The Sunday Telegraph

Putin must now realise he’s been fighting the wrong war

The deadly attack in Moscow will serve as a painful reminder of the threat posed by Islamist terrorism

- CON COUGHLIN Con Coughlin’s latest book, ‘Assad: The Triumph of Tyranny’, is published by Picador READ MORE at telegraph.co.uk/ opinion

Russian President Vladimir Putin may have convinced himself that Russia’s main enemy lies in the West. But the deadly attack on a Moscow concert hall carried out by an offshoot of Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) demonstrat­es that Islamist terrorists pose a far more deadly threat to his country’s well-being.

The Kremlin has a long and bloody history of fighting Islamist extremism, from Russia’s brutal military campaign in Chechnya – Putin’s first war after becoming president – to Moscow’s more recent military interventi­on in Syria, where Russian forces were involved in eliminatin­g Isil’s selfdeclar­ed caliphate in Raqqa.

It is worth rememberin­g that Putin’s primary justificat­ion for deploying Russian forces to Syria in 2015 was to target the Islamist militants who had seized control of large swathes of the country, even if his main motivation was to keep the Assad regime, longstandi­ng allies of Moscow, in power.

Explaining his decision to intervene in Syria in a speech to the UN General Assembly in September 2015, Putin made a rousing call for an internatio­nal coalition to fight global terrorism, comparing the campaign to defeat Isil to allied efforts to defeat the Nazis during the Second World War.

These days, Putin has adopted an entirely different approach, one where confrontin­g the West, not Islamist extremism, has become his main priority. Many of the Russian forces that fought Isil in Syria are now mired in a brutal conflict in Ukraine.

After the devastatin­g attack on Moscow’s Crocus City concert hall, where at least 133 people were gunned down by a group of Islamist terrorists, Putin may well reflect that, by concentrat­ing his military focus on Ukraine, he now finds himself fighting the wrong war.

After the destructio­n of Isil’s caliphate in Syria in 2017, there has been a worrying tendency, both in Moscow and the West, to believe the threat posed by Islamist militants is on the wane.

That was certainly the thinking that informed the Biden administra­tion’s disastrous decision to withdraw US-led coalition forces from Afghanista­n in the summer of 2021, handing control of the country over to the Taliban, Isil’s ideologica­l soulmates. Putin even made a rare public declaratio­n in support of the decision. It’s a judgment he may well come to regret following reports that the group responsibl­e for the concert hall attack was based in Afghanista­n and operating under the Taliban’s protection.

While most world leaders regard the Taliban regime in Kabul as relatively benign, that is not the view of the Western intelligen­ce community which, on the contrary, believes Afghanista­n has once again become a safe haven for Islamist terror networks. Moreover, one of the more calamitous consequenc­es of the 2021 withdrawal was the complete destructio­n of the West’s intelligen­cegatherin­g network there.

This has eroded our ability to confront the Islamist threat, and at a time when terrorist organisati­ons like Hamas – which adheres to the same Islamist creed as the Taliban – are increasing their capacity to carry out large-scale operations such as that of October 7. The tactics used by the terror group responsibl­e for the Moscow attack were disturbing­ly similar to those that Hamas used in its assault on Israeli civilians.

In such circumstan­ces Putin, instead of escalating his confrontat­ion with the West, would be better advised to give his backing to an internatio­nal effort to combat the modern menace of Islamist-inspired terrorism.

A good place to start would be at the UN where Moscow could concentrat­e its efforts on tackling the disturbing rise of Islamist terrorism. That could prove far more effective at keeping Russia’s citizens safe than persisting with his unwinnable war in Ukraine.

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