Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Islam and the Future of Russia
Communist and Post-Communist Studies | 2/ 27/2008 | Dmitry Shlapentokh

Posted on 03/12/2008 9:47:20 AM PDT by hanfei

Abstract The growing and increasingly politically active Russian Muslims of diverse ethnic backgrounds provide various political models for their relationship with Russians. Some still accept Eurasianism but assume that it is Muslims not Orthodox Russians who should be the “older brothers” in the alliance or, in any case, that the very notion of older and younger brother should be put to an end. The others want complete separation from Russia or at least the minimization of their relationship with it. Finally, others believe in the Islamization of Russia. The models provide a glance at the possible scenarios for Russia's future.

Keywords: Muslims; Russia; Eurasianism; Dzhemal; Tatarstan; Chechnya; Jihadism

Article Outline The demographic shift The spread of “conversions” The rise of Muslim parties Muslims as equal brothers Dzhemal: Asiatic Eurasianism Russia as a dying civilization Eternal Russia as eternal evil The global Muslim community is the only force fighting for global justice From the Asiatic version of Eurasianism to Islamization Discarding the Mongol legacy The early Ottoman state as the ideal society and springboard for global Caliphate Conclusion References

The disintegration of the USSR has caused a tectonic shift in geopolitical arrangements. One of these changes was the end of Slavdom, as it had been known for centuries. Not just the “arrogant” Poles of Alexander Pushkin, but even “brotherly” Ukrainians would rather opt for Europe. Incorporation in the European Union is invariably seen as parting with Russia, despite a considerable number of Russian elite proclamations that Russia is also a part of Europe. The Slavs of Eastern and Southern Europe might think about the case of a divided West and ponder whether it would be better to be attached to Western Europe or to the USA. Quite a few might be disappointed with geopolitical marriages that often hardly meet their expectations. But they have no second thoughts in regard to their divorce from Russia.

In this geopolitical debacle for Russia, some members of the elite have turned to Eurasianism, the political/philosophical doctrine that emerged in the 1920s, seeing it as one of the more viable ideological paradigms. Its influence, especially in its Europeanized form, can be seen in Putin's often use of Eurasian lexicon. Its essence is the assumption that Russia is a unique blend of Slavic/Orthodox and Muslim, mostly Turkic, people. Russian Muslims, not Slavs outside Russia, are Russia's natural allies. Eurasian doctrine seems to depart from Slavophilism, but it is similar in many ways. Like Slavophiles, traditional Eurasianists assume that Russia, along with Orthodoxy, should be an “older brother,” playing the leading role in political arrangements. Islam, Buddhism, and traditional Judaism are accepted as honorable, legitimate religions, but they are seen as planets moving around the central creed, even as a kind of derivative of Orthodoxy. Their independent roles, especially cultural/historical and metaphysical ones, are utterly ignored. And, of course, the notion that the various ethnic groups that populate Russia belong to different civilizations is absolutely discarded.

The assumption that Orthodox Russians are the “older brothers” of the Eurasian family is increasingly challenged by Russian Muslims of various ethnic backgrounds. This is not due to a “clash of civilizations” (whatever the term might mean) but due to the rise of Asia as an economic and demographic center, the global Muslim response to the spread of capitalism, and the peculiar arrangements in Russia. Ethnic Russians face an increasing challenge to their leadership of the Russian state, noted by those who observe political/intellectual trends.

In the late Yeltsin and especially Putin eras, there have been endless assertions about unity and the mighty state. Politicians state that the decline is over and Russians have reentered the world arena as important players. Yet ethnic Russians show strong political/social atomization and are decreasing in numbers. The Muslims of the Russian Federation are putting forward their own political vision. Some assume that the Eurasian model basically works, but that Muslims should equal or even lead the Russians. Others opt for separating from the Federation, or at least minimizing ties with the center. Still others dream of total Islamization, changing Russia completely in a neo-Bolshevik or neoconservative way.

The demographic shift One could argue about the importance of the increasing Muslim role in contemporary Russia. Certainly the political assertiveness of the Muslim parties and Muslims in general has received major impetus from the increase in numbers of Muslims, caused not just by migration but also by their increasing birth rate.

It is common knowledge – anecdotal evidence supported by statistics – that the Russian population is declining. The birth rate is lowest in Moscow, St. Petersburg, the Tula region, and Mordovia, the ethnic Russian heartland. There are a variety of explanations. Vardan Bagdasaryan, in an article for the Russian Civilization Foundation, proposed that the decline is directly connected with the preservation of traditional culture. “This pattern,” he says, “suggests that those peoples who traditionally followed Orthodoxy were far more affected by Soviet atheistic propaganda, something that left them without the kind of cultural defense that other religious traditions – including Islam, Buddhism and paganism – provided their followers” (quoted in Goble, 2006). And this has directly affected the ethnic Russian birth rate.

Traditionally non-Orthodox ethnic groups continue to increase, pagan as well as Muslim. Despite the widespread notion that post-Soviet hardships have brought the small northern and Siberian minorities to the verge of extinction, they actually have dramatically increased. According to Bagdasaryan, “pagan groups in the Far East, Siberia and the North grew rapidly during this internecine period – with the Mani increasing by 44.6% and the Khanty by 30%, for example – despite the extreme climatic conditions in the regions where they live” (quoted in Goble, 2006). Of course, the small indigenous peoples of the North will not dominate Russia, whatever their birth rate. The Chinese, however, could do so; consequently, there is fear of creeping Chinese migration. Some experts believe that in 20–30 years the expansion of Asians, especially Chinese, will change the demographic profile of parts of Russia, threatening the global predominance of European civilization (Mandrik, 2006). Muslimization and consequent Turkization of the country – most Russian Muslims are ethnically/linguistically Turkic – are seen as another possibility. Many of these people are not migrants who might have problems getting resident/work permits, but indigenous Russians who have experienced the same revival as the ethnic groups of the north. The demographic/cultural/religious balance of the Federation is shifting in a direction that could potentially change the very nature of Russian civilization.

Russian authorities, disturbed by the decline of ethnic Russians, have proposed several measures to solve the problem, including financial incentives for women to have more children. The actual implications of this program – if it indeed were to stimulate the birth rate – were not well thought through. In the view of some observers, Muslims with their traditional values would be the most likely to benefit (Babich, 2006). Sensing that the demographic balance could be tipped in favor of ethnic minorities, mostly Muslims, the state has engaged in other plans.

One idea is to encourage migration from other republics of the former Soviet Union, especially ethnic Russians. This follows the model of Nazi Germany, which tried to bring ethnic Germans back to the Reich. But it is not likely to solve Russia's demographic problems, much less substantially resolve the demographic balance of the Federation. Most ethnic Russians who felt uncomfortable in the new independent states have already left, and the explosive population rise in Central Asia has spread to Russia via emigration. It is unlikely that immigration authorities would be able to differentiate between ethnic Russians and Russian-speaking non-ethnic Russians from republics of the former USSR. Moreover, the proverbial Russian bureaucratic corruption would probably mean that those with enough cash would have no problem getting to Russia as workers or permanent residents.

The demographic effects of migration, mostly from the predominantly Turkic Central Asian republics – Tajikistan is the only notable exception – are already visible in Russia, and future shifts may be even more dramatic. Experts say that by 2010, if present trends continue, 50% of Russia's 18-year-old men will come from historically Muslim peoples of the Federation (Russia: the impact of Islamic parties, 2003). All this has led to the emergence of Russian Muslims as a distinct political force.

