Talk:Shamil Basayev
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[edit] Update
Someone should go through and change all of the present tenses to past, considering his recently deceased status. All the "is"s to "was"s and such. user:awaggener
[edit] Media Citation
Hey, take a look, this page was cited by CNN! [1]
- Yeah, and that's a worry considering the article has no references section. For all we know the authors could be making stuff up (though I doubt it). Please provide us with a reference section! It looks bad when the news media publishes information from our website without a reference to where you guys gathered the information from. - Ta bu shi da yu 12:03, 3 Oct 2004 (UTC)
Wasn't the "outhouse" speech (not the "shithouse") pronounced much much later?Gaidash 4 July 2005 07:42 (UTC)
- No, the article is correct - the outhouse speech was made when Putin was still prime minister, i.e. between August and December 1999. Incidentally, "blasting in the outhouses" ( literally, "soaking in the outhouses" ) is a preexisting Russian idiom - some meaning is lost in translation. --Itinerant1 22:38, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Current Event
BBC on power outage claims Pravda on power outage claims Marked as currentevents - Does the page need to be backlinked to from the current events page? Mrzaius 19:08, 27 May 2005 (UTC)
[edit] How to edit
Here is your edit I reverted:
- Among the Chechens and their supporters he is a "separatist", for fighting to separate from Russia; but he is, unequivocally among the greater part of Russians, a "terrorist".
Wiki is a worldwide encyclopedia. He is notable not just to Chechans and Russians, but worldwide. And "unequivocally" is very very rarely used as it is POV. And yours does not define what a separatist is or why he would be considered a terrorist. --Noitall 04:57, August 12, 2005 (UTC)
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- IMPORTANT NOTE: In a recent TV interview by ABC (yes, he gives TV interviews to American television networks and yet somehow the Russian authorities can't find him to shoot him dead), he called HIMSELF a terrorist. Cite: [2] Take that as you will, but since he calls himself a terrorist, it is definitely NPOV to call him what he calls himself. Russians DO consider him a terrorist, and he calls himself that openly. Xaa 07:30, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
I see what Wiki is now, yes. And what Wiki will always be. And I see now that politics isn't and will never be Wiki's domain.
Do you notice, out there in the West, that the East Europeans behave differently? That they laugh a little at this NPOV, that it seems ridiculous to them? Have you ever thought that this is not a whim, but a result of certain differences?
I'm not arguing for anything. I'm wondering how you can congratulate yourself when you've fallen into meekness? When "information" has become, for you, as slippery as oil? When, instead of acknowledging two sides with dignity - or acknowleding none at all - you would insult your reader and offend him by diffusing every cup of coffee until it is water?
I say again: do you need to define "terrorist"? Is the motto of Wikipedia "you can't ever REALLY know anything"?
As to the Russians and Chechens. For God's sake, this is the Russians' and the Chechens' article. Whom in heck does it concern what the others think? Look around, and you'll notice there is no such thing as a "supporter of Russia" - only a Russian. Is that an accident? --VKokielov 16:22, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
I'll substantiate this by recommending that you grab a style manual for any encyclopedia and see for yourself whether "some" and "others" are good words. I will wager anything that you'll be told to run from them like from fire. --VKokielov 16:43, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
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- Well, if you don't understand Wiki or proper editing, I can only point you in the right direction. Your assertion that "For God's sake, this is the Russians' and the Chechens' article" is entirely wrong, it is a worldwide article. And the fact that you argue that terrorists do not need to be defined because you, VKokielov is both false and not useful to Wiki readers. A person does not have to support Russia in any action to call Basayev a terrorist. --Noitall 21:37, August 15, 2005 (UTC)
