RT News is reporting that the terrorist attack on the St.
Petersburg subway Monday was the work of a Kyrgyz national with Russian
citizenship. Based on the photos shown, he appears to be an Islamic militant.
We don't hear much from Kyrgyzstan, a relatively small Central Asian Muslim
state situated between three giants - China, Russia and Kazakhstan. It is a
major producer of gold and its fertile green valleys are ideal for agriculture,
which it has been trying to develop. It was last heard from in the news when
one of its nationals shot up a club in Istanbul,Turkey on New Year's eve,
creating massive casualties.
Well,
they are back.
It's
exceptionally bad news because terrorism tends to encourage other terrorism and
it may mean that Isis, which claimed credit for the Petersburg attack, has
infiltrated its society.
Here's
another reason it's bad: It raises questions as to whether Russia can be of any
use as a partner to the West in the war on Isis. President Vladimir Putin does
talk tough about terrorists and where he has the space to do it, can crack own
hard. But with Russians wary of any war (they all know how badly their soldiers
have been treated in the aftermath, there is no wounded warrior social
network), Putin may not have the public behind him. Ergo, Russia may be too
weak as an ally to fight Isis despite its national interests as the cultural
guardian of orthodoxy, its geographical proximity to terrorist nesting grounds
in the Middle East and its impressive reputation for a hard hand against
miscreants. They might just not be able to do it, given the problems emerging
in what is known as its 'Near Abroad,' the scruffy Central Asian states on much
of its southern border. They've got a big emerging problem here.
And
don't think they aren't the first victim of it as well. Russia has a largely
unguarded border, the largest population of illegals outside the U.S. (go
figger - the reality is, the place is not as bad as the human rights groups
paint it - its World Bank rankings on economic freedom are fairly good) and
they are a major transshipment point of migrants to Europe through Murmansk and
St. Petersburg. So this emerging terrorism problem with Kyrgyzstan is not just
a problem for themselves, but has potential to spread to western Europe. They
may not be able to be helfpul.
Fundamentalism
has been popping up a lot in Kyrgyzstan, and neighboring Kazakhstan. Over the
summer there were several internal incidents, apparently combinations of coups
and teerrorism, though the Russian and Kazakh governments dismissed these
incidents as tribal. Neighboring Uzbekistan seems to be more stable, the place
has a lot of people and dates back to the tsarist empire and so, seems to be an
articulate state, and so far, the fundamentalist infection has not hit them.
But those other areas are emerging trouble spots. Kyrgyzstan also is quite
close to Xinjiang where Islamic fundamentalism is also a growing problem and of
great concern to China.
Kazakhstan
(which RT names in its report as an initial possible supplier of suspects) is
significant because they have had currency devaluation which is horrifically
destabilizing to anyone who has to live inside the country because it drives up
prices and destroys savings. It was done by state poliyc with likely Russian
connivance, in a conversation I roughly recall last summer with Johns Hopkins
University economist Steve Hanke because it enabled Kazakhstan to
corner the global uranium market, including our uranium with their hard
currency, through Hillary Clinton's dirty deal. This had been the plan since
2009, and Hanke had firsthand knowledge of the Kazakhs' initial efforts to
stabilize their currency. The weak Kazakh currency drove down the global
commodity price of uranium (they are the Saudi Arabia of uranium) and made it
impossible for legitimate producers to stay in business over in
Australia,Canada and the states. The U.S. has just one or two working uranium
mines as a result, something that alarms some of my sources in the Department
of Energy. Australia is in a very similar bad way. The Canadian, which control
very big companies such as Cameco, are in best shape, but they have suffered
too. Driving down the currency which drove down the price of uranium, upon
which all nuclear power and nuclear weapons are derived, was a strategy to take
over the industry. It worked but now we have a Muslim fundamentalism problem in
that country and in Kyrgyzstan, which has also seen fearsome devaluations as a
small country with an economy tied to Russia and China, both of which have
devalued in recent years. It has desperately tried to stabilize its currency,
probably with only partial luck. It does not help that it is a major shipper of
legal illegal immigrants (1 million) and relies on remittances, which the World
Bank says tend to keep a country underdeveloped. But give it credit, it has
tried.
Currency devaluation may be great for cornering the market on strategic national resources but it makes everyone and everything suffer on the inside.
Currency devaluation may be great for cornering the market on strategic national resources but it makes everyone and everything suffer on the inside.
Now
it's spilling over to Russia's borders and may go beyond that. Unless a
hardcore free market regime is instituted (something Hanke would be more than
capable of doing) the terror attacks on St. Petersburg only expose the quietly
festering problems Russia has with it near abroad and which may impact its
capacity to fight terror beyond its borders to keep it from spreading.
http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2017/04/st_petersburg_attack_shows_russias_growing_problem_with_its_nearabroad.html