The spread of “conversions” The power of the Islamic community is reinforced by both the slowdown of assimilation and conversions to Islam. According to some insiders, the rates of conversion of the Orthodox people “became threatening” (Novosti i Kommentarii, 2006). Despite improved conditions under Putin, Russian marginalization and the disintegration of Slavdom as a geopolitical entity have led some Russians to abnegate their national identity, which is historically related to Orthodoxy.

Similar to other millenarian creeds, early Christian or Marxist, Islamic jihadism discards nationality/ethnicity to define humanity. Acceptance or rejection of true Islam is what really matters. Islam, sometimes in its extremist form, is increasingly popular among ethnic Russians, and conversion is common ([20 tysiach korennykh moskvichei priniali Islam, 2004] and [Ahmad, 2004]). Some converts see total conversion to Islam as the only salvation and support the so-called Russian Islam, whose proponents advance the following proposition: “In the historical past, Russians made a mistake when they adopted Orthodoxy and not, let us say, Islam; and on this basis, they decayed as a people, falling away from God and taking to drink. Consequently, advocates of Russian Islam say that if now Russians want to reestablish a certain historical justice and accept Islam, then this will save Russia – Russians will stop drinking, and the demographic situation (under the conditions of polygamy) will resolve itself” (Goble, 2006). These conversions have increased the numbers of Muslims and correspond with the increasing assertiveness of the Islamic community in the Federation.

The rise of Muslim parties At the beginning of the post-Soviet era, the Muslim minority felt in the shadow of a “big brother.” Political influence grew very slowly, and the Islamic parties could hardly be seen as a major political force: “they rose and fell, and wound up not having a major impact” (Russia: the impact of Islamic parties, 2003). But the very emergence of these parties indicated political clout. Even those who had no desire to split from Russia felt that they should have more power and, therefore, wealth in a society where the two are directly connected.

Nur (Light), formed in 1995, was among the first officially registered Muslim movements. Its influence was miniscule. “Out of Nur came the ‘Islamic Party of Russia’ (IPR), which was not registered, due to its religious name” (Politicheskoe Issledovanie, 2003). The role of another Nur offshoot, the True Patriots of Russia, seems also to be negligible. Muslims of Russia, led by the Mufti of the Volga region (Povolzhe) Mukaddas Bibarsov, which apparently emerged independently, also appears to have had quite limited influence (Politicheskoe Issledovanie, 2003). The Union of Muslims of Russia seems to be more influential. Formed in 1995, it was headed by Nadirshakh Khachilaev, from Daghistan's Lak minority. The Union joined the Our Home Is Russia bloc, supported Yeltsin in the 1996 elections with some reservations, and maintained contact with Yeltsin's national security adviser, General Aleksandr Lebed.

The Muslim community placed its intellectual relationship with Orthodox Russians in the broader context of global politics and the general historical process. Several models emerged. One major paradigm implies that Russians and Muslims – ethnic differences inside the Muslim community are downplayed – could indeed live in one state. This scenario, an Asiatic variety of Eurasianism, has two variants. In one, the role of the Muslim minority would be equal to that of Orthodox Russians; in the other, Muslims would be leaders, and Russians the “younger brothers.”

Muslims as equal brothers The variety of Eurasianism with Muslims equal to Russians became the implicit ideological framework of Rebakh (Blagodenstvie), created in 1998 by Abdul-Vakhid Niazov or Niiazov, an ethnic Russian who converted to Islam (Politicheskoe Issledovanie, 2003). In 1999 Rebakh became part of the coalition of Muslim organizations called Medzhlis and planned to have a representative in the Duma. Its original design did not work, but Niazov's political influence grew with Putin's ascent to power. In 2003 he was the among very few Muslim politicians who actually entered the Duma. “The only civic organization of Muslims that made it into the current Duma was Abdul-Vakhid Niazov's ‘Rebakh’ movement” (Russia: the impact of Islamic parties, 2003). Niazov's drive for power was based on unity with stronger partners. But it seemed not to be successful, or at least did not satisfy his ambitions. “Rebakh ran on a ‘Unity’ list but then fell into disfavor with Unity's head, Sergei Shoigu, and was later expelled from the faction.”

By that time, Niazov had made up his mind to create his own Eurasian Party, which soon became a broader political bloc into which Rebakh was incorporated. “Rebakh joined the ‘Eurasian party of Russia,’ headed by Pavel Borodin, the secretary of the ‘Russians/Belarus Union,’ and head of the ‘Great Russian/Eurasian Bloc’” (Russia: the impact of Islamic parties, 2003). In another translation, this alliance was called the “Great Russian/Eurasian Union” (Velikaia Rossiia-Evraziiskii Soiuz). By 2003, the Eurasian Party had been transmogrified into the Eurasian Party-Union of Patriots of Russia, which finally absorbed the other groups, including Rebakh.

“Today, Rebakh, still registered, is active through the ‘Eurasian Party-Union of Russia’ bloc, with the figurehead of Pavel Borodin” (Russia: the impact of Islamic parties, 2003). “Muslims make up less than half of this anti-Western party,” but the leader has developed pro-Muslim programs that could be called an Asiatic modification of Eurasianism. This version has much in common with the neo-Eurasianism developed by Dugin, whose short-lived Eurasian Party emerged at the same time as Niazov's Evrazia. Both assume that Russia/Eurasia is a unique blend of Slavic/Orthodox and Muslim, mostly Turkic, people, and see the USA as the major enemy. Major personalities have been affiliated, directly or indirectly, through personal ties with both movements. Leonid Ivashov, former Head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the General Staff of the Russian Federation, is predisposed to Dugin's Eurasianism, but at the same time he is part of the leading body of the Niazov movement (It seems Ivashov has found a new political home.)

With these many similarities, one could be tempted to see the differences as caused just by personal animosity between Dugin and Niazov. While at the beginning of the development of both movements personal animosity played an important role, later disagreements concerned theory and different visions of the role of Muslims in the Russian Federation.

The alliance between Orthodox and Russian Muslims was the most important aspect of Eurasian doctrine, and it is not surprising that Dugin put much emphasis on this. He was also allied with Talgat Tadzhuddin, Chief Mufti of the Central Spiritual Directorate of Muslims (Tsentral'oe dukhovnoe upravlenie musul'man). Dugin entered this alliance to emphasize the importance of Muslims in his design for a mighty Eurasian Russia. But he believed – at least it was his pronouncement in most cases – that barring a catastrophic decline of Orthodox Russians (he believes the decline is reversible), ethnic Russians should take the lead, and the Orthodox religion should be the framework. Niazov's approach was altogether different, and this certainly contributed to his split with Dugin.

Along with personal ambitions, there was apparently a more serious reason for Niazov's conflict with mainstream parties. Niazov believed that ethnic Russians should share power with Muslims on a much broader scale. This may be one justification for those who believed Niazov should not be included in the political mainstream. Indeed, Niazov was expelled from Unity, “allegedly because Niazov supported the most visible Turkish Muslim leaders in Russia” (Russia: the impact of Islamic parties, 2003).