- Thanks. Let's start a catfight, shall we? Or should I accuse you of "original research" in retaliation? --VKokielov 02:16, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- Where did I say that "terrorist" doesn't need to be defined? I said, "Would you really define". What in the world could I possibly mean? Surely not that, if the blue link is still there. --VKokielov 02:21, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- I highlighted your statement arguing that you don't need to define terrorist because you already know it. And I have no idea how your original research statement has any relevance to this discussion. To be frank, if you agree with the POV that Basayev is a terrorist, it is much more powerful to discuss why he is a terrorist (killing women and children) and that it is not just the Russians who think so. --Noitall 04:24, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- This article is going to be forever plagued by the competing POVs of "insurgent" and "terrorist" - but let us not define terrorist so succintly as "killing women and children" or shouldn't we point out the gassing by the FSB and subsequent deaths of women and children makes them terrorists?Ranieldule 12:25, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
- I highlighted your statement arguing that you don't need to define terrorist because you already know it. And I have no idea how your original research statement has any relevance to this discussion. To be frank, if you agree with the POV that Basayev is a terrorist, it is much more powerful to discuss why he is a terrorist (killing women and children) and that it is not just the Russians who think so. --Noitall 04:24, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- Well, if you don't understand Wiki or proper editing, I can only point you in the right direction. Your assertion that "For God's sake, this is the Russians' and the Chechens' article" is entirely wrong, it is a worldwide article. And the fact that you argue that terrorists do not need to be defined because you, VKokielov is both false and not useful to Wiki readers. A person does not have to support Russia in any action to call Basayev a terrorist. --Noitall 21:37, August 15, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Contradictory
"When Communist hardliners attempted to stage a coup in August 1991, Basayev allegedly joined supporters of Russian President Boris Yeltsin... A few months later in August 1991, the Chechen nationalist leader Dzhokhar Dudayev unilaterally..."
August 1991 can't be a months later than August 1991. Kaldari 06:13, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
- I changed second "August" to October. MaxSem 05:36, 8 April 2006 (UTC)
Another contradiction: "...considered by some as the undisputed leader..." If only some consider this, he's not undisputed.
[edit] Basayev's ancestry
It used to was "Russian", now it's "Chechen" - and I heard he's actually Avar. Who is he, really?
- Hmmm, does he have an offical biography or something? Maybe it would say there. —Khoikhoi 19:36, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
- He is from the Benoj (Беной) Teip according to teip, but as teips can consist of both Chechen and other peoples, this unfortunately doesn't bring us any further. But I guess Avar probably refers to his idol Imam Shamil. --Hardscarf 23:46, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Hero or not
I wonder if "Chechnya's most famed contemporary national hero" is not a bit overstated. Considering that (at least) not all Chechens support his wahabistic view and not all support his actions, and the fact that Aslan Maschadov was also high valued among them, leaves me wondering if this info is correct. (I did not remove this statement earlier btw) --Hardscarf 12:01, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
- Not enough to win the presidency for sure (but he came as a second). Right now he's much more of, ahem, a "controversional figure" (fear above all I think, also both hate and respect, even from Ramzan if Ramzan's opinion on anything matters). --Kocoum 13:50, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
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- As far as I know his wahabistic views came under influence of e.g. Khattab in the end 90s, so I wonder if the incidents in the Second Chechen War did affect his image negatively, which he had when Ichkeria was still in place (for for instance his victories in the Battles in Grozny). Fear and hate, I guess, do not make up very good points for receiving the 'hero' status. But perhaps respect outlasted the Second Chechen War and fear and hate. --Hardscarf 23:56, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
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- "But what proved absolutely unexpected for me and my colleagues was that 24% supported the candidacy of Abdul-Khalim Sadulayev" as legitimate head of state, the newspaper's editor, Islam Tekushev, told Radio Liberty last week. Basayev earned 1% support in the poll. << Right now a widespread support for the separatist cause still, but very little for Basayev personally (at least as for a "legitimate head of state"). But he was a huge hero in 1995-96, especially during the temporary ceasefire after Buddyonnovsk and the Operation Jihad (Grozny 96). Then he was blamed for effectively starting the CW2 and more.
