My article on the PRC’s handling of its Uyghur minority in
Xinjiang, titled “The Stan That Never Was” is in the current edition of
CounterPunch Magazine, the subscription-only print/digital monthly. Subscribe here! Now!
The piece will provide, I think, useful background to
readers who wish to make sense of the spate of news concerning Xinjiang.
Long story short, from the CCP point of view, Xinjiang needs
the best and the brightest to manage its profound contradictions, but the
hardship posting tends to attract cadres and citizens who trend toward the “worst
and dimmest” end of the spectrum. The Center
is trying to square this circle with money, attention, and smarter policies;
but it also realizes its strategy for Xinjiang has a certain chance of failing
catastrophically because of growing local dissatisfaction with what is
essentially colonial occupation harshly implemented by mediocre cadres. The PRC has no interest in cultivating
capable and sophisticated local Uyghurs—like Ilham Tohti, recent recipient of
an extravagantly draconian sentence—who might serve as an alternative rallying
point for improved governance of Xinjiang.
Instead, it is muddling through with what it’s got, while preparing for
the worst-case scenario by beefing up the full suite of effective repressive
measures.
The PRC government invokes the threat of terrorism to
justify its actions, and its reactions to the occasional spectacularly bloody
acts involving aggrieved Uyghurs, Han citizens, and the security
apparatus. Western governments and the
press instinctively gag at the idea of endorsing the repressive Chinese regime’s
insistence on characterizing Uyghur violence as “terrorism” even when—as in the
case of ethnic Uyghurs running amok in a train station in southern China and slaughtering
29 people and injuring 143 more—it’s hard to call it anything else.
Even the paranoid sometimes have real enemies, if only
in the future, and the PRC government has confronted the reality that the nasty
political dynamic provoked by its rule over Xinjiang has the potential to
generate bona fide, professionalized, international-seal-of-approval candlelight-vigil
terrorism, instead of the frantic ad hoc hatcheting that seems to be the rule
today.
The explanation for PRC Xinjiang policy, I believe, can boil down to one word:
Chechnya.
In the West we tend to pigeonhole Chechnya as Putin’s
Problem, Bloodsoaked Caucasus Division.
In fact, there seems to be a sizable contingent of Putinophobic Western
journos who view Chechnya primarily as a Russia v. Freedom cage match and wait with
barely disguised impatience for Chechnya to fall to pieces again so that Putin, his
tsar-light repressive regime, and his ferocious local client, Ramzan Kadyrov,
can be discredited.
But Chechnya has another, less Euro-centric, more Central
Asian identity, as a way station on the global jihad trolley. After the USSR got its ass handed to it in
Afghanistan, the trained, motivated, and at that time generously funded (Saudi
religious foundation, natch) jihadis went looking for a new battle. After a few stopovers in Bosnia &
Tajikistan, they found one in Chechnya.
Chechnya in the 1990s looked pretty much like a reprise of Afghanistan—same
terminally dysfunctional Russky military machine savaging another freedom-loving
Islamic population with a brutal occupation/security operation.
Arab jihadis, led by Ibn al-Khattab, descended on Chechnya
in the mid-1990s. Thanks to their
ruthlessness, fighting experience, and attractive, practical ideology (Khattab
was a champion of what one might characterize as “jihadism in one country” a la
Stalin as opposed to Bin Laden's rather Trotskyite global jihad focused on attacking
the US) the Arab militants to a significant
degree took over the indigenous Chechen independence movement, and also set up
a conveyer belt of Chechen fighters to be trained in Afghanistan (many of whom,
unable to go home to a liberated Chechnya, have found employment and
distraction in Syria/Iraq, but that’s another story).
Khattab was a ferociously effective military leader who
bested the Russians in numerous military engagements. He also benefited from external support, as
Thomas Hegghammer describes in his book, Jihad
in Saudi Arabia: Violence and Pan-Islamism since 1979:
Shortly after his
arrival in Chechnya, Khattab began building a training infrastructure which he
would run in partnership with the legendary Chechen commander Shamil
Basayev. By mid-1995 a logistics chain
had been set up to facilitate the arrival of foreign volunteers. The main stations on this chain were Istanbul
(Turkey) and Baku (Azerbaijan). The Baku
safe house was run by Arabs operating under the cover of the Islamic
Benevolence Committee. Khattab enjoyed a
certain amount of logistical and financial report from Saudi Arabia. Saudi sheikhs declared the Chechen resistance
a legitimate jihad, and private Saudi donors sent money to Khattab and his
Chechen colleagues. As late as 1996, mujahidin
wounded in Chechnya were sent to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment, a practice
paid for by charities and tolerated by the state. After the end of the first Chechen war,
Khattab expanded his activities in Chechnya, build more camps and set up an
institute in which old Saudi friends of Khattab taught religion and military
science to Chechen rebel leaders.
Khattab also benefited from the de facto haven of the
Pankisi Gorge in neighboring Georgia which, according to whomever you believe, has
either been shut down by the pro-US Georgian government in a fit of altruism,
or still provides rest & resupply infrastructure for current and new
jihadis hoping to stick it to Putin in Chechnya and Assad in Syria.
Khattab’s demise has a rather Game of Thrones cum Medici-ish vibe to it, per Wikipedia:
He was killed during
the night of March 19–20, 2002, when a Dagestani messenger hired by the Russian
FSB gave Khattab a poisoned letter. Chechen sources said that the letter was
coated with "a fast-acting nerve agent, possibly sarin or a
derivative". The messenger, a Dagestani double agent known
as Ibragim Alauri was turned by the FSB on his routine courier mission. Khattab
would receive letters from his mother in Saudi Arabia, and the FSB found this
to be the most opportune moment to kill Khattab, rather than attack his
mountain hideout and risk losing soldiers. It was reported that the operation
to recruit and turn Ibragim Alauri to work for the FSB and deliver the poisoned
letter took some six months of preparation. Ibragim was reportedly tracked down
and killed a month later in Baku.