Niazov believed, contrary to Dugin, that Muslims should be the equals of benevolent Orthodox Russians. One could assume that he and his allies would rather regard Russians as “younger brothers” in the ethnopolitical arrangements of the Russian Federation. Despite playing with Eurasianism, Rebakh regarded Muslims as its major electoral base. Niazov also allied with Ravil Gainutdin, head of the Council of Muftis of Russia, who also believes that Muslims should play a more important role in the Federation than they do now.

This version of Eurasianism has implications for Russian foreign policy. Some aspects are quite similar to Dugin's Eurasianism; others are idiosyncratic. Like Dugin's, Niazov's Eurasianism implies close ties with Central Asia, with Turkic Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan at the top of the list. Niazov made his attachment to these states quite clear. Pointing out that the ideology of his movement should be grounded in classical Eurasianism, he also appealed to prominent intellectuals from Central Asia. Dugin regarded Central Asian intellectuals as kindred spirits, but he did not include them in the leading body of the party. Niazov did include such intellectuals, among them the writers Chingiz Aitmatov from Kyrgyzstan, and Olzhas Suleimenov from Kazakhstan. He was especially glad to see people from Kazakhstan in leading roles because Eurasianism “in general is a state ideology” in Kazakhstan (Velichie Rossii, 2004).

This appreciation of Kazakhstan as a country with Eurasianist ideology is similar to Dugin's, but there is a significant difference as well. For Dugin, Kazakhstan and Russia would gravitate to each other because of cultural/geostrategic compatibility between Slavic Russians – the core people of Russia/Eurasia – and Kazakh–Turkic, historically Muslim people. For Niazov, Russia gravitates to Kazakhstan because it has increasingly become Turkic and Muslim in composition.

This belief about the growing Muslim influence among the Russian population also defined Niazov's view on policy toward the “distant abroad,” the countries outside the borders of the former USSR. Niazov's geopolitical plans are in many ways similar to those of Dugin, but the differences are unmistakable. As pundits put it, the Borodin party is “Turkish–Slavic–Muslim–Orthodox Rossiyani in union with China, India, and the Arab world to oppose Western Europe and America, whereas Dugin's Eurasia stretches from the Pacific Ocean to the Straits of Dover and opposes the Atlantic ‘non-Eurasia’ of Great Britain and the U.S.”

Niazov clearly regards China and India as important players that could be employed against the USA. But he does not consider India a major ally and China even less so. Niazov – along with not just Dugin but quite a few Russian Muslim leaders – regards China with suspicion. In their view, China, while playing a positive role in counterbalancing the USA, could emerge as a superpower in the future. It could be as or even more dangerous than the USA for Russia and the Muslim community in general. India and especially China should not be regarded as major allies of Russia, where Muslims will play a much more active role than now.

According to Niazov, Muslims make up a considerable percentage of the Russian population, and he believes Russia should move closer to Muslim countries and enter the Organization of Islamic States (Prezidentskie vybory v Chechne, 2003). These geopolitical aspirations are fully supported by representatives of the radical anti-American states and movements, and it is not surprising that a meeting of the Eurasian Party's political council was attended by the Iraqi and Palestinian diplomatic missions in Russia. This hobnobbing with foreign Islamic radicals does not mean that Niazov and his allies are ready for radical political statements or, especially, action. Here it is clear that Niazov and Dugin have a lot in common in political outlook, and neither, while strongly anti-American, is prone to call for direct violent confrontation with the USA.

One might assume that Niazov was even more cautious than Dugin in regard to direct confrontation with the USA. The explanation is, of course, in Niazov's position. While Dugin has tried to demonstrate his absolute loyalty to authority, he has not been able to become directly incorporated into the power structure. Niazov, on the other hand, was able to get a Duma seat and became a full-fledged politician, and consequently became especially attentive to signals from the top. But here he received no encouragement.

It is true that Putin and his entourage strongly dislike the USA, but Putin has no intention of directly confronting the USA. And this is well understood by Niazov and people close to him, who even reproached people close to Dugin for non-admissible provocative statements. This is the case with Ravel Gainutdin, who was in the news in April for responding to Talgat Tadzhuddin's call for jihad against the USA by saying such calls were “‘impermissible and dangerous’ and, while Muslims should help Iraq, they should not use unlawful means”. Indeed, it is hard to find even one case when Niazov and those who were politically affiliated with him had problems with American officials because of their support of any serious anti-American actions and, even more so, in calling for direct violence against the USA. It is true that Pavel Borodin was arrested during his visit to the USA and spent some time in an American prison. Still, he was accused not of being involved in terrorism or similar actions but of purely criminal activities – money laundering, and so on.

It is obvious that both Dugin and Niazov regard the USA as the major enemy of Russia and Eurasia in general. They agree that Russia/Eurasia could carve itself an appropriate place in geopolitical arrangements, and they vehemently reject the unipolarity of the USA. Yet they usually do not advocate direct Russian involvement on the side of the Islamic forces in the struggle against the USA. The case is different with Geidar Dzhemal, whose philosophy illustrates what I would call the radical version of Asiatic Eurasianism.

Dzhemal: Asiatic Eurasianism Geidar Dzhemal was born in Moscow in 1947. In 1965 he was enrolled in the Institute of Oriental Languages (Institut Vostochnykh Iazykov), but he soon was expelled, supposedly for political reasons. This did not stop him from broadening his intellectual/cultural horizons. He actively engaged in self-education and became encyclopedically educated, at least from a linguistic point of view. He is fluent in Turkish, English, French, and Tadzhik, and can read Arabic, Italian, and German. The Soviet authorities who had expelled Dzhemal from the university apparently did not do so without grounds. It is clear that early in his life he became involved in dissident or, at least, semi-dissident activities. In the late 1960s he became part of Misteriia Iuzhinskogo, an unofficial gathering of youth on Iuzhinsky Lane (pereulok) in Moscow at the apartment of Iurii Mamleev, the well-known dissident author and philosopher. One could assume that at that point of his life Dzhemal saw himself though not as a Russian by blood, but at least as the one who had been strongly influenced by the Russian culture. Soon, however, he rediscovered his Muslim roots, and since 1979 he has been in contact with Muslims in Tadzhikistan, presumably with grassroots Islamic activists. Since the beginning of Gorbachev's “Perestroika,” he has been actively engaged in various political activities, sometimes with opposite programs. On the one hand, he became involved in the emerging Russian nationalistic opposition to the regime, such as Pamiat. Soon, however, he left the movement and became more and more involved in the life of Soviet and, later, post-Soviet Muslims. For example, since the late 1980s, he has actively participated in Islamic political activities in the USSR and is among the leaders of the Independent Informational Center.

In 1990, the Islamic Revival Party (Islamskaia Partiia Vozrozhdeniia) was formed, with Akhmed-Kadi Akhtaev as leader. Dzhemal was actively involved in the work of the party. The party had some kind of Asiatic variation of Eurasianist philosophy, emphasizing the leading role of Muslims in geopolitical and ethnic/religious arrangements. Indeed, the party leaders were also said to advocate preserving the USSR in order to withstand the West in a union with Turks, Caucasians, and Islamicized Slavs (Russia: the impact of Islamic parties, 2003). The emphasis on the leading role of Muslims in the ethnic/political arrangements of the past had alarmed the ruling circles, and “some of its leaders were accused of Wahhabism. The party split in 1994 and, without a wide base of support, retreated from the political scene.” The early vacillation between two opposite political/ideological trends, emphasizing the predominant role of Muslims versus cooperation between Muslims and Russians, continued when Dzhemal became the leader of the Islamic Committee of Russia (Islamskii Komitet Rossii). One could assume that this ambivalence was due to the fact that not all Russian nationalistic parties – at least those regarded as such by outside observers – were anti-Muslim. This latent Eurasianism possibly induced Dzhemal to cooperate with them. For example, he collaborated with Rodina, with its strong Russian nationalistic agenda, possibly because it included the Party of Russian Regions (Partiia Rossiiskikh Regionov).