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- He's not hero. People in Chechnya don't think so. I live in Russia and I know that. Chechens hate him. Because he was the organisator of Beslan terract. Now people in Chechnya dont want to separate. Moscvitch 19:10, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
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- Yer but the Russian government stuffed that up, maybe the chechens hate the russian and vice versa. Enlil Ninlil 05:45, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
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- Please sign your posts. It is rather difficult to find out what people in Chechnya think. The most NPOV version would probably be that he was once considered a hero, but that he became controversial not after Beslan, but much earlier. Only problem with that version is that the guy is dead. This article needs some major editing because of that. But anyone who tirs that out piecemeal will see his work undone in a few hours by secessionist POV editors. That is why this "acclaimed as a hero" thing is still here. It is plainly nonsense, but it keeps some people happy and stops them from performing worse vandalism. And I am one of those who tried to correct it. --Pan Gerwazy 12:23, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
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- I added template message "Neutrality" Moscvitch 19:15, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] Intro Seemed to be pro-Chechen POV
The introduction should be a basic outline of what is most pertinent about Shamil Basayev. It completely omitted the fact that he is wanted for terrorist actions that have caused mass casualties to civilians, which almost anyone reading up on Shamil Basayev would want to know about. Instead it calls him a Chechen national hero, which I left up because I don't know how popular he is in Chechnya. I changed the intro to include the fact that Russians and most Western countries view Basayev as a terrorist due to his numerous bloodbaths. --Bbcrackmonkey 5:16, 17 June 2006
"Mass casualties" - he didn't gas to death these civilians in Moscow or burned alive the kids in Beslan, the Chekist "federals" of the former KGB did. For example, the terrorists killed only 2 non-hostage unarmed persons in Moscow (both came from the outside, through the "security cordon" - odd, isn't it?), and also wounded 2 hostages in an accidental shooting (after which they were evacuated). Then, the gas attack by the FSB killed 130 or more and disabled hundreds, and they also executed all surviving terrorists including unarmed women with a point-blank shots to the head (talking about "ruthlessness" and "bloodbath").
He didn't gas those civilians but he is responsible for their deaths through his actions. He sent a large squad of terrorists armed with bombs, machine-guns, etc. into the theatre and gave the Russians no choice but to either acquiesce to his politically unfeasible demands or have the people in the theatre killed like the children in Beslan were. The Russians basically had no choice but to storm the theatre and their controversial use of sleeping gas is covered in the article of the Moscow theatre siege. Despite the fact that the Russians caused the casualties, they were not trying to kill their own civilians but were instead trying to rescue the patrons of the theatre. The execution of the terrorists is also covered in the article, but I would like to know how you would deal with dozens of sleeping terrorists who had several kilograms of explosives wrapped around their bodies, who could concievably wake up and detonate themselves during the evacuation of the unconscious civilians. This is not an article about Russian atrocities in Chechnya or a staging ground for pro-Chechen views, it is an article about Shamil Basayev and he is mostly famous for the Moscow theatre siege and Beslan school siege. I will remove the words "ruthlessness" and "bloodbath" from the introduction. --bbcrackmonkey
- The "suicide" explosives were all fake. The real was the big bomb, but it was not live (lacked a detonator). Is it not in the article? One terrorist was actually executed outside of theatre, because he was evacuated by mistake (it was filmed). Also one hostage was executed because he was mistaken with a terrorist (in fact he was a Russian Army cadet). His father found him only after days of search, on the heap of terrorists' bodies in morgue (the bodies were then all destroyed, as were their families' houses and in at least one instance a family killed).
It was not the Russians' fault they didn't know that the suicide bombers had fake explosives on them. I have not heard this before, and I would like a source for this accusation. If you feel strongly enough about it, perhaps you should make some edits to the page on the Moscow theatre siege if you can provide credible sources for your content. I read that instead of destroying the bodies, they were buried wrapped in pigskin, but this was never verified.
