In the 1990s and early 2000s, the Russian government defeated a separatist insurgency in Chechnya with a scorched-earth campaign that killed thousands of civilians and displaced hundreds of thousands more. Despite that ostensible victory, Russia continues to battle separatist insurgents in its North Caucasus region, of which Chechnya is a part. According to the independent news site Caucasian Knot (here), from 2010 to 2013 this conflict killed more than 2,700 people, approximately 1,500 of whom were civilians. The group leading the separatist insurgency in its current form, the Caucasus Emirate, has also committed several major terrorist attacks in Moscow and elsewhere, and in early 2014 its leader publicly called on militants to attack the Sochi Olympics (see here).
The persistence of this insurgency and its success in carrying out significant attacks elsewhere in Russia raises an awkward question: Why hasn’t the same regime that perpetrated a state-led mass killing in Chechnya done the same in its fight against the substantial insurgency that persists?
I recently emailed a few experts on political violence and civil conflict in Russia to ask them about this puzzle. In their responses, a couple of them wondered if it was even a puzzle at all, suggesting that Russian forces may already be committing atrocities in the North Caucasus that amount to state-led mass killing. Jason Lyall, a professor of political science at Yale University who studies civil wars and conducted field research in the region in the early 2000s, told me that:
Kristin Bakke, a senior lecturer in politics and international relations at University College London who studies political violence, including Russia’s civil wars, made a similar point:
Bakke’s and Lyall’s remarks about the persistence of atrocities in the North Caucasus are echoed in a background briefing written earlier this year by the Council on Foreign Relations’ Zachary Laub for PBS Newshour. According to Laub,
Still, all of the experts I consulted agreed that Russia has not attacked the current insurgency as aggressively as it prosecuted the war in Chechnya. None of them claims to fully understand why that’s true, but all three said that necessity, or the lack thereof, has something to do with it. Monica Duffy Toft, a professor of government and public policy at Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford, who studies ethnic and religious civil wars in Russia and elsewhere, wrote:
Lyall’s explanation expanded on that latter idea:
Bakke echoed that necessity-based argument and pointed out that two other drivers of the violence in Chechnya—racism in Russia against people from the North Caucasus and sympathy among foreign governments for crackdowns on groups with ties to international terrorism—were still present today, so we can’t explain the difference in strategies through changes in them. She also made an interesting point about variation over time in the professionalism of Russian security forces:
Given what Bakke, Lyall, and others say about the persistence of atrocities in the region, it certainly doesn’t make sense to describe the absence of overt state-led mass killing in the North Caucasus as a preventive success. At the same time, none of these experts seemed to expect the situation to worsen sharply any time soon.
Consistent with those views, the Early Warning Project’s statistical risk assessments do not identify Russia as a country at relatively high risk of an onset of state-led mass killing. Russia currently ranks 82nd among the 162 countries we assess, placing it in the large pool of cases with estimated risks hovering close to zero. Since late 2013, we have also been asking our expert opinion pool to assess the risk of an onset of state-led mass killing in the North Caucasus region before the end of this year. As the plot below shows, the aggregate forecast from that pool ticked up a bit ahead of the Sochi Olympics but never exceeded 13 percent and has receded slightly since the spring. In short, in spite of the persistent insurgency and recent history of mass atrocities perpetrated by the same regime, neither our statistical models nor our opinion pool foresees a sharp escalation of state-led atrocities in the North Caucasus in the near future.