Shamil Sultanov was among the leaders of the Party of Russian Regions. He had strong radical Islamic beliefs, which, presumably, induced Dzhemal to believe that these Russian nationalists would provide Muslims – and, of course, him personally – the power and influence that they deserved. Dzhemal, at least in the beginning of the Yeltsin era, believed that Orthodox Russians and Russian Muslims of various ethnic backgrounds could live in happy symbiosis. This was also manifested in Dzhemal's brief befriending of Dugin at the beginning of Dugin's intellectual and quasi-political career. Still, as time progressed, his views and political affiliations started to drift away from a Russian/Orthodox alliance. It is true that he never abandoned the idea completely and regarded himself as a Russian Muslim brought to and spiritually/intellectually developed in the context of Russian/Eurasian space. Still, the trend was unmistakable toward not so much Russians but other Muslims regardless whether they were placed inside or outside of Russian/Eurasian space. In 1991, he visited Germany where he got in touch with the representatives of the local Turkish community. His own Azerbaijani origin had undoubtedly helped to facilitate these contacts. In 1991 he made Hajj – pilgrimage to the sacred places of Islam – and in 1997 he engaged in the creation of a bank in which representatives of certain Middle Eastern countries were involved (Kislov, 1998, p. 1).

Dzhemal continues to be a leader in the Islamic Committee of Russia. He also publishes a lot, mostly on the Internet. Among his publications are “Russians and the Territory of Resistance” (2004), “The End of Russia and American Might over the World” (2003), “The Anti-elitist (Antielitarnoe) Future of Russia” (2002), and Osvobozhdenie Islama (2004).

Dzhemal's views, with his praise of radical Islam engaged in mortal conflict with the USA as the only way of salvation, are quite controversial and often appear contradictory and their connection is not evident. Still, several major focuses can be easily seen. The USA has emerged as a major threat for the global community. Maintenance of global hegemony and global order is based on injustice – both social and moral. The USA, thus, is engaged in mortal struggle with Europe and the Islamic world. In the conflict with Islam, the struggle has acquired almost Manichaean dimensions: the struggle of the cosmic goodness embodied by Islam and the Satanic forces of evil embodied by the USA.

Russia's position in this struggle is controversial. At the beginning of his intellectual career, Dzhemal saw Russia at a crossroad. The roots of Russian civilization were in the wholesome tradition of spiritualized collectivity, in a deep quest for justice and compassion. At the beginning of Yeltsin's rule, Dzhemal was convinced that this wholesome Russian civilization had received a mortal blow from forces inspired by the USA. Still, it was not completely destroyed and could regain strength in the future; of course, this would happen only if it would hold the outstretched hands of the Islamic community, both Russian and international.

Still, while Dzhemal was developing this rather positive (from his point of view) future for Russia, he had doubts, which have increased with time. Two basic options have emerged. The first, which was already apparent during the Yeltsin era, implied that Russia became irrelevant; even Muslims, both inside and outside Russia, became irrelevant tools in the hands of two major global competitors – the USA and Europe. Europe is viewed slightly better than the USA, but it could not receive a full blessing from Muslims. In the other scenario, Islam preserves its vitality as the embodiment of universal goodness and engages in fighting the forces of global injustice manifested by the West, mostly the USA. Russia preserves global role, or at least plays a visible role in the global struggle. Still, in this scenario, Russia is finally destroyed as a wholesome civilization and would be on the side of the enemies of Islam. Islamic forces should be united and strike not just the USA but Russia, the stooge of America and the West. Dzhemal has developed his ideas to the point where they are indistinguishable from jihadism.

In the last few years, Dzhemal's first vision of Russian civilization implied that Russia had been a benign collectivistic and spiritual civilization in the past, and, in such a capacity, had embraced both ethnic Russians and Muslims of various ethnic groups. But this civilization had disappeared. The new Russia became a pathetic parody of the West, with which Muslims cannot deal. In the second scenario Russia had never been benign but had been an oppressive monster throughout its history. For this reason, the present conflict between the Russians and Muslims brings nothing new to the relationship between them.

Russia as a dying civilization Elaborating on the current global situation, Dzhemal gave quite negative characteristics to present-day Russia. In this interpretation, Russian civilization was historically based on spiritual collectivism and all-embracing internationalism. It was also imbued with global messianism, the drive to create a harmonious society all over the world. The Soviet system was not the negation of the Russian historical tradition but a continuation of it. Thus the collapse of the Soviet regime was the collapse of Russian civilization, breaking its spiritual core. In the process of destruction of the USSR, the Russians lost their global mentality and acquired a parochial one (Dzhemal, 200X). The spiritualized messianism to build the society of universal brotherhood was replaced by crass materialism and narrow-mindedness. In Dzhemal's view, this degeneration of the Soviet system – of Russian civilization as it had been known for centuries – was started by Gorbachev and almost finished by the time of Putin ([Dzhemal, 2004a] and [Dzhemal, 2004b]). The fall of 1993 was a turning point: the basic elements had collapsed and the destruction of the Soviet system became irreversible (Dzhemal, 200X, p. 1).

Most Soviet and, consequently, Russian civilization has decomposed, but the process is not complete. According to Dzhemal, the USSR has not died completely and still exists in a “posthumous way” (zagrobnoe sushchestvovanie). In this rather gloomy vision, Dzhemal assumes that the negative holdover from the Soviet era, the Soviet bureaucracy, proved to be the most resilient among all aspects of the Soviet system. The present bureaucracy is not just the product of the Soviet era, but has accumulated all negative features of the Soviet society. Its major activity could be reduced to plundering the resources of the USSR, and this led to the permanent decline of Russia, which still continues under Putin.

According to Dzhemal, it was under Putin that Central Asia was given to the USA and Russians abandoned all military bases outside their territory. It is under Putin that we see wars in the Caucasus and the transformation of East Europeans into enemies. Putin's reign, Dzhemal concludes, is not the reverse of the Yeltsin era but a continuation and even an acceleration of the process of Russia's destruction. The final sign of this is manifested by the continuous decline of the Russian nuclear force, a force that by 2007 would be merely symbolic. At this point, the Americans, Dzhemal implies, had two options in dealing with the degenerated country, a country that had forsaken its own traditions.

First, for several reasons, the Americans might continue to regard Russia as an enemy. They might believe that Russia, despite all the changes in the last years, could return to its roots and reemerge as a threat, especially if Russians join the Muslim community. Another factor would be geopolitical inertia and sense of insecurity. Russia has been the enemy for so long that Americans simply cannot imagine any other geopolitical situation. The essential weakness of the Russian nuclear forces would reach its nadir somewhere at the beginning of the 21st century and make Russia extremely vulnerable to an American attack. And this would provide the USA the opportunity to strike against Russia.