- I think the best way to maintain a NPOV would be to refrain from declaring what the opinions of people or groups of people are, even in the general, without scientific evidence (or at the very least, reputable polls) to back it up. It's best to stick to discussing the objective facts, which is is to say, who he is and what he has done. That alone will probably be enough fodder for people to argue over in this article. No need to discuss what people think of him and, given that this article discusses current events (more or less), it's probably not an appropriate point for an encyclopedia entry. --Rumplefurskin 17:47, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] elimination
Seems this bandit has been eliminated.--TheFEARgod 12:53, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- Killed in the struggle against Russian imperialism.80.186.100.180 17:17, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- in the struggle against imperialist children, yeah.--TheFEARgod 13:34, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, Mazel tov to all - CrazyRougeian talk/email 16:02, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- And Russia's war in Chechnya is not against children? The children in Beslan were in fact killed by Russian special services.User:Anonymous
- And of course, it was Putin who forbade the children to eat and drink for two days?--Pan Gerwazy 21:06, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- And Russia's war in Chechnya is not against children? The children in Beslan were in fact killed by Russian special services.User:Anonymous
- Yes, Mazel tov to all - CrazyRougeian talk/email 16:02, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- in the struggle against imperialist children, yeah.--TheFEARgod 13:34, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- Don't feed the trolls guys.--Eupator 22:00, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Confirmation of death
It would be nice if there were some confirmation about this s***bag's death before we jump for joy. I am happy thought at the prospect he's finally in Hell. Queereyes 14:04, 10 July 2006 (UTC)~
- Fallen for his country in the fight against imperialism.80.186.100.180 17:19, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
Congratulations to FSB for a job well done! It's about time this scumbag met his maker. This is a great day for all mankind, I hope this is confirmed soon. --Eupator 14:32, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
It is said in press the FSB (russian spec-ops) exploded a Kamaz brand heavy truck as a bomb when a convoy of four Lada cars loaded with chechen gunmen passed by. They were en route to a place of ambush where they were hoping to capture an arms shipment. Basayev was in one of those cars and his head was nearly fully severed by debris. Russians visually identified him based on head, especially his beard and also because of his prosthetic foot. The 10USB blood bounty was reportedly paid to "foreign informators" who were instrumental in locating him. Good riddance, anyhow. 195.70.32.136 15:56, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- is the date correct? all other sources site July 10th. 17:55, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
One of the pictures of the incident site available on newsru.com show the tail end of an S-8 rocket, the kind fired from Mi-24 HIND's it may be that a HIND attacked his convoy and set off the explosives in the truck that way.
http://images.newsru.com/pict/id/large/869185_20060710180701.gif
- Maybe as well some unexploded munition from the KAMAZ. They were rigging various rockets for a ground launching since the beginning of first war for sure.
Vandalism In Death Section
I doubt he was performing fellatio on a friend as stated in the article.
[edit] Russian Coup of 1991?
"When some members of Soviet government attempted to stage a coup in August 1991..."
I know this might sound like splitting hairs, but there is no historical record of a "coup" attempt in 1991. The white house in Russia -did- come under siege, but if you look at the history it was Yetlsin that was attempting the coup.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia#Post-Soviet_Russia
--66.227.111.238 14:27, 11 July 2006 (UTC)Harold
- The siege of White House BY Yeltsin was in 1993. The 1991 one was a coup attempt against Gorbachev by some Soviet generals. --HanzoHattori 22:33, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Hm. Yeah, in August, actually. Generally referred to as the August Coup of 1991. Vot: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_coup_attempt_of_1991
- Dietwald 12:50, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Famous Last Words
Not really, probably, but it turns out that Shamil Basayev's last deed as Vice-President of Ichkeria was to ... congratulate the Iraqi Mujahideen for killing the Russian diplomats. [3] Now that is something Doku Umarov would not have liked - after all the efforts he put in to convince the West there was no collusion between Chechen "freedom fighters" and Iraqi "terrorists".
Since User:Karkachev's main contributions seem to be to put axisglobal links everywhere (I am not the first one to notice: [4]), I think I should replace that one with the Kavkaz Center one. I hope no one will delete it as a terrorist, or Al Qaeda site. --Pan Gerwazy 15:00, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Government in exile
The intro is low quality and appears to be written by someone with a bias towards him. "vice-president of the internationally unrecognized separatist government-in-exile of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, Islamist guerrilla leader."
if they are a government in exile, how are they separatists? Chechenya would have had to be independent and conquered by the Russians. Think the Free French in WWII. 67.10.243.230 22:31, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
- It was pretty much so. They had no Russian Federation troops, police, government offices, border guards - except on border with Russia and from the Russian side (and vice versa, there were no Chechnya deputies to Duma etc). They were even recognised, even if only by Yeltsin's Russia and OSCE. The only Russian flags they had were on the posters from the 1997 peace treaty (still visible on a photo from the 1999 invasion). --HanzoHattori 09:11, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
They're not the goverment-in-exile.They're a bunch of terrorists and war criminals.
