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Reports and analysis
Illuminating the full extent of humanitarian and political catastrophe in Chechnya is a crucial first step in developing and ultimately instituting U.S. policies consistent with protecting human rights and promoting regional stability. The following topical archive serves as an online clearinghouse for research, analysis and official statements concerning the war in Chechnya and its broader moral and strategic dimensions.
Freedom House publications
Human rights reports back to top
Terrorism back to top
- Has Russia Achieved Victory in Its War against Terror?
December 2006: Pavel K. Baev, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- Beslan:
Russia's 9/11?
October 12, 2005: John
Dunlop, American Committee for Peace in Chechnya
- From Dubrovka to Beslan: Who is learning faster?
November 2004: Ekaterina Stepanova, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- Chechnya's
Suicide Bombers: Desperate, Devout, or Deceived?
September 16, 2004: John
Reuter, American Committee for Peace in Chechnya
- Patterns
of Global Terrorism
April 30, 2003: U.S. Department
of State
- Links
between Chechen rebels and al-Qaeda questioned
March 21, 2003: Andrew
Jack, The Financial Times
- U.S.
State Department Designation of Chechen Terrorist Organizations
February 2003: Colin
Powell, The Federal Register
- Chechen
Terrorist Organizations: Statement of the Case
February 2003: U.S.
Department of State
- Al
Qaeda and Chechnya
October 2002: Lyoma
Usmanov, The Washington Post
- Statement
on the events of September 11
September 2002: Chechen
Committee of National Salvation
- Allies
and Atrocities
August 2002: The Washington
Post
- Patterns
of Global Terrorism
May 2002: United States
Department of State
- Chechnya's
Tragedy
February 2002: The
Washington Times
- Tiptoe
Diplomacy
January 28, 2002: Fred
Hiatt, The Washington Post
- Chechnya-Based
Terrorists
January 2002: Council
on Foreign Relations
- Patterns
of Global Terrorism
April 2001: United States
Department of State
U.S. policy briefs back to top
- The Changing Context of Russian Federal Policy in the North Caucasus
December 2006: Mark Kramer, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- Instability in the North Caucasus and the Political Implications for the Russo-chechen War
December 2005: Mark Kramer, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- The Coming Revolutions in the North Caucasus
December 2005: Georgi Derluguian, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- Bringing Peace to Chechnya?
February 11, 2005
: Jim Nichol, CRS Report for Congress
- Russia
January 5, 2005
: Stuart D. Goldman, CRS Issue Brief for Congress
- Ingushetia as a Microcosm of Putin’s Reforms
November 2004: Matthew Evangelista, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- Putin’s War in Chechnya: Who steers the course?
November 2004: Pavel K. Baev, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- Security Sell-Out in the North Caucasus, 2004
November 2004: Mikhail A. Alexseev, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- The Structures of Chechnya’s Quagmire
November 2003: Georgi Derguluian, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- US Foreign Policy and Chechnya
March 2003
: Michael McFaul, A Paper by the Century Foundation and the Stanley Foundation
- US Policy on Chechnya
May 9, 2002
: Steven Pifer, Deputy Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs, Statement Before the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe
- Opposition to the War in Chechnya: Antimilitarist Organizing in Russia
January 2002: Valerie Sperling, PONARS policy brief, CSIS
- An Opening on Chechnya
July 2001
: Zbigniew Brzezinski, Max M. Kampelman and Alexander M. Haig, Jr.
- U.S. Policy for the Caspian region
July 2001
: Brenda Shaffer, Harvard University
- Toward a U.S. Policy on Chechnya
November 2001
: Sarah E. Mendelson and Scott Lindsay, CSIS
- The Second Chechen War: Two Years On
September 2001
: John Dunlop, Stanford University
- Chechnya Conflict: Recent Developments
May 3, 2000: Jim Nichol, Congressional Research Service
- Russia's Escalation in Chechnya: What Can the West Do?
October 27, 1999: United States Information Agency
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