There is another idea that could creep into the minds of the American elite, Dzhemal implied. They could finally realize that Russia that had been known from the dawn of its history to the end of the Soviet era was no more. Irreversible changes had taken place in the fabric of Russian civilization; the very building blocks, the genetic code of Russian civilization, had been removed. From an outside view, Russia could be seen as surviving and even prospering. But this is not the case; foreign genes and building blocks – all brought from the West – have been implanted and merged with the corrupt, crass, materialistic bureaucracy, a holdover from the Soviet era. The result is that an absolutely different country has emerged. While having the external appearance of old Russia, post-Soviet Russia is an entirely different society, a nation closer to America than to Russia of the past. The very fact that the present Russian elite is on the side of the Zionist aggressors instead of the Muslim victims of aggression indicates that Russia is a part of the American camp regardless of all the elite's anti-American rhetoric. Americans, Dzhemal believes, could well realize this and include weak Russia in the camp of its aides and stooges.

Russia, in this interpretation, is finished; what remains of the grand and sublime civilization is a dead carcass, of which Soviet bureaucracy, adjusting to the new order, is biting off the last pieces of the Russian flesh. This bureaucracy and emerging “new Russians” have created a country completely different from what it had been for centuries, one that is ready to work in conjunction with the USA to destroy the Muslim people, to suppress the drive for justice. Even in this bleak vision of Russia, Dzhemal sees a sort of silver lining. It is true that Russia is no more: what is now called Russia is a corrupt weakling, a stooge of the predatory USA. But it was a great civilization in the past, a major force of universal goodness that confronted the Godless, nationalistic, predatory West with Americans as the embodiment of the very worst. This great Russian civilization could still live, in memory if not reality, as the cultural artifact to inspire future generations in the same way that the images of the French and Russian revolutions have inspired generations of fighters.

Eternal Russia as eternal evil There is yet another image of Russia that Dzhemal has elaborated in his recent works. Here there is no notion about the degeneration of Russian civilization. Russia was always a brutal country that suppressed its ethnic minorities and was in no way different from the worst of the Western states. The calamities/abuses of the Soviet and post-Soviet periods were not an aberration or degeneration of Russia's spiritual core but the continuation of its historical path.

Dzhemal presented this vision of Russian history in recent interviews. He stated that the roots of oppressive rule could be found at the very beginning of Russian history. The conquest of the Urals and Siberia in the 16th century had nothing to do with the romantic images of Russian and, later, Soviet historiography. The original documents provide quite a different picture. The natives suffered genocidal slaughter. Those who were spared were deprived of local self-government, and their women were taken away to be given as wives to Cossacks. One might add that Dzhemal's rather negative views of the Russian/Muslim relationship are shared by other current Muslim historians. Akhmad Davletshin, for example, wrote that until the mid-17th century Russian authorities had been more or less tolerant of Muslims under their rule. But the policy changed, and Russian Muslims were subjected to relentless pressure by Russian authorities, who were engaged in coercive Christianization. Davletshin does not deny that there were Muslim uprisings against Moscow's rule, but insists that most Muslims were loyal subjects and the government's coercive Christianization was not provoked (Davletshin, 2006).

Dzhemal apparently agreed, at least in this interpretation of history, that the Russian government was engaged in full-fledged repression against Russian Muslims by the end of the 17th century and that the repression increased as time progressed. During the 18th and 19th centuries, Russian wars in the Caucasus were hardly different from the genocidal slaughter of the Indians by white Americans. Millions perished. The Muslims who survived these calamities were always treated by Russian authorities as second-class citizens.

This brutal treatment of Muslims of various ethnic origins was not an isolated phenomenon. In fact, the Russian government and ethnic Russians in general deeply hated and despised the numerous minorities of the empire. They understood that they could not maintain their power over minorities if these minorities were not harassed by the mob and became united. And government calculations explained a lot in the history of ethnic minorities in late imperial Russia. By the beginning of the 20th century, the tsarist regime engaged in provoking ethnic conflicts. The most infamous result of these activities – the Jewish pogroms – was well-known. But this was hardly the only one: the ethnic conflicts in the Caucasus and the Western part of the empire were also the products of the machination of the czarist administration.

After the Bolshevik Revolution, the imperial policy of “divide-and-rule” was soon reinstated by Stalin, who created autonomous regions and republics in such a way as to increase ethnic hatred. Stalin also engaged in mass deportation of the people without exception. Gorbachev followed the same pattern, and Dzhemal has accused him of directly fomenting the inter-ethnic conflicts that erupted during his rule. The Yeltsin and Putin eras continued this brutal repression against minorities, mostly Muslims. These regimes are responsible for the brutal Chechen War and countless repression against the Muslims, whom the regimes accused of terrorist activities (Dzhemal, 2006a, p. 7). Cooperation between the regime and Muslims on this basis is impossible. Dzhemal mocked Dugin's expression “dawn in military boots,” which for him outlined Dugin's vision of Putin's Russia: a militaristic Russian nationalistic state in which Muslims played the role of docile “younger brothers” in the grand “Eurasian” empire.

Dugin, Dzhemal has implied, proclaimed that his “Eurasian” project is absolutely different from that of the Americans; Dzhemal discards this notion with disgust. Dugin's Eurasianism is not a plan for a healthy symbiosis of Russians and Muslims of the empire, or minorities in general, but the continuation of an oppressive state tradition. This state would be disgusting, not only because Dugin would actually suppress Russian Muslims, actually all minorities, under the guise of benign paternalism, but also because it would legitimize the gaping social differences and crass materialism. This state, Dzhemal believes, would be in no way different from the states of the modern West, especially the USA (Dzhemal, 2006a, p. 8).

The Russian historical tradition should not inspire any hope for Muslims. The only exception is the Bolshevik Revolution and the early Soviet period, when the state forsook nationalism and stressed spreading of the idea of social justice through a call for worldwide revolution. Trotsky was the leader of this drive. This policy appealed to the global Muslim community and explains the popularity of Trotsky's commissars' propaganda campaign. Dzhemal does not discard the possibility that Russians could return to this early period of Soviet history after “suffering, convulsions, and disintegration” (Dzhemal, 2006a, p. 8). Russia could reassemble itself in a new capability, break with its ugly imperial tradition, and engage in an alliance with the global Muslim community. But this metamorphosis, the radical change of Russians' cultural/genetic make up, would implicitly not take place in the near future. Dzhemal actually sees little chance for Russia to abandon its long tradition of oppression of minorities and general injustice. In fact, he stated, Russia is moving in the opposite direction, and Muslims in Russia are losing their last hope that Moscow could be their protector and fair judge. During the uprising in Nal'chik, the people assumed that Moscow would support the rebels, for they fought against clear social injustice. But Moscow regarded them as troublemakers and used violence (Dzhemal, 2006b, p. 1). Nothing in the present indicates that Russians would change course in relation to Muslims. This departure from viewing Russia as a potential ally of Muslims has led Dzhemal to the conclusion – he might not even acknowledge it himself – that Muslims should rely on themselves and tap their own resources, abandoning Russians as a spent force.

The global Muslim community is the only force fighting for global justice Elaborating on the global potential of the Muslim community, Dzhemal stated that Muslims are superior to Western Christian civilization. What emerged in the West after Christ's death had nothing to do with Christ's message; the European church actually institutionalized social injustice. The strength of Islam is in its inclusiveness of all people, regardless of their race or civilization. Moreover, Dzhemal stated, at least in the quoted article, that one need not be even formally a Muslim, that is, follow the Qur'an, for the meaning of Islam is “the principle of a transcendental sense of justice, which could provide meaning and justification of all terminal actions, such as the life of a particular individual” (Dzhemal, 2006a, p. 6).