[edit] Terrorist category
I removed this article from the "Chechen terrorists" category on POV grounds, but it was reverted by User:Dietwald with the message, "reverted to previous version. Basayev was by all accounts a terrorist." What could the source possibly be that reflects all accounts?—Nat Krause(Talk!) 01:14, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- The article states he was a “self-described terrorist” and he has claimed responsibility for terrorists actions which are nearly universally regarded as terrorism. What more could you ask for? The man was a terrorist. Rune X2 09:27, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Where does he describe himself as a terrorist (the link above is broken)? I imagine that terrorist insurgent types might admit to being insurgents, with the caveat that their opponents—in this case, the Russian authorities—are also terrorists. However, this sort of statement becomes meaningless unless we are also going to put Vladimir Putin in Category:Russian terrorists.—Nat Krause(Talk!) 14:24, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
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- I refer merely to the article. In any case, he has taken responsibility for several attacks which have been nearly universally classified as terrorism. E.g. Beslan which was so characterized by Kofi Annan/US, by the EU, USA, Mandela/SA, etc. A terrorist is one who engage in terrorism. If everybody from Annan to Mandela feels confident in calling him a terrorist, I'd say Wikipedia is on fairly uncontroversial ground by following step. Rune X2 14:36, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Oh, but you may add Maskhadov to that list. Remember what he claimed he would do to Basayev once the war was over? The quote "I am a terrorist" is from the interview that he did with Babitsky and that was aired by ABC (which caused ABC to lose its license in Russia) so it is all over the Internet, anyone who claims he cannot find that quote, is not a very good googler. [5] The quote claiming responsibility for the apartment bombings on behalf of "our friends in Dagestan" is however much more difficult to find, but I am sure he did claim it at one time, then stopped doing so, as he found out that letting all others claim the FSB did it, was more profitable.--Pan Gerwazy 19:31, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
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- In that link, Basayev says, "I admit, I'm a bad guy, a bandit, a terrorist ..." Would that make it appropriate to put him Category:Bad people? Why, I imagine Kofi Annan and Nelson Mandela would probably agree with that, too.—Nat Krause(Talk!) 19:46, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Indeed there are many categories Shamil Basayev could fit into, including Category:bipedels and Category:people staring with the letter s. What is your point? It still doesn't change that he clearly belong to Category:Chechen terrorists as well. Rune X2 21:14, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- I agree with Nat Krause here, there is not much idea sticking this terrorist label to everybody. I have read the English transcript, but have not seen the original (supposedly Russian) version. However, this single sentence from an interview seems simple rhetoric, trying really to stress that the "real terrorists" are Russians led by Vladimir Putin. --Magabund 13:47, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
- Indeed there are many categories Shamil Basayev could fit into, including Category:bipedels and Category:people staring with the letter s. What is your point? It still doesn't change that he clearly belong to Category:Chechen terrorists as well. Rune X2 21:14, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
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User:Kingal86 edited the text to delete "terrorist" a number of times. How anyone can describe "Shariat" as "militant" is beyond me, but later he even used the word "insurgent" - while most of their actions in Dagestan have been to stir up sectarian trouble. I haven't put "terrorist" back in the case of Shariat, because the text is not about what is happening in Dagestan. I took "Islamic extremist" from the talk pages of September 11, 2001 attacks User:Kingal86 did not have any problem with the use of the word "terrorist" there: [6] and [7]. So I kept the word "terrorist" in connection with the apartment block bombings. Perfectly similar, even to the point of the existence of a conspiracy theory.--Pan Gerwazy 01:08, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
- No, not a "sectarian trouble" - they never attack Shiites or anything, just the local government and members of the Russian Federation forces. Anyway, Basayev was of course a terrorist, even according to himself (while he always maintained he had nothing to do with 1999 bombings - which is irrevelant however, because he claimed responsibility for some others since then and personally took civilian hostages before). Besides, for the "perfectly similiar conspiracy theory" thing, the only people caught red-handed in these bombings turned out to be FSB agents, acting on orders from their superiors (I don't really remember any FBI agents caught while "conducting exercises" by trying to hijack any airplanes on September 11, you know).
