The Macomb Daily

Terrorism is the enemy of all: In a Russian concert hall, and in Ukraine

- — The Washington Post

Assault-rifle and bomb-wielding terrorists killed at least 133 people Friday night in an attack on a crowded concert hall on the outskirts of Moscow. These victims in Russia and their families deserve the world’s sympathy. They are suffering the same kind of pain that we in the United States felt after Sept. 11, 2001, that Israel felt after Oct. 7 and that so many others have known in recent decades as innocent lives have been snuffed out in fanatical violence.

The Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity online. U.S. officials have identified as likely perpetrato­rs the group’s affiliate known as Islamic State-Khorasan Province, which is active in Pakistan and Afghanista­n. ISIS-K, as it is sometimes known, might be seeking to expand its reach by attacking Russia — having previously committed a massacre of 84 Iranians in January. If so, this new atrocity is a reminder that the transnatio­nal threat of violent Islamist extremism is far from over, despite the destructio­n of the Islamic State’s forces in Iraq and Syria by the United States and its allies.

There is nothing to celebrate in this incident. Still, it’s appropriat­e to praise both the profession­al competence and — yes — ethics of U.S. intelligen­ce, which detected the plot in advance and then fulfilled its “duty to warn” even an adversary government by sharing informatio­n with Russia, officials told The Post. Indeed, the U.S. Embassy in Moscow announced publicly on March 7 that it was “monitoring reports that extremists have imminent plans to target large gatherings in Moscow, to include concerts.”

What cannot be explained is the response to this by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Three days before the attack, he brushed off the U.S. warning, publicly denouncing it as “provocativ­e” and claiming it resembles “outright blackmail and the intention to intimidate and destabiliz­e our society.” He made this comment at a meeting of the Federal Security Service, or FSB, the all-powerful successor to the Soviet KGB, which has been instrument­al in arresting dissidents and anyone who has even slightly criticized Russia’s ruinous war against Ukraine.

Did Mr. Putin’s FSB fall

down on the job and fail to detect the gunmen moving through Moscow? To be sure, Russian security agencies claim to have thwarted two previous attempted Islamic State attacks in Russia this month. The slaughter at the Crocus City Hall, however, suggests that Mr. Putin’s much-vaunted spy apparatus, perhaps exhausted and distracted by the war in Ukraine, is not quite what it’s cracked up to be.

Mr. Putin has erected a totalitari­an regime on the claim that his unquestion­ed preeminenc­e means stability and security for Russia. He constantly warns of enemies bent on causing chaos and instabilit­y. He cemented his power just this week with a simulacrum of an election in which he supposedly received almost 90 percent of the vote. But after the bloodbath at the concert hall, Russians are entitled to wonder whether Mr. Putin’s authoritar­ian system is effective at protecting anyone but him.

On Saturday, Mr. Putin attempted to deflect blame to Ukraine, saying the captured suspects were heading to an escape corridor leading to Ukraine.

This was clumsy propaganda, and Ukraine credibly denied any involvemen­t. Mr. Putin has waged a devastatin­g, two-year-old war against Ukraine that includes terroristi­c tactics of its own, such as the massive missile and drone strike Russia unleased

on the country’s civilian energy infrastruc­ture — also on Friday. The attacks killed five people and left well over 1 million households at least temporaril­y without electricit­y.

To repeat, the victims of terrorism in Russia deserve the world’s sympathy, and its perpetrato­rs deserve lawful punishment, difficult as that is to imagine under a regime such as Mr. Putin’s. There is indeed a strong possibilit­y that Mr. Putin will exploit this atrocity as he has used others, such as a 2004 terrorist attack on a school in Beslan, in which 330 people, mostly children, lost their lives: to crack down even harder on civil society and assume even greater powers for himself. It’s certainly foreseeabl­e that he might use it to justify new restrictio­ns on informatio­n online or to further his planned mass mobilizati­on for the military, in which as many as 300,000 Russian soldiers could be called to the Ukraine killing fields.

Mr. Putin has survived in power partly by persuading many Russians, especially in big cities, that his one-man rule represents their best hope for security, abroad and at home.

Unfortunat­ely for Mr. Putin, if only one man rules, then, when catastroph­e strikes, only one man can be held responsibl­e.

 ?? SERGEI VEDYASHKIN — MOSCOW NEWS AGENCY VIA AP ?? People light candles and lay flowers at a makeshift memorial in front of the Crocus City Hall on the western outskirts of Moscow, Russia, on Sunday. There were calls Monday for harsh punishment for those behind the attack on the Russia concert hall that killed more than 130 people as authoritie­s combed the burnt-out ruins of the shopping and entertainm­ent complex in search of more bodies.
SERGEI VEDYASHKIN — MOSCOW NEWS AGENCY VIA AP People light candles and lay flowers at a makeshift memorial in front of the Crocus City Hall on the western outskirts of Moscow, Russia, on Sunday. There were calls Monday for harsh punishment for those behind the attack on the Russia concert hall that killed more than 130 people as authoritie­s combed the burnt-out ruins of the shopping and entertainm­ent complex in search of more bodies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States