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Russian apartment bombings

The Russian apartment bombings were a series of explosions that hit four apartment blocks in the Russian cities of Buynaksk, Moscow and Volgodonsk in September 1999, killing more than 300, injuring more than 1,000, and spreading a wave of fear across the country. The bombings, together with the Invasion of Dagestan, triggered the Second Chechen War.[1][2] The handling of the crisis by Vladimir Putin, who was prime minister at the time, boosted his popularity greatly and helped him attain the presidency within a few months.

Russian apartment bombings
Part of the Second Chechen War
LocationBuynaksk, Moscow and Volgodonsk
Date4–16 September 1999
TargetResidential apartment buildings in Russia
Attack type
Time bombing, car bomb, truck bomb, terrorism
WeaponsVarious explosives
Deaths307
Injured1,000+
Perpetrators

The blasts hit Buynaksk on 4 September and in Moscow on 9 and 13 September. On 13 September, Russian Duma speaker Gennadiy Seleznyov made an announcement in the Duma about receiving a report that another bombing had just happened in the city of Volgodonsk. A bombing did indeed happen in Volgodonsk, but only three days later, on 16 September. Chechen militants were blamed for the bombings, but denied responsibility, along with Chechen president Aslan Maskhadov.

A suspicious device resembling those used in the bombings was found and defused in an apartment block in the Russian city of Ryazan on 22 September.[3][4] On 23 September, Vladimir Putin praised the vigilance of the inhabitants of Ryazan and ordered the air bombing of Grozny, which marked the beginning of the Second Chechen War.[5] Three FSB agents who had planted the devices at Ryazan were arrested by the local police.[6] The next day, FSB director Nikolay Patrushev announced that the incident in Ryazan had been an anti-terror drill and the device found there contained only sugar.[7]

The official Russian investigation of the Buynaksk bombing was completed in 2001, while the investigation of Moscow and Volgodonsk bombings was completed in 2002. In 2000, seven people were convicted of perpetrating the Buynaksk attack. According to the court ruling on the Moscow and Volgodonsk bombings, which was announced in 2004, the attacks were organised and led by Achemez Gochiyaev, who remains at large. All bombings, the court ruled, were ordered by Islamist warlords Ibn Al-Khattab and Abu Omar al-Saif, who have been killed. Five other suspects have been killed and six have been convicted by Russian courts on terrorism-related charges.

State Duma deputy Yuri Shchekochikhin filed two motions for a parliamentary investigation of the events, but the motions were rejected by the State Duma in March 2000. An independent public commission to investigate the bombings was chaired by Duma deputy Sergei Kovalev.[8] The commission was rendered ineffective because of government refusal to respond to its inquiries. Two key members of the Kovalev Commission, Sergei Yushenkov and Yuri Shchekochikhin, have since died in apparent assassinations.[9][10] The Commission's lawyer and investigator Mikhail Trepashkin was arrested and served four years in prison for revealing state secrets.[11] Former FSB agent Alexander Litvinenko, who defected and blamed the FSB for the bombings, was poisoned and killed in London in 2006. A British inquiry later determined that Litvinenko's murder was "probably" carried out with the approval of Putin and Patrushev.[12]

The attacks were widely attributed to Chechen terrorists, despite their guilt never being conclusively proven.[13] Some historians and journalists claim the bombings were coordinated by Russian state security services to help bring Putin into the presidency.[14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21] Others disagree with such theories or argue that there is insufficient evidence to assign responsibility for the attacks.[22][23][24][25][26] Independent investigations have faced obstruction from the Russian government.[27][28]

Bombings

Overview

Five apartment bombings took place and at least three attempted bombings were prevented.[29] All bombings had the same "signature", based on the nature and the volume of the destruction. In each case a powerful explosive was used, and the timers were set to go off at night and inflict the maximum number of civilian casualties.[30][31][32] The explosives were placed to destroy the weakest, most critical elements of the buildings and force them to "collapse like a house of cards".[33] The individuals behind the bombings were able to obtain or manufacture several tons of powerful explosives and deliver them to numerous destinations across Russia.[33][34]