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- Caught red-handed? With what? It was an exercise. Anyone who claims Putin needed the bombings to invade Chechnya, will have a problem over the timeline here: Ryazan happened on the 22nd of Sepetember 1999. By that time, the Russian army had been in Chechnya for four days. I found a quote for Basayev claiming his Dagestani friends did it, by the way: [8]. This is Maskhadov on September 21: [9]. That the separatists later tried to find a story more acceptable to the "West" is clear from the case of Alexei Galkin. No, I do not know of any CIA agent in Iraq or Afghanistan being tortured to go on Al Jazeera claiming George Bush organized 9/11.
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- As for Basayev's gang in Dagestan, judging from the entries in chechnya.sl, 90% of their killings are local policemen, many of whom just involved in sorting out "normal" crime (most "invaders" got killed while attacking them at their safe houses, except that one time when they blew up military lodgings, killing mostly wives of "Russian invaders"). Just looking back for the most recent event which did not only concern "the local government and members of the Russian Federation forces", the two guys who became shaheed in a Kizilyurt apartment in May, had a map of a nearby school in their possession. Strangely, explosives were found at that school. [10] and [11] As for targeting criminal police and armed attacks on money transports, whether Algerian citizen Kamel Burahlia ([12])is a terrorist or not, is a moot point. On the other hand, "terrorist" IS a word to avoid, and since here these guys in that passage are being accused of killling Basayev, I do not think they should be called terrorists there, since killing Basayed does not qualify as terrorism. --Pan Gerwazy 23:36, 26 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Okay, "Dagestanis". Why the FSB is claiming it was an "Arab" plot led by an a Karachay (very few, if any, Chechens, btw)? "Exercise" thing (of planting bomb in the basement of an apartment building). Why the Americans, somehow, didn't conduct any exercises involving people trying to hijack airplanes? Isn't it a normal thing to do in the middle of a terrorist crisis (or any time, for that matter)? These agents were arrested by the local police after a large manhunt (after they phoned for a further instructions), thousands of terrified people were evacuated in the middle of the night, the bombs were disarmed (live detonator and real explosives - don't tell me you believe FSB version of the "faulty equipment" of the Ryazan police sappers, who detected hexogen) and the capture of terrorist suspects was publicily annnounced (Ryazan authorities knew nothing of the "exercise"). But what I know. Maybe this is normal and happening in Russia all the time? Were there any "exercises" involving, say, FSB agents "exercising" a large-scale hostage takings, with no one knowing what's going on? Somehow, I don't think very many. Next, they "had map of school" and "explosives were found" because the other side (local interior minister and RIA-Novosti) said so? Maybe then Chechens did the WTC ("Jews did the WTC") too, because FSB announced they found "maps of New York" and "diagrams of airplanes" in a cave in Chechnya just after September 11? Did they? Now, they're fighting other Chechens because of the Russian policy of Chechenization. And it was happening back since 1993 already, when Russia was clandestinely supported Chechen opposition forces. Many of these Chechen policemen and soldiers are former "bandits and terrorists" too, btw (now "returned to a peaceful life" like the defections are called in the Russian newspeak). They don't necessarily kill them too, many are simply disarmed when possible (with or without beatings), like were dozens of traffic policemen and civilian Interior workers in the 2004 Nazran attack. Of course any killings are very problematic, because of the blood vendetta traditions (guess, how many of the federals were killed only in a pure revenge attacks, by people who targeted only them specifically and then returned to their normal lives?). Plus many of the police are a double agents (not to mention rampant corruption). Also, Basayev was indeed a terrorist (and the Carthage should be destroyed). --HanzoHattori 03:24, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Flying planes into buildings is not really the same or as easy as leaving sugar on the landing of an apartment. Patrushev at the time did claim there were other exercises. [13] I realize that my timeline is a little bit naughty: the Russian army did enter Chechnya on the 18th (according to Maskhadov and AFP) but an open and wholesale invasion only took place somewhere between September 30 and October 3. Of course, they were threatening to pursue terrorists and had been bombarding Grozny and other places for some time, even before the 18th. On the 28th, however, Yeltsin and Defence Minister Igor Sergeev admitted what everybody already knew: that there were, and had been for some time, Russian troops fighting in Chechnya. [14] I do not think they really needed another bombing or a bombing attempt in Ryazan on the 22nd still. As for the Dagestan thing - we will have to remain a sea apart there. I still think that the attacks on policemen look like they want to stir up ethnic hatred - not even necessarily against Russians - some office or administrative unit is always blamed for being corrupt and, of course partial to one thnic group.--Pan Gerwazy 04:08, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
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- I don't know where this discussuion is supposed to lead, but the Russian campaign was being prepared months before the bombings started. The were incursions and intelligence work, black ops too. Dagestan is complicated, Islamic insurgents make of only a part of violence, with the clans and groups competing for power and money. Various ethnic groups toom yes. And the insurgency alone is complicated too (for example some of these guys from 1998 who seemingly attempted a coup, fled to Chechnya, lobbied Basayev for help, and in the end turned out to be just a provocatours, or at very least double agents like this one who later poisoned Khattab - even the guy who founded Sharia Jamaat in 2000 wasn't trusted anymore for a quite long time again, despite wasting dozens cops). Or the situation in Gimry, who has sharia law and shelter rebels, and is near a strategic tunnel, but is a no-go zone for federals - while the villages who declared independence in 1999 were just bombed out Chechnya-style. According to the police sappers, it was NOT sugar in Ryazan. Petrushev's claim may be well true - as he might mean the "exercises" he arranged in Moscow in Volgodonsk before. And what Basayev meant as the work of Dagestanis - it would be Buinaksk, where the troops' housing block was blown up. All the later blasts were in Russia and targeting civilians, with the propaganda campaign blaming Chechens back then. --HanzoHattori 21:24, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
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- It is not true, by the way, that the US never had an exercise in which planes were supposed to fly into buildings. They were actually planning one at the very moment the attacks were on: "On the morning of 9/11, 50 minutes before Flight 77 crashed into the Pentagon, the National Reconnaissance Office, who are responsible for operating US reconnaissance satellites, had scheduled an exercise simulating the crashing of an aircraft into their building, four miles from Dulles airport[111]." That is from Wikipedia's 9/11 conspiracy theories. As for Basayev naming the Dagestanis, well, if he knew it was his Karachai friends who did it, he was not going to give them away just like that while they were not in Chechnya or Georgia (that is where they all ended up) yet. Actually, there is also a very plausible theory that the mess in Ryazan was an organized provocation by ... Berezovsky using the FSB connections (Vladimir Rushailo) he stil had then: [15] for instance. But you do not hear much about that allegation in the Western press. Like Alexei Galkin, who usually only gets quoted on his words to a Turkish journalist while he was held captive by the mujahedin, but not on his retraction years later.--Pan Gerwazy 01:21, 30 August 2006 (UTC)
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- [16]: a link quoted by ... Polish Wikipedia, of all places. If the EU thought he was a terrorist, why cannot we?--Pan Gerwazy 01:25, 30 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] secret wife?
Anyone catch today's NYT article about Elina Ersenoyeva? It might be worth adding. Here's the link for anyone who has the free registration already done[I know it's not something we might cite for the article, but one might look it up elsewhere as well].
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/27/world/europe/27chechnya.html?th&emc=th --r. 23:04, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
This is free: http://www.kommersant.com/page.asp?id=700100 --Pan Gerwazy 19:15, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
It's crap. The family said what the siloviki told them after Ersenoyeva was "dissapeared" and so the story started. She was kidnapped most probably because of her journalist work (she was also an UNICEF worker). If she was Basayev's wife she would be arrested as a "terrorist's accomplice" (they do this openly). --HanzoHattori 15:48, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
- Hm. She did write a letter to Chechen Society and some NGOs that she and her family were in trouble because she had married a boyevik who had died only a month before. And after Basayev's death they were visited by the FSB, who questioned her, her mother and her brother. "Только тогда Маргарита поняла, за кем была замужем ее дочь." ([[17]]) So, her mother understood whom she had married, not AFTER she disappeared, but before.--Pan Gerwazy 21:54, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Categories
These categories are simply POV. Basayev didn't go from village to village just killing people. Yes he's resonsible for numerous attrocities, but based on this logic shouldn't we also add the same categories to George W. Bush, for all the civilians that have been killed in Iraq? —Khoikhoi 04:35, 4 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] official version
"According to this official version, a detonator with a remote control hidden in one of the explosives was detonated by FSB agents..." Although some western media claims it is the official version, there were no official version at all , (Exept that he was killed in a special operation). Patruchef (FSB cheef) told in a Brifing, he (or somebody else) is not authorised to tell how Bassajew was killed.