Islam's appeal to the ideal of global justice is a most powerful force in itself. But besides this, the Islamic community has a huge economic/intellectual potential and actually does not need any partners, including Russians. Moreover, the Qur'an and Muslim tradition, in general, contain universal, ultimate wisdom; Dzhemal expressed the belief that in 10 years all scientific puzzles would be solved in the context of the Qur'an (Dzhemal, 2006c, p. 5). The Muslim community also has the will to fight for the right course, and this has already transformed some Islamic states into global centers. Iran is a good example of it.

In the 1990s and at the beginning of the new century, Dzhemal had a rather bleak vision of Iran, seeing it as, at best, a tool manipulated by the real global player, Europe. The situation changed with the election of Ahmadinejad. When Dzhemal was invited to a conference dedicated to the 17th anniversary of the death of Ayatollah Khomeini, he became an ardent supporter and real adherent of Iran. He sees it as a country that would unify Sunnis and Shias in the struggle against the enemies of Islam, the symbols of global injustice in general. Ahmadinejad, Dzhemal implied, rejected the Jewish Holocaust because it is a way to ignore the “real holocaust against Chechens, Iraqis, Afghans, and Africans” (Dzhemal, 2006d, p. 2). The denial of the Jewish Holocaust, which Dzhemal also regards as fiction, is a way to shake up the servile attitude toward Israel and Zionism, which are just tools in the hands of the Americans. Ahmadinejad's proclamation is actually an action of defiance against Americans. Dzhemal stated that the Europeans were actually delighted that there is at least one country that dares to stand against the USA and its Zionist stooges, though externally Europeans pretend to be indignant (Dzhemal, 2006d, p. 2).

The source of Iran's power is not so much its technology as its boldness, its fearlessness. Iranians and their charismatic leader are true believers in Allah and thus are not afraid of war and death. This makes it possible for Iran to face the USA. Iran is emerging as a real superpower: “this state, which is 10 times smaller than Russia and 20 times less populous than China, proves that it has a right to be one of the centers of global policy because it has no fear of death.” This sense of righteousness is absolutely foreign to Russians, whose hedonistic and corrupt spirit makes them foreign to any sense of sacrifice. Russians are afraid of death and suffering and, despite their anti-American statements, are ready to accept dictates from Washington. Spiritual rottenness, thus, is translated into geopolitical weakness. For this reason, it is not Iran that needs Russia but Russia that needs Iran if it wants to survive as an independent state and not a hireling of the Americans engaged in the massacre of Muslims in Chechnya.

Dzhemal has reinforced his positive image of Iran by placing on his Internet site articles supportive of Iran, which he sees as a rising power of global importance.1 The authors of these articles point out that Russians should not be afraid of an Iranian nuclear bomb because a nuclear Iran would be a great counterbalance to the USA and no threat to Russia (Gorevoi, 2006, p. 3). They even implied that Russia might help Iran to develop weapons of mass destruction.2

Other contributors have proclaimed that Iran is already in possession of nuclear weapons and that this is why the USA and Israel have not tried to strike Iran (Konovalov, 2006, p. 21). But even without the atomic bomb, Iran has enough resources to stand against America, and a war with Iran would be a disaster for the USA. One author whose article Dzhemal placed on his site quoted in this connection, “the former Polish count” – apparently Zbigniew Brzezinski – who predicts that the American war with Iran would last 30 years (V mire, 2006, 30). In this arrangement, Iran becomes the center of the global Muslim fight for social justice; the Shia movement emerges as something like the international communist movement of the past which fought oppressive regimes/nations all over the globe, including Russians in Chechnya (Tulenkov, 2003, p. 5). In his praise of Shiites – and implicitly Iran – the pundit has maintained that the Shiites, contrary to the Sunnis, would not be transformed into submissive servants of either the Russians or the Americans (Tulenkov, 2006).3

From the Asiatic version of Eurasianism to Islamization In all these paradigms of the Russian/Muslim relationship, the old Eurasian scheme is the basic matrix, the framework for interaction. This framework implies that the Mongol Empire was the bedrock of Russian civilization. And this civilization, among many other aspects, implied a quasi-political/cultural/ethnic unity – an intermingling of Orthodox Russians, Slavs, in general, and Muslim people of various ethnic backgrounds or, at least, a common cultural/political heritage – for Russians and the Muslim people of Russia. This common cultural framework implies basically two major political paradigms, the modus of political behavior.

The first option – entertained by Niazov and Dzhemal – implies that Russians are unable to play the leading role in Eurasian space, and that this role should be played by Muslims; or at least Muslims should be equal to Russians. The second option implies the disintegration of Eurasian space and consequent absorption of it by its neighboring countries. But even in this fragmented condition, the pieces retain their basic Eurasian genetic code, so to speak. The heritage of Genghis Kahn and the Byzantine Empire is still present in genetic codes of the fragmented pieces of the Federation. This cultural genetic matrix would be carried over and incorporated into European civilization, in the broad meaning of the word, that is, civilizations that would embrace all of Europe, from the Atlantic to the Urals. This is at least the view of the proponents of Euro-Islam in Tatarstan.

At the same time, there is a new approach to Eurasian space and the relations between Orthodox Russians and Muslims. It completely discards the Eurasian paradigm of the mutual symbiosis of Orthodox and Muslim cultures or at least acknowledgment of the common historical/cultural roots of Russians and even some Muslims of the Russian Federation. This model suggests an absolutely different historical background for the future emerging state. This state would be based not on Mongol or Roman/Byzantine traditions but only on pure Islam, of which Ottoman Turkey is the true embodiment. Islam, in this model, would exist not as one of the religions/cultures in the Eurasian mosaic but as the overwhelming creed that would absorb all religions. The melting pot of Islamism would absorb all ethnic peoples, and Islamicized Russians/Eurasia would become part of the global Khalifat.

In this arrangement, not only would Russia/Eurasia lose any cultural/political specificity, much less centrality in the global arrangements, but also the very notion of a separate civilization or even a separate state would disappear. There would be no separate entities but a universal community of Muslims of all ethnic backgrounds and races who would live in absolute harmony. Such an approach can be seen among various groups of Islamic radicals who have started to proliferate in post-Soviet space. This Islamic extremism became especially popular among the Chechen fighters in the almost 15-year-old war with the central government.

Despite all Moscow's efforts, the war seemed to have no end. The horrific implications of the conflict became especially clear during the Beslan tragedy (2004), when Chechen terrorists took schoolchildren as hostages and hundreds of children died. The Beslan events demonstrated the brutal determination of Chechen fighters. Timur Sogdran, a contributor to the Chechen rebel Internet site Kavkaz, mocked Russian propagandists who asserted that the Chechen detachment that took Beslan School was full of foreign fighters (Sogdran, 2004). Beslan and other similar events, he implied, were done by the native people of the Caucasus, Chechens first of all, and demonstrated that they would stop at nothing in fighting for their independence. There have been no major terrorist attacks of the Beslan type since 2004. But sporadic attacks against Russian troops and Ramzan Kadyrov, the viceroy in Chechnya, continue.