What’s this got to do
with Xinjiang?
Seven areas of high or partial correlation, I would think, as far as PRC strategists are concerned.
First of all, there’s the thirst for independence shared by
activist Uyghurs and Chechens that decades of immersion in a multi-ethnic
communist empire has failed to quench.
Second, there’s the powerful “godless foreigners oppressing
Muslims” dynamic that worked so well in Afghanistan and carried over to
Chechnya.
Third, the religious dynamic in the Xinjiang Uyghur
community is similar Chechnya in the 1990s: indigenous, relatively quietist
Sufism discredited by its impotence in the independence struggle.
Fourth, the challenge of militant Wahabbism, its philosophy
of jihad, its well-heeled charities backed by Saudi sheikhs, and its fifth
column of madrassahs, to traditional religious/political practice.
In Chechnya, Wahabbists were able to achieve
an at least temporary and partial ascendancy.
In the PRC, as this excellent article
by Muhammed al-Sudairi in The Diplomat
points out, the PRC has been vigilant in restricting Wahabbist efforts at
prostelization, education (within the PRC and at Arab universities), and
pilgrimage sponsorship via Saudi charities.
With this context, for instance, the offensive and intrusive
PRC regulations against religious observances within homes, and for growing beards and
wearing hijabs, are understandable.
It is assumed that, by abandoning traditional Uyghur dress and
observance in favor of Wahabbi-tinged practices, these individuals are
self-identifying as malcontents and professional troublemakers. And, in particular, by making beards and hijabs
a regulatory offense, the PRC has a basis for questioning these people and
creating a useful database of worrisome individuals, families, and social
networks.
It pretty much runs in parallel with Chechen Republic efforts to re-establish the prestige of indigenous Sufi observance as an
alternative to “foreign” and subversive Wahabbism.
Fifth, the availability of havens. At the height of the Chechen war, many parts
of the country were no-go zones, there was Pankisi, and behind it the
incalculable comfort of knowing that medevac to Saudi Arabia was available
(just as fighters in Syria and Iraq are granted access to Turkish medical facilities).
The PRC is expending immense resources to ensure that its
writ runs the length and breadth of Xinjiang.
But outside of Xinjiang, there’s wobbly stans, there’s Afghanistan, and
there’s the security trainwreck that is the Pashtun regions of western Pakistan—and
there’s the reduction of the intimidating if strategically ineffectual US/ISAF
presence thanks to the Obama drawdown.
Sixth, there is admission to Jihadi University, the
international network of experienced, talented and, “entrepreneurial” Islamic militants. Only a few hundred can make a difference, as
Higghammer states:
In the Islamist
historical narrative, the emergence of the Saudi jihadist movement represents a
spontaneous 'rise of the people' in the face of outside aggression in
Afghanistan, Bosnia and Chechnya. The
reality was far more complex. 'The
people' never rose to any of these causes, and the mobilisation was far from
spontaneous. A few thousand men were
mobilised, and only as the result of the systematic and sustained effort of
entrepreneurial groups of devoted individuals.
Khattab helped bring jihad to Chechnya.
In Pakistan, as I have attempted to point out frequently,
the essential identity of the Pakistan Taliban (not, please, to be confused
with the PRC-friendly and open-for-business Afghan Taliban) is to avenge the
bloody assault on the Lal Masjid Mosque in Islamabad—which was undertaken at
the insistence of the PRC, partially because it believed that Uyghur militants
were being harbored there.
In Central Asia, the PRC has historically benefited from the
contacts and resources it developed in its role as the CIA’s quartermaster to
the anti-Soviet mujahidin, and in its intimate security alliance with Pakistan’s
military. But those relationships are in
danger of fraying, at least with some groups that have dumped al Qaeda and the
Afghan Taliban to declare loyalty to the Islamic Caliphate. And there, militant Uyghurs have reportedly
found haven.
PRC’s diplomacy and security policy for Central Asia is, I
believe, a matter of trying to shore up the anti-terror capability of its more
rickety neighbors against the day when a significant chunk of professional
Islamic militants decide that fighting the Chinese infidel in Xinjiang on
behalf of Islam and the Uyghurs is the cause du jour.
Seventh, there is outside money. Saudi fiddling in Chechnya is a matter of
record. And there is the notorious rumor
that Prince Bandar threatened President Putin with Chechnya problems at the
time of the Sochi Olympics if Russia did not abandon its pro-Syria policy.
Thankfully, for the PRC at least, the prospect of Saudi
Arabian sheikhs funneling money and support to Uyghur rebels-- and thereby terminally
offending and alienating China, the 21st century’s biggest customer for Middle
East hydrocarbons--is relatively remote.
As long as the PRC is left to its own devices and the Uyghur
community is fragmented internally and isolated from outside support, the CCP’s
divide and rule/assimilationist/repressive model for Xinjiang—backed by the
world’s largest population and second largest economy—has good prospects for
success.
But factors 1-6 offer the PRC plenty of food for thought.
1 comment:
Japan. The model is Imperial Japan. By the 1930s, there were lots of young Koreans and Taiwanese Chinese who identified with Tokyo. It took the - arguably more sophisticated Japanese in simpler times around 30-40 years to indoctrinate the locals. The PRC is much less aggressive in her efforts, but give it one more generation and most young people inside the PRC will feel "Chinese".
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