Manezhnaya Square, Moscow

On 31 August 1999, at 20:00 local time, a bomb exploded in the amusement arcade of the Manezh Square shopping complex of Moscow.[35][36][37] At least 29 people were injured.[38][39][40][41] According to the FSB, the explosion had been caused by a bomb of about 300 grams of explosives.[36]

On 2 September 1999, an unknown person called and claimed that the bombing was committed by the militant organization the "Liberation Army of Dagestan".[42]

Buynaksk, Dagestan

On 4 September 1999, at 22:00, a car bomb detonated outside a five-story apartment building in the city of Buynaksk in Dagestan, near the border of Chechnya. The building was housing Russian border guard soldiers and their families.[43] Sixty-four people were killed and 133 were injured in the explosion.[44][45]

On 4 September 1999, another bomb was discovered shortly after the explosion and detonated in the city of Buynaksk in Dagestan.[43][46] The defused bomb was in a car containing 2,706 kilograms (5,966 lb) of explosive material. It was discovered by local residents in a parking lot surrounded by an army hospital and residential buildings.[47]

Moscow, Pechatniki

 
Bombing at Guryanova Street. One section of the building completely collapsed.

On 9 September 1999, shortly after midnight at 20:00 GMT,[48] a bomb detonated on the ground floor of an apartment building in southeast Moscow (19 Guryanova Street). The explosive power was equivalent to 300–400 kilograms (660–880 lb) of TNT. The nine-story building was destroyed, killing 106 people inside (with early reports giving 93 dead[49]) and injuring 249 others, and damaging 19 nearby buildings.[48] A total of 108 apartments were destroyed during the bombing. An FSB spokesman announced that traces of RDX and TNT were found on items removed from the site of the explosion.[50] Residents said a few minutes before the blast four men were seen speeding away from the building in a car.[51]

Boris Yeltsin ordered the search of 30,000 residential buildings in Moscow for explosives.[52] He took personal control of the investigation of the blast.[34] Putin declared 13 September a day of mourning for the victims of the attacks.[48]

Moscow, Kashirskoye highway

 
Rescuers digging for survivors after Kashira road bombing.

On 13 September 1999, at 05:00, a large bomb exploded in a basement of an apartment block on Kashirskoye Highway in southern Moscow, about 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) from the place of the last attack. This was the deadliest blast in the chain of bombings (because the apartment was built with brick), with 119 people killed and 200 injured.[53] The eight-story building was flattened, littering the street with debris and throwing some concrete pieces hundreds of meters away.[49]

Moscow, prevented bombings

 
Apartment on Borisovskiye Prudy street, Moscow, where one of the bombs was found and disarmed in September 1999.

On September 13, 1999, the police found and defused bombs in an apartment block on Borisovskiye Prudy street and Kapotnya in Moscow.[54][55]

According to Litvinenko, Felshtinsky and Goldfarb, on 13 September 1999, Achemez Gochiyaev called and reported about bombs planted in several locations. Gochiyaev claimed that he was framed by his old acquaintance, an FSB officer who asked him to rent basements "as storage facilities" at four locations where bombs were later found. After the second explosion on Kashirskoye highway Gochiyaev recognized he was set up, called the police and told them about the basements of two other buildings at Borisovskie Prudy and Kapotnya, where the explosives were actually found and explosions averted.[56][57] In 2002 Felshtinsky and Litvinenko obtained a written testimony from Achemez Gochiyaev as well as a video recording and several photographs about it.[58][59] The same statement was received by Prima News agency.[60]

According to Russian newspaper Kommersant and the public relations centre of the FSB, further bombings in Moscow were prevented with the help of a real estate agent who called the police after the second bombing in Moscow and told about his client, who rented basements in the two buildings which were blown up in Moscow. The client was identified as Achemez Gochiyaev.[61][62][63]

Volgodonsk, Rostov Oblast

 
Volgodonsk bomb partially destroyed an apartment block.