Discarding the Mongol legacy While engaging in fierce resistance and acts of indiscriminate terror against civilians, the Chechen fighters also created a philosophical/historical justification for their struggles. The key elements of most of above discussed models of the Russian/Muslim relationship imply the wholesomeness of the Mongol tradition, or at least some aspect of it. Consequently, those who discard the entire fabric of Eurasian civilization should discard any positive element of Mongol tradition. Paradoxically, they sound exactly like Westerners who regard Russians as descendents of Mongols. In the view of these European observers, this explains the origin of what they see as the essential traits of the Russian national character – brutality, corruption, and slavish submissiveness to the stronger.

One could find this image of Russians, and Mongols as Russian forebears, in one of the articles authored by Iusuf Ibragim, a contributor to Kavkaz. Elaborating on the creation of the current regime, Ibragim asserted the Eurasianist idea that Mongols created the Russian political culture that has survived to the present. But he saw no positives in the Mongol tradition, which was similar to that of the USSR and, even more so, present-day Russia. In all these cases, the leader is concerned only with collecting tribute from local governors; otherwise, they can do whatever they want. Average Russians saw no difference between the Mongols and local Russian princes: the heroic struggle of the entire population against the Tatar/Mongol role is actually a myth. The Kulikovo Field Battle was no more than a skirmish, like a rebellious local governor deciding not to pay tribute to Moscow and the President. How minor this battle was from a strategic point of view can be seen, according to Ibragim, from the fact that just after the battle, Tokhtamysh, the new Tatar ruler, successfully “restored the vertical of power” and took Moscow (Here Ibragim alluded to Putin's policy and the terminology he used asserting his control over the government.) It was not Russian princes but the great Tamerlane who defeated the Tatars and made it possible for Russian rulers to proceed in the unhampered mistreatment of the population in Mongol/Tatar fashion. Thus, the author concluded ironically, Russians should build monuments to Batu – the Mongol ruler who while conquering created the system that made possible their present mistreatment – and to Tamerlane, who made it possible for Russian rulers to loot the local population without sharing booty with the Tatars (Ibragim, 2004).

Other contributors to Kavkaz followed suit. Lebedev (2004) pointed out that the Mongols could be regarded as the founders of the oppressive Russian state. This was not surprising, he implied, if one would remember that Mongols hardly embodied Eurasian collectivistic and spiritual virtues, but were a brutal and oppressive force. Russians, indeed, are the legitimate heirs of Mongol rule, but they had nothing to do with European civilization, as Russians have claimed for centuries. Comments from an anonymous reader mocked Russian pretensions of having anything to do with Europe and the traditions of Roman/Greek civilization from which modern Europe emerged. Russians like to compare themselves with Romans and coined the idea of the “Third Rome.” This is ridiculous, for the Russians were a product of a 100 years of Tatar/Mongol slavery and could hardly create anything comparable with great Rome (O tret'em Rime, 2005).

Mongolian tradition, with its emphasis on brutal despotism, corruption, and abuses of all sorts, had nothing to do with religious tolerance. Islam is not free in Russia, and leading officials such as Tadzhuddin and Gainutdin and similar official representatives of the Muslim elite are nothing but Putin's slaves. Putin emerges as the modern embodiment of the Mongol rulers who lorded over Russia in the past. Chechens and other Islamic people who live in Russia or similar regimes that emerged in post-Soviet space should rise in holy revolt against the oppressors.

Chechen ideologists propose two options. One option, similar to that of the proponents of Euro-Islam in its more radical form, implies complete separation from Russia and creation of an independent state. According to Boris Stomakhin, a Russian radical who contributed to Kavkaz and was arrested and imprisoned by Russian authorities, Chechens could be compared with Jews in Israel who desperately defend their independence. The Russians' hatred of Chechens is similar to their hatred of Jews. This is evident by widespread anti-Semitism in present-day Russia (Stomakhin, 2005). Like the Jews, Chechens could appeal to the USA, in Stomakhin's view a progressive force that fought against oppressive Russia, which continues to be an empire. The USA and Chechens could forge a strong alliance; and Chechens in this capacity could maintain constant pressure on Russians. According to some Russian observers, this alliance has already been forged: some leading Chechen separatists work for American intelligence (Rudneva, 2004).

The second option is radically different from all other scenarios discussed in this paper. It does not only imply the various types of states but also entirely discards the notion of the state, at least as usually understood. The state in this scenario resembles a futuristic utopia, close to the designs of Thomas Moore or Thomas Campanella. The collectivistic tradition of pre-modern Gemeinschaft arrangements has been reinvented as the pathway to a quasi-socialist regime in a religious context. In their historical imagination, the early Ottoman state has emerged as a sort of ideal state.

The early Ottoman state as the ideal society and springboard for global Caliphate The features attractive to this group are very different from those in most variations of the Eurasian model. The Eurasian model stresses that the Mongols/Tatars created a mighty state and a highly developed civilization, where numerous ethnic/religious groups could coexist in peace. The radicals who appealed to early Islam for the basis of Ottoman experience were quite different in their vision of the negative and positive aspects of society. According to one Kavkaz contributor, Islam inspired the Turks with tolerance and social justice. The very notion of social justice is the essence of Islam and makes it different from other religions.4 When the Turks became Muslims, they immediately acquired this noble drive for social justice.

This was the reason why the common folk, regardless of social background or ethnicity, regarded the Turks as liberators (Erbiev, 2004). The incorporation of the various peoples in the Ottoman Empire had nothing to do with conquest; in fact, Ottoman military prowess is totally ignored here. The early Ottoman state was just a springboard for transforming the world in a universal Caliphate. And jihad is seen as a tool to achieve this goal.

Conclusion The collapse of the USSR signaled the end not just of the Russian imperial state, but of Slavdom as a civilization. The assertiveness of Russian Muslims is one repercussion. Some ask for rearrangement of the pecking order, demanding the lion's share of power and consequently property. Others say they have nothing to do with ethnic Orthodox Russians. Some have started to see ethnic Russians as the enemies of Russian Muslims, in fact, of the entire Muslim community. Ethnic Russians have responded in different ways. For some, the assertiveness of Russian Muslims and the global Muslim community is an incentive to convert to Islam; for the majority it has led to racism and the slogan “Russia for Russians.”

These increasing tensions do not mean an inevitable clash in the future. Everything – or at least a great deal – will depend on the strength of the Russian state; in Russia, as in other non-Western and pre-modern societies, this is the agent of change. A strong Russian state could arrest ethnic/religious clashes, preventing their development to a serious threat. But the situation could change if the state becomes weaker, and a strong state does not exclude problems. The rising influence of the Muslim community and the demographic shift – if it proceeds for a long time – would radically change a considerable part of Russia. Russia itself would disappear, at least in the cultural and ethnic form in which it has been known for almost a 1000 years. The views of the above-discussed Russian Muslims might thus be of great importance, for they might indicate the germination of a new civilization that would replace Russia in the future.

References Ahmad, 2004 Ahmad, Damir, 2004. Russians Increasingly Embracing Islam, Islam Online, October 4.

Babich, 2006 Aisha Galina Babich, ‘Rozhali i budem rozhat,’ Musul'manka o poslanii Prezidenta, Islam Ru (2006) December 5.

Davletshin, 2006 Akhmad Davletshin, Loial'nost' ili vneshnepoliticheskie interesy, Islam News (2006) May 11.

