last
September: "Russia may be using still dodgier tactics elsewhere.
Uzbekistan, an autocratically run and independent-minded country
in Central Asia, is facing a mysterious Islamic insurgency. Its
president, Islam Karimov, said crossly this week that Russia was
exaggerating the threat, and was trying to intimidate his country
into accepting Russian bases."15 As Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan
once said, "Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his
own facts." I do not know of a single shred of evidence or the testimony
of a single reputable expert to support this insinuation, which
is in any case counterintuitive, given the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan's
links to Russia's most bitter enemies. It is a passage reminiscent
of the baroque Russian conspiracy theories suggesting, among other
things, that the CIA is actually behind the terrorist Osama bin
Laden.16
Instead, we
would do better to listen to Owen Harries, editor of the National
Interest, a conservative who was a tough anticommunist and is
certainly no Russophile: "During the Cold War, a struggle against
what was truly an evil empire, there was some justification in maintaining
that similar behavior by Washington and Moscow should be judged
differently, because the intrinsic moral character of the two actors
was so different. But that was due less to the unique virtues of
the United States than to the special vileness of the Soviet Union,
and even then applying double standards was a tricky business, easily
abused. In the more mundane world of today there is no justification
for applying one standard to the rest of the world and another to
America. Not only does insistence on double standards seem hypocritical
to others, thereby diminishing American credibility and prestige,
but even more seriously, it makes it impossible to think sensibly
and coherently about international affairs. And that is a fatal
drawback for an indispensable nation."17
Hatred of Soviet
communism helped take me to Afghanistan in 1988 as a journalist
covering the war from the side of the anti-Soviet resistance, and
then to the Baltic States and the Caucasus in 1990. In the 1970s
and 1980s, I was prepared to justify nasty Western crimes as a regrettable
part of the struggle against communism. But I never pretended these
crimes did not occur, or that the reasons for them did not include
a good measure of crude traditional national power politics.
The Cold War
was a profoundly necessary struggle, but it was also one in which
Western morality suffered and Western soldiers on occasion behaved
badly. Westerners greeted their qualified but peaceful victory with
overwhelming joy and relief. Ten years after the end of the Cold
War, it is time to liberate ourselves from Cold War attitudes and
to remember that whether as journalists or academics, our first
duty is not to spread propaganda but to hold to the highest professional
standards.
Notes
1. See, for
example, the attitudes toward Russia reflected in Ariel Cohen, Thomas
Moore, John Hillen, John Sweeney, James Phillips, and James Przystup,
"Making the World Safe for America," in Issues '96:
The Candidate's Briefing Book (Washington, D.C., Heritage Foundation).
2. The classic
study of this tradition remains John Howard Gleason, The Genesis
of Russophobia in Great Britain: A Study of the Interaction of Policy
and Opinion (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1950).
3. A favorite
example of mine—and one beloved of anti-Russian geopoliticians then
and now—is captain Fred Burnaby, a British Guards officer who traveled
extensively in the Ottoman Empire and Central Asia, and wrote some
brilliantly vivid accounts of his experiences with a strongly anti-Russian
cast. Burnaby was later killed fighting with a British expedition
to the Sudan. What was he doing there, one may ask? Well, he was
trying to introduce Christian civilization to the Sudanese with
the help of the Maxim gun and the Martini-Henry rifle. This of course
bore no relationship whatsoever in his own mind to Russia's introduction
of Christian civilization in Central Asia with the help of slightly
different brands of armaments. See his A Ride to Khiva, first
published London 1877 (republished, London: Century Hutchinson,
1983).
4. Richard
Pipes, "Russia's Past, Russia's Future," Commentary,
June 1996. See also his "A Nation with One Foot Stuck in the
Past," Sunday (London) Times, October 20, 1996.
For a similar historicist view, see Mark Galeotti, The Age of
Anxiety: Security and Politics in Soviet and Post-Soviet Russia
(New York: Longman, 1995), esp. pp.3–24.
5. For a milder
version of such thinking, see Laurent Murawiec, "Putin's Precursors,"
The National Interest, no. 60 (summer 2000), in which the
Putin regime is slotted into a desperately simplistic theory of
a division between "Westernizers" and Slavophiles"
that allegedly runs continuously from the eighteenth century through
the era of the Soviet Union to the present.
6. Henry Kissinger,
"Mission to Moscow: Clinton Must Lay the Groundwork for a New
Relationship with Russia," Washington Post, May 15,
2000.
7. George Will,
"Eastward-Ho—And Soon," Washington Post, June 13,
1996.
8. Interview
with Gene Randall on CNN, February 26, 2000.
9. "The
World Must Not Look Away," editorial, Los Angeles Times,
September 19, 2000.
10. Maura Reynolds,
"War Has No Rules for Russian Forces Fighting in Chechnya,"
and Robyn Dixon, "Chechnya's Grimmest Industry," Los
Angeles Times, September 17 and 18, 2000, respectively.
11. For the
contrast between Brzezinski's approach to human rights abuses in
Russia and in China, or in the states of Central Asia he wishes
to turn into anti-Russian allies, see, for example, his testimony
to the Senate Finance Committee's hearing on Trade Relations with
China, July 9, 1998, or his interview in Cyber-Caravan: News
and Analysis from Central Asia and the Caucasus, vol. 1, no.
2, February 18, 1998.
12. Dominic
Lieven, Empire: The Russian Empire and Its Rivals (London:
Macmillan, 2000).
13. See my
essay, "Nightmare in the Caucasus," Washington Quarterly
vol. 23 (winter 2000).
14. See Mark
Bowden, Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War (New York:
Atlantic Monthly Press, 1999).
15. "Russia
and Its Neighbours: Frost and Friction," Economist,
September 30, 2000.
16. See, for
example, Konstantin Truyevtsev, "Ben Laden v Kontekste Chechni,"
Nezavisimaya Gazeta, November 30, 1999.
17. Owen Harries,
"America Should Practice the Foreign Policy It Preaches,"
International Herald Tribune, August 24, 1999.
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