UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Military



USIS Washington File

08 March 2000

Byliner: "Clear on Chechnya" by U.S. Secretary of State Albright

(Madeleine Albright op-ed on Chechnya in March 8 Washington Post)
(820)
(begin text)
CLEAR ON CHECHNYA
By Madeleine K. Albright, U.S. Secretary of State
(Reprinted from The Washington Post)
Russia is in the middle of a historic presidential campaign as well as
a bloody military campaign in Chechnya, which has shocked
international opinion. It's obvious that American policymakers should
avoid taking sides in Russia's electoral politics, while stating with
utter clarity our strong objections to this brutal, futile war.
Yet there seems to be a view that the Clinton administration has
actually "endorsed" Acting President Vladimir Putin and that we have
hesitated to criticize Russia for what it is doing in Chechnya. The
truth, however, is very different.
American officials, from President Clinton on down, have described Mr.
Putin as capable and energetic, knowledgeable on the issues, blunt and
direct, with some positive things to say about economic reform, the
rule of law and arms control. All simple statements of fact, but
hardly an endorsement.
I have myself frequently noted the challenge of reconciling the two
main strands in Mr. Putin's biography. He has, on the one hand, been
associated with the economic reformers of St. Petersburg. On the
other, he spent most of his adult life in the KGB and has overseen the
massively destructive Chechen military campaign. Russian commentators
themselves have struggled to reconcile these facts, asking whether Mr.
Putin really desires a society built on the rule of law or prefers
something different--what I've called "order with a capital O."
I have said there's little to be gained by trying to make a final
judgment at this point--because we can't really know the answer;
because we're going to have to deal with what Mr. Putin does, not with
what he thinks; and because it's our job to try to influence what he
does, by what we ourselves do and say.
On no other issue has it been more important for us to be clear than
on the war in Chechnya. We respect Russia's territorial integrity, and
we don't question its duty to combat terrorism on its own soil. But
where Russian actions have called for criticism, we have not minced
words.
Last September, when, even before the war began, bombs leveled two
Moscow apartment buildings, we warned that this event must not become
a pretext for abridging civil liberties. When Russian forces bombed a
Grozny market in October, I called it "ominous and deplorable." As the
military campaign took an increasingly cruel toll in civilian
casualties, we said the Russian army's indiscriminate use of force was
"indefensible, and we condemn it."
When President Clinton attended the Istanbul summit in November, he
confronted Boris Yeltsin across a huge table of European leaders and
told him that Russia could not consider this war simply an internal
affair. After Radio Free Europe-Radio Liberty reporter Andrei
Babitsky's disappearance in January, we held the Russian government
accountable for his fate and called on it "to come clean." In February
our annual human rights report detailed the appalling human
consequences of the war.
When Human Rights Watch published reports of summary executions in
Grozny, we called for full and transparent investigations--with
international observers--and punishment for those responsible. (For
such statements, let me note, the Russian foreign ministry accused the
State Department of "information terrorism.") I told Acting President
Putin face to face last month that only by getting to the bottom of
these charges can Russia credibly claim to take its international
commitments seriously. He heard the same strong message when President
Clinton wrote to him about Chechnya last week. And I put the issue at
the top of my agenda when I met with Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov in
Lisbon on Friday.
I've heard it said that the administration won't criticize Russia
because we fear that doing so will damage prospects for arms control.
Our record of criticism is clear enough, but the very idea of such
linkage requires a comment. We are definitely working hard on arms
control (and in fact last fall we reached a major agreement on
conventional forces in Europe, signed at the very meeting at which
President Clinton expressed his views on the Chechen war). But pulling
our punches on Chechnya would be contrary to American principles and
interests, and we won't do so.
No matter what agreements we seek on other issues, we have to bring
Russia to see that this war--and last week's Russian casualties
suggest that it is far from over--must be resolved by political, not
military means. Russia's failure to recognize this fact can only lead
to increased international isolation. To deliver that message, we will
continue to tell it like it is.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://www.usinfo.state.gov)
|||||||



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list