Dzhemal, 200X Dzhemal, Geidar, 200X. Budushchee Rossii i mira v kratkikh tezisakh. Part I, p. 2.

Dzhemal, 2004a Geidar Dzhemal, Rossiia: konflikt ideologii, Kruglyi stol v redaktsii ‘Zavtra,’, Zavtra (2004) October 6.

Dzhemal, 2004b Geidar Dzhemal, Osvobozhdenie Islama, Ul'tra Kul'tura, Moscow (2004).

Dzhemal, 2006a Geidar Dzhemal, Zaochnoe interv'iu zhurnalu ‘Ekspert Urala’, Islamskii komitet (2006) May 30.

Dzhemal, 2006b Geidar Dzhemal, Nado svorachivat' okhotu na ved'm, Islamskii Komitet (2006) May 21.

Dzhemal, 2006c Geidar Dzhemal, Smert' Miloshevicha i buduschee global'nogo Islamskogo proekta, Islamskii Komitet (2006) December 23.

Dzhemal, 2006d Geidar Dzhemal, Traurnyi miting v Tegerane, Islamskii Komitet (2006) June 20.

Erbiev, 2004 Alkhazar Erbiev, Pravednaya imperiia rannikh Osmanov, Kavkaz Center (2004) October 2.

Goble, 2006 Paul Goble, Culture, not cash driving demographic trends in Russia, Window on Eurasia (2006) August 21.

Gorevoi, 2006 Ruslan Gorevoi, V mire: voina otmenyaetsia: Iranu razreshili stat iadernoi derzhavoi, Islamskii Komitet (2006) June 13.

Haykel, 2006 Bernard Haykel, The enemy of my enemy is still my enemy, New York Times (2006) July 26.

20 tysiach korennykh moskvichei priniali Islam, 2004 20 tysiach korennykh moskvichei priniali Islam v etom godu, Kavkaz Center (2004) October 8.

Ibragim, 2004 Iusuf Ibragim, Pamiatnik Batyiu i Tamerlanu, Kavkaz Center (2004) January 23.

Kislov, 1998 Pavel Kislov, Rossii mozhet pomoch' tol'ko Islam, Russkii Islam (1998) 3.

Konovalov, 2006 Ivan Konovalov, Iran: shans na vyigrysh, Islamskii Komitet (2006) April 20.

Lebedev, 2004 Valerii Lebedev, GKChP-2, Kavkaz Center (2004) September 15.

Makhmud Ahmadinejad, 2006 Makhmud Ahmadinejad: Iran vskore mozhet stat' mirovoi sverkhderzhavoi, Iran News (2006) July 14.

Mandrik, 2006 Irina Mandrik, Orda vozvrashchaetsia, RBK (2006) May.

Novosti i Kommentarii, 2006 Novosti i Kommentarii, 2006. rus@rusidea.ru, June 8.

O tret'em Rime, 2005 O tret'em Rime, Kavkaz Center (2005) June 1.

Politicheskoe Issledovanie, 2003 Politicheskoe Issledovanie: Musul'mane, 2003. Internet version.

Prezidentskie vybory v Chechne, 2003 Prezidentskie vybory v Chechne: pravozashchitnyi monitoring, TV Ru (2003) September 12.

Rudneva, 2004 Elena Rudneva, Rossiia vnov' trebuet Zakaeva i Akhmadova, Gazeta Ru (2004) September 7.

al' Rusi, 2006 Kharun al' Rusi, Shiitskii vyzov Rossiiskoi Umme, Jamaat ru (2006) July 21.

Russia: the impact of Islamic parties, 2003 Russia: the impact of Islamic parties on the elections, RFE/RL (2003) October 9.

Sogdran, 2004 Timur Sogdran, Gore nichto-imidzh vse, Kavkaz Center (2004) September 7.

Stomakhin, 2005 Boris Stomakhin, Pravil'nogo antisemitizma ne byvaet, Kavkaz Center (2005) August 1, 2005.

Timmerman, 2005 Kenneth R. Timmerman, Countdown to Crisis: the Coming Nuclear Showdown with Iran, Crown Forum, New York (2005).

Tulenkov, 2003 Daniel Tulenkov, Kremlevskii dzhamat, Islamskii Komitet (2003) June 13.

Tulenkov, 2006 Daniel Tulenkov, Brat-sunnit, kto tvoi vrag?, Kavkaz Center (2006) July 14.

V mire, 2006 V mire: Antiiranskii Kulak ‘diadi Sema’, Islamskii Komitet (2006) April 20.

Velichie Rossii, 2004 Velichie Rossii, velichie ee naradov, Radiostantsiia Ekho Moskvy (2004) September 26.

1 It is indicative that Iran News – the Internet site that publishes news on Iran in various languages, including Russian – published, with implicit approval, Ahmadinejad's speech proclaiming that Iran will be a superpower in the near future (Makhmud Ahmadinejad, 2006). 2 Help in building an Iranian nuclear bomb likely goes back to Yeltsin, despite the regime's assertion that it regarded the USA, the West in general, as its foremost ally. By 1995 Prof. Anton M. Surikov, quite close to Yeltsin's internal circle, had designed a plan for Russia, weakened by the disintegration of the USSR, to counterbalance the USA, hardly regarded as Russia's friend. The threat of selling nuclear and missile technologies could be a “trading card” with the United States (Timmerman, 2005, p. 202). 3 The view of Shiites and Iran as real Muslims challenges Russian Muslims who want to be loyal Muslims in a Russian state (al' Rusi, 2006); on the Shia–Sunni global conflict, see Haykel (2006). 4 Many Muslim Russian elite seems to see Islam as more disposed to the poor than other religions. A contributor to the major Russian Muslim Internet site Muslim Ru mocked the statement that the Orthodox Church promulgated humbleness, that not earthly blessings but spirituality is important. In fact, in both pre-Revolutionary and modern Russia, preaching spirituality and acceptance of one's lot provided justification for regimes where immense wealth was concentrated in the hands of a few super-rich who ignored the misery of the majority. So the Orthodox holdover the Russian population is rather tenuous. The story is quite different with Islam. Not only does Islamic teaching demand concern for the poor [sic].


TOPICS: Religion
KEYWORDS: demographics; eurasianism; jihad; russia
It seems like Russia will be getting only worse. Does anyone have any ideas as to what America should do about this?
1 posted on 03/12/2008 9:47:26 AM PDT by hanfei
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: hanfei
There's nothing America can do about it.

Most people don't even realize that Russia has a percentage of Muslims more than twice as high as that of France or England or Germany.

2 posted on 03/12/2008 9:49:52 AM PDT by wideawake (Why is it that those who call themselves Constitutionalists know the least about the Constitution?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: wideawake

Time for Putin to go back and put a new spin on the pogrom program.


3 posted on 03/12/2008 9:57:07 AM PDT by Califreak (Hangin' with Hunter-under the bus "Dread and Circuses")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: hanfei

Bump.


4 posted on 03/12/2008 4:32:16 PM PDT by nw_arizona_granny (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1886546/posts?page=4972#4972 45 Item Communist Manifesto)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: DAVEY CROCKETT

Ping.


5 posted on 03/12/2008 4:34:01 PM PDT by nw_arizona_granny (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1886546/posts?page=4972#4972 45 Item Communist Manifesto)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson