| 分类: VOA英语 |
Chechen Peace Prospects Said to Dim in Aftermath of Maskhadov Killing
Recent Chechen history has brought to prominence two separatist leaders who have been fighting Russian forces for about a decade.
One was Aslan Maskhadov, former elected president of Chechnya,
considered by many experts to be a moderate figure willing
to negotiate with Russia. The other is Shamil Basayev, a far more
radical leader, willing to use terrorist tactics to achieve
his goal of full independence from Russia. Last
month,
Experts on the Chechen crisis say one cannot draw a
parallel between the two separatist leaders. Marshall
Goldman, from Harvard University,
Marshall Goldman: The important thing about Maskhadov was that he kept talking about the need to mediate, to work out some kind of arrangement with the Russian government. His problem was that he couldn't control everybody in Chechnya, so he could say one thing, but then the Basayevs and others would act on their own.
Experts say another difference between the two is that Mr. Maskhadov has condemned terrorist acts while Mr. Basayev has claimed responsibility for some of the worst acts of terrorism in post-Soviet Russia. They included the seizure of a Moscow theater in October 2002 and last September's raid on a school in Beslan, North Ossetia where more than 330 people were killed, half of them children. However Russian President Vladimir Putin considers both men terrorists and his fight against Chechen separatists as part of the international war on terrorism.
Yo'av Karny is a scholar who has written extensively on Chechnya.
Yo'av Karny: To think of Maskhadov as an Osama bin
Laden character, hiding in the
Analysts say another key difference between the two men is that Mr. Maskhadov was willing to negotiate with Russian authorities while Mr. Basayev rejected any notion of talks.
John Russell is an expert on Chechnya from Bradford University. He says Mr. Maskhadov's death allows the Russian government to continue its policy of refusing to talk with Chechen separatists.
John Russell: What it does do, of course, is it allows
Putin to say to the international community: who is there left to
negotiate with? You may not agree that we have rubbed
out
Mr. Russell says given the current situation, there is no chance of talks between the Russians and Chechen separatists.
John Russell: Maskhadov would have represented a body of
moderate opinion that would have settled for less than outright
Chechen independence. Basayev, I think, would not, and that's the
difference, in some ways.
Experts say the future for any peaceful solution to the Chechen conflict is gloomy. They say Russian forces will continue to hunt down Mr. Basayev. Analysts also say there is no doubt that he will engage in more terrorist acts.
Yo'av Karny sees another outcome, now that Mr. Maskhadov is dead.
Yo'av Karny: Disintegration of the independence
movement.
Chechen separatists have named Abdul-Khalim Saidullayev, a local religious leader, to succeed Aslan Maskhadov. Experts say very little is known about Mr. Saidullayev but they all agree that he neither has Aslan Maskhadov's stature nor his following.
For Focus, I’m Andre de Nesnera.
注释:
prominence [5prRminEns] n. 突出,明显的事物
separatist [5sepEreitist] n. 分离主义者,独立派
moderate [5mCdErit] adj. 中立的,缓和的
radical [5rAdikEl] adj. 激进的
pin down 镇压
parallel [5pArElel] n. 平行线,平行面
mediate [5mi:djEt] v. 仲裁,调停
Osama bin Laden 奥萨马·本·拉登
rhetoric [5retErik] n. 花言巧语
rub out 抹去,擦去,这里指消灭
diabolical [daiE5bClikEl] adj. 恶魔的
scenario [si5nB:riEu] n. 特定的情节
gloomy [5^lu:mi] adj. 黑暗的,阴郁的,令人沮丧的
disintegration [dis7inti5^reiFEn] n. 瓦解
spasm [5spAzEm] n. 一阵发作,痉挛,这里指不断的冲突事件
warlord [5wC:lC:d] n. 军阀,军阀式首脑


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