Analysis
Did Ukraine war lead Russian security services to
neglect Islamist threat?
Shaun
Walker, Pjotr Sauer and Andrew Roth
Considering its giant security apparatus, Moscow’s
slow response to terror attack is shocking
Sun 24 Mar
2024 15.00 GMT
As Russia
observes a day of mourning for the victims of Friday’s terror attack, along
with the sorrow comes the hard question that follows most similar incidents:
how could this have happened?
Rooting out
determined and well-trained terrorist cells is not an easy task for security
services in any country, but there are numerous signs that failing to prevent
Friday’s attack was in large part down to a catastrophic security failure on
the part of Russian authorities.
First,
there was the public warning from the US government earlier in March that it
had learned of “imminent plans to target large gatherings in Moscow” by
terrorists. The warning, also shared privately with the Russian government,
suggested Washington had picked up some fairly specific intelligence relating
to an upcoming attack. But Putin, three days before the attack, brushed off
these warnings, calling them an “attempt to scare and intimidate our society”.
In light of
Putin’s public dismissal of the threat, it also seems Russian authorities did
not take additional security measures to protect such large gatherings, with
numerous witnesses talking of an extremely light security presence at the
Crocus City Hall. The police response to the attacks was so slow that the
handful of attackers were able to roam the venue at will, kill more than 100
people and then slip away without being apprehended or shot on the spot.
For a
country with a giant, sprawling security apparatus, this slow response is
shocking. Some Russians pointedly compared the absent police response on Friday
with the overwhelming police presence at the funeral of opposition leader
Alexei Navalny, after his death in a Russian prison.
“The FSB
obviously had their priorities wrong. They had their main resources on Ukraine
and on the domestic opposition. These are the priorities placed upon them from
the top,” said Mark Galeotti, an expert on the Russian security services.
As the
crackdown on dissent has intensified in the two years since the full-scale
invasion of Ukraine, Putin’s security services have gone after people who put
likes on anti-war social media content, LGBTQ+ adolescents who can now be
accused of “extremism” simply for attending gay club nights, and people laying
flowers in memory of Navalny.
Thousands
of security officials have been sent away from their day jobs in Russia to
manage the takeover of newly occupied parts of Ukraine, rounding up Ukrainian
sympathisers and sowing terror in a foreign country rather than keeping an eye
on security threats at home.
There was
also a feeling that the threat from domestic Islamist terrorism, ever-present
during the first decade of Putin’s rule, had subsided. Strong-arm tactics in
the North Caucasus region, combined with allowing several thousand radicals to
leave for Syria and Iraq several years ago, led to a feeling that the fight
against Islamist terror was over.
“Everybody
relaxed and there was a general feeling that there was no longer a serious
threat,” said one analyst who works on the phenomenon inside Russia.
The
dynamics at play in Friday’s attack, with most of the perpetrators apparently
radicalised citizens of Tajikistan, are different to the terror attacks in the
early part of Putin’s rule, when attackers tended to be from the North
Caucasus.
Galeotti
said: “Central Asian Islamic terrorism remains a real problem for the FSB. The
FSB has a lot of experience dealing with extremists in the Caucasus, they have
spent huge resources on that, but central Asia is more of a blind spot.”
Predictably,
in the aftermath of the attack, rumours and wild theories abounded about who
might “really” have been responsible, even as Islamic State took responsibility
for the bloodshed.
Putin
hinted at supposed Ukrainian links to the attacks, and Russian pro-war
commentators went further, making a concerted effort to suggest that the
Islamic State claims were a red herring and the attacks were actually organised
by Kyiv. Ukraine has fiercely denied this.
Meanwhile,
Ukrainian military intelligence and some western commentators suggested the
whole thing had been a “false flag” event, organised or facilitated by the
Kremlin to consolidate the war effort in Ukraine.
There is so
far no evidence that either of these suggestions are true, although the
coordinated claims of Ukrainian involvement by Russian sources do suggest that
the Kremlin plans to use the aftermath of the attacks for political gain.
The coming
days will show whether the Kremlin’s claims of Ukrainian involvement are simply
a distraction tactic from the intelligence failure, or if they will be used to
bolster a ramping up of war rhetoric.
In many
societies, there would be serious political questions raised after such an
attack, but Putin rarely punishes subordinates for failures and will likely be
keen to avoid too much talk of an intelligence catastrophe.
“You would
think heads should roll at the FSB, but there was no meaningful retribution for
their intelligence failures during the invasion of Ukraine. Putin is hesitant to implement a major reshuffle,” said Galeotti
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