Taking his statement out of context. That is not NPOV. The meaning is more like 'yeah yeah whatever you say I am' meaning the 'Western' definition of terrorism is whoever fights back against them. (This has nothing to do with whether or not he was actually a terrorist, I am not commenting on that).
27 November 2006
[edit] "National hero"
To quote from the citation:
“ | During the failed military coup against Boris Yeltsin in August 1991, Basayev was one of scores of Chechens who joined the barricades to protect the Russian president. But when Dzhokar Dudayev used the ensuing chaos to declare Chechen independence, Basayev rushed to the capital, Grozny, to join the fledgling state. He quickly became a commander, leading several hundred volunteers fighting to help Abkhazia break away from Georgia. When Yeltsin sent troops to quash Chechnya's independence in 1994, Basayev was one of the city's fiercest defenders and became a national hero. | ” |
Khoikhoi 22:53, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
- As for the "self-described terrorist" part, see [18], [19], and [20]. Khoikhoi 23:00, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
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- You are certainly correct that the source does say he became a national hero in 1994. However, the source also says:
- His passage from national liberation hero to pitiless extremist with fundamentalist Islamic overtones reflected the collapse of values on both sides of Russia's struggle to contain Chechen demands for independence in the post-Soviet period.
- Thus, this article suggests that he had moved from national hero to "pitiless extremist". The description "national hero" is pretty loaded, especially for someone with this kind of history. Based on the citation, I think you could call him a "former national hero", but that starts to move to a different POV. So, I think the phrase should be removed. The reference to him being considered a hero after his actions in 1994 are already part of the relevant section of the article.
- I do, however, agree that the sources support "self-described terrorist". -Kubigula (ave) 14:53, 4 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ok, but you haven't provided any sources that say he stopped becomming a national hero. Would you be able to show me some? Khoikhoi 05:15, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- BTW, this article says, "to many of the opposition fighters in Chechnya, Dagestan and throughout the North Caucasus, Basayev was a legend, a hero unafraid to throw down the gauntlet to a nuclear power, who forced the very head of the Russian government to come crawling to him". Khoikhoi 05:22, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- The source above, which is the one that is being cited to support the notion of the guy being a national hero, says he moved from being a national hero (when he was defending Chechneya) to a "pitiless extremist" (when he started attacking civillians). My edit to the intro was an almost exact paraphrase of the citation. I am trying to find a compromise, which is why I changed the text to so carefully mirror the citation.
- I don't have any particular interest in Chechneya, but I do believe it is very controversial to call a (self-admitted) terrorist a national hero. You are basically asserting that almost every person in Chechneya idolizes a terrorist. That may be true, but you need a strong source to back that kind of controversial statement. The existing source simply does not support calling him a national hero for his actions after 1994. Your new source supports calling him a hero to the "opposition fighters", but that is much different than being a hero for the entire nation. -Kubigula (talk) 20:47, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ok, you have a point. I've finially found a better source that says, "Basayev was Moscow's most wanted man, and a national hero for many Chechens". [21] How's that? Khoikhoi 20:55, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Works for me. Given the very bad blood between Chechens and Russians, I have no trouble accepting a source that says he is a hero to many Chechens. That addresses my concerns with calling him an unqualified national hero. -Kubigula (talk) 21:04, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ok, you have a point. I've finially found a better source that says, "Basayev was Moscow's most wanted man, and a national hero for many Chechens". [21] How's that? Khoikhoi 20:55, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- You are certainly correct that the source does say he became a national hero in 1994. However, the source also says:
[edit] Kavkaz
No doubt the Wahhabis around here will persist in revising this article to claim that this subhuman thug was a great hero of Islam, but can we at least omit all reference to the worthless website called Kavkaz Center? (Speaking of which, there was a big roundup in Turkey a couple of days ago, and with a little luck, Kavkaz is now history.)LDH 11:53, 1 February 2007 (UTC)