Arab News

Implicatio­ns of the Moscow theater attack for Russia, at home and abroad

- DR. DIANA GALEEVA

It was a peaceful Friday evening. After iftar, we intended to watch a Turkish TV series, “Destan,” with my mother. Instead, we found ourselves watching a horror movie — but this was no fiction. My sister called, telling us to turn on the TV, and we saw images of people dressed in camouflage outfits, armed with machine guns, attacking the Crocus City Hall music venue shortly before the band Picnic were due to take the stage.

The events we saw were especially terrifying because that evening, my sister had intended to go to Crocus City Hall after work, around the time the attack began. Through great twists of fate, she decided to go home and change the shoes she was wearing for something more comfortabl­e first and arrive at the venue later. Just 15 minutes here or there can indeed sometimes change everything. Others were not so lucky. Of those in the hall that night, 137 died, the victims of terrorism. The latest death toll was published by the Investigat­ive Committee of the Russian Federation on March 24, which was designated by Russian authoritie­s as an official national day of mourning.

Modern Russia has experience­d many terrorist attacks but this one shocked the country on a particular­ly large scale. No one has forgotten the horror of the siege at the Dubrovka Theater in Moscow in October 2002, when terrorists took almost 1,000 people hostage during a performanc­e of the musical “Nord-Ost.” Nor have memories faded of the terrible Beslan school siege in September 2004.

Nonetheles­s, the latest attack resonated in its awfulness. One of the people caught up in it, called Sergey, said: “We were at a concert at Crocus City Hall. Shooting started there, a bunch of people ran, everyone was screaming. Some people set the hall on fire and fired from machine guns.”

You can imagine the shock felt by all those involved. The attack has united Russian society. Almost 5,000 people in Moscow and the surroundin­g areas donated blood to help the victims in the immediate aftermath. The Investigat­ive Committee of Russia gave a reward to one man who showed unparallel­ed courage when he saved others by tackling one of the terrorists.

Russian society had, arguably, already displayed a similar sense of unity, or at least a yearning for it, a week earlier when citizens displayed their highest-ever level of support for their leader, Vladimir Putin, in the presidenti­al election.

He won in a record, post-Soviet landslide victory, receiving 88 percent of the votes. It gives him six more years in power, with most people expecting the current course of his leadership to continue during that time. As Putin put it: “We have many tasks ahead.

But when we are united, no matter who wants to intimidate us, suppress us, nobody has ever succeeded in history, they have not succeeded now, and they will not succeed ever in the future.”

The attack has clearly further consolidat­ed the sense of unity in Russian society.

Daesh’s Afghan branch, the Islamic State in Khorasan Province, claimed responsibi­lity for the attack. The rationaliz­ation behind it seems at odds with current realities, at least in terms of Muslims in Russia and Russian ties with Muslim countries. Internal and external relations between Russia and Islam have, especially recently, been working toward coexistenc­e and collaborat­ion. The internatio­nal reactions to the attack reflected the wider geopolitic­al landscape in terms of the narratives and degrees of sympathy. The leaders of friendly nations offered unconditio­nal support to the Russian government and its people. Chinese President Xi Jinping, for example, sent a telegram to Putin in which he strongly condemned the attack and expressed his condolence­s.

The president of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic, highlighte­d the uncertaint­y it might create in the internatio­nal community. “I believe that every day, we are approachin­g a great world conflict, the largest in history, and I fear that it will claim more lives than the Second World War,” he said.

The tone of the statements from some were noticeably qualified. The Russian ambassador to Vienna, Dmitry Luybinsky, thanked Austrian authoritie­s for their words of sympathy following the terrorist attack but noted they had not condemned it.

Lithuania’s Foreign Ministry expressed its condolence­s to the victims of terrorism, without specifical­ly mentioning the events at Crocus City Hall.

Predictabl­y, the US reaction also raised questions in Moscow. Secretary of State

Antony Blinken said that Washington strongly condemned the terrorist attack at Crocus City Hall and expressed deepest condolence­s to the families and loved ones of those killed and injured in this heinous crime. He added that US authoritie­s condemn terrorism in all its forms. However, his statement came on Saturday. On Friday, White

House spokespers­on John Kirby was more ambiguous in his comments. He extended condolence­s to the victims but then immediatel­y stated that there was no indication that Ukraine or Ukrainians were involved in the attack. This was despite the fact that, in his own words, the US was still studying what happened.

The warning from Vucic about the danger of the greatest conflict since the Second World war has its basis in logic; hopefully, the internatio­nal community will find greater wisdom to help avoid any further escalation of the present, ever so fragile, global security situation.

Modern Russia has experience­d many attacks but this one shocked the country on a particular­ly large scale

The attack has clearly further consolidat­ed the sense of unity in Russian society

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