Russia and America should become permanent partners in fighting terrorism
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Russian President Vladimir Putin called U.S.
President Donald Trump on Sunday to thank him for America’s help in saving
Russian lives. And it’s not the first time.
In both instances, two years apart, U.S. intelligence services provided their
Russian counterparts with information that thwarted holiday terror plots
targeting civilians in Russia’s cultural mecca, St. Petersburg. Earlier, Russia
had warned the U.S. about the danger posed by the Tsarnaevs, the Chechen
brothers who perpetrated the Boston Marathon bombings (though American officials
didn’t act in time).
Russia is a target for the Islamic State, given its role in fighting the
terrorist group in Syria and the sympathies for ISIS in the Russian republic of
Chechnya. At his annual press conference just before Christmas, Putin noted that
Russian natives account for the second-largest number of Islamic State fighters
imprisoned in Syria.
It’s not hard to imagine what a terrorist attack in Moscow would look like. When
I was Christmas-shopping in the giant Evropeyskiy Mall recently, the FSB federal
security service and Russian police executed a counterterror operation in the
building, rounding up five terror suspects.
Then, on Dec. 19, as I was walking in central Moscow on an unseasonably mild
late afternoon, traditional American Christmas music and festive light displays
flooding the winter darkness, I heard what sounded like a series of
firecrackers. Pyrotechnic displays aren’t unusual at this time of the year —
just not on a weekday afternoon downtown. After at least a dozen emergency
vehicles with wailing sirens whizzed by, heading towards the popping noises, I
learned that a gunman had opened fire on passersby outside the headquarters of
the Lubyanka Building, the headquarters of the FSB (the successor agency to the
KGB).
Everyone initially assumed a political motive, given the target. This was, after
all, the building where terrorist mastermind Doku Umarov, believed to be
responsible for the Moscow subway bombing that killed 39 people in 2010 and a
series of suicide bombings in Volgograd in the run-up to the 2014 Sochi
Olympics, was rumored to have been taken after being captured by Russian Special
Forces. According to a Russian intelligence source, Umarov was forced to
identify his state-sponsor, Saudi Arabia, before being quietly liquidated.
It turned out that there was no obvious political motive in the Dec. 19
incident. The suspect was killed, and it appears that suicide-by-cop was the
likely motive. It wasn’t technically tantamount to an act of terrorism, but it
was nonetheless terrifying.
I’ve seen the reaction of the French to terror attacks in Paris. The contrast
with the Russian reaction to a sudden outburst of public violence is stark.
Within hours, it was business as usual again, as if nothing had happened —
merely a blip on the radar of people’s daily lives. No collective
teeth-gnashing, no media-led soul-searching, no downloading of the role of the
security and intelligence services onto the general public to “see something,
say something.”
It’s refreshing. There’s a difference between being informed and being bombarded
with anxiety-inducing hysteria. Terrorism should be handled in the shadows by
the relevant authorities. Average citizens already have enough to worry about in
their daily lives.
French President Emmanuel Macron recently said that NATO needs a new mission,
because the Soviet Union, which NATO was created to counter, no longer exists,
and Russia isn’t the enemy. Macron has suggested that NATO transform into
anti-terror coalition.
The problem is that terrorism can’t be eradicated strictly via military might.
NATO, as it exists now, is a military alliance whose primary purpose seems to be
perpetuating the military-industrial complex. Counterterrorism is about
intelligence efforts that break up terror cell networks, locate and seize
funding, and intercept information about attacks being planned. It’s discreet
work that doesn’t involve the kind of military hardware upon which traditional
defense contractors rely.
Another sticking point is that Western nations’ fight against terrorism has been
highly politicized. The terrorism label has been used against governments that
the U.S. simply doesn’t like, such as Iran and Venezuela, while America
simultaneously cuddles up to the worst nation-state terror sponsor, Saudi
Arabia. When our political leaders are lying to us about where the real threat
lies, how can we trust them to properly allocate the resources to fight it?
Rather than merely the odd flash of useful cooperation between Russia and the
U.S., maybe some of the self-serving political hacks running things can see past
their own interests and biases to make it the norm rather than the exception.
COPYRIGHT 2019 RACHEL MARSDEN