A truck bomb exploded on 16 September 1999, outside a nine-story apartment complex in the southern Russian city of Volgodonsk, killing 17 people and injuring 69.[52] The bombing took place at 5:57 am.[64] Surrounding buildings were also damaged. The blast also happened 14 km (9 mi) from a nuclear power plant.[64] Prime Minister Putin signed a decree calling on law enforcement and other agencies to develop plans within three days to protect industry, transportation, communications, food processing centres and nuclear complexes.[64]

Ryazan incident

At 20:30 on 22 September 1999, Alexei Kartofelnikov, a resident of an apartment building in the city of Ryazan noticed two suspicious men who carried sacks into the basement from a car.[47][65][66] While the license plate indicated that the car was registered in Moscow, a sheet of paper was taped over the last two digits, and the number written on it implied that the car was local.[67]

Kartofelnikov alerted the police, but by the time they arrived the car and the men were gone. The policemen found three sacks of white powder in the basement, each weighing 50 kg (110 lb). A detonator and a timing device were attached to the sacks.[32] The detonator was reported by a Russian newspaper to be a 12-gauge shotgun shell filled with powder.[68] The timer was set to 5:30 AM.[32] Yuri Tkachenko, the head of the local bomb squad, disconnected the detonator and the timer. Reportedly, Tkachenko tested the three sacks of white substance with a "MO-2" gas analyser, which detected RDX vapors.[69]

Inhabitants of the apartment building were evacuated.[68] According to David Satter, residents of neighboring buildings fled their homes in terror, to the effect that nearly 30,000 residents spent the night on the street. Police and rescue vehicles converged from different parts of the city. As many as 1,200 local police officers were put on alert, the railroad stations and the airport were surrounded, and roadblocks were set up on highways leaving the city.[69]

At 01:30 on 23 September 1999, explosive engineers of the Ryazan UFSB took a sample of substance from the suspicious-looking sacks to a firing ground located about 1.6 km (1 mi) away from Ryazan for testing.[68][70] During the substance tests at that area they tried to explode it by means of a detonator, which was also made from a shotgun shell, but the substance failed to detonate.[68][71][72][73][74][75][76] At 05:00, Radio Rossiya reported about the attempted bombing, noting that the bomb was set up to go off at 05:30. In the morning, Ryazan resembled a city under siege. Composite sketches of three suspected terrorists, two men and a woman, were posted everywhere in the city and shown on TV. At 08:00 Russian television reported the attempt to blow out the building in Ryazan and identified the explosive used in the bomb as RDX.[71] Vladimir Rushailo announced later that police prevented a terrorist act. A news report at 16:00 reported that the explosives failed to detonate during their testing outside the city.[68][71][72][73][77][78]

At 19:00, Vladimir Putin praised the vigilance of the inhabitants of Ryazan, and called for the air bombing of the Chechen capital Grozny in response to the terrorism acts.[32] He said:[79]

If the sacks which proved to contain explosive were noticed, that means there is a positive side to it, if only the fact that the public is reacting correctly to the events taking place in our country today. I'd like ... to thank the public. ... No panic, no sympathy for the bandits.

On 23 September Natalia Yukhnova, a telephone service employee in Ryazan, tapped into a suspicious phone call to Moscow and overheard the following instruction: "Leave one at a time, there are patrols everywhere".[80][81][82] The called number was traced to a telephone exchange unit serving FSB offices.[83]

When arrested, the detainees produced FSB identification cards. They were soon released on orders from Moscow.[84][85][14][86]

The position of Russian authorities on the Ryazan incident changed significantly over time. Initially, it was declared by the FSB and federal government to be a real threat. However, after the people who planted the bomb were identified, the official version changed to "security training".[87]

On 24 September, FSB director Nikolai Patrushev announced that it was an exercise that was being carried out to test responses after the earlier blasts.[88][89]

The Ryazan FSB "reacted with fury" and issued a statement saying:[79]

This announcement came as a surprise to us and appeared at the moment when the ... FSB had identified the places of residence in Ryazan of those involved in planting the explosive device and was prepared to detain them.

FSB also issued a public apology about the incident.[88] In a show Independent Investigation on NTV, Evgeniy Savostyanov, former director of Moscow and Moscow Oblast regional FSB branch, has criticized the FSB for performing such exercise on residential buildings with inhabitants inside and without notifying local authorities.[90]

In excerpts from the planned Ryazan operation, first published in 2002, it was stated that the exercise was overseen by the head of the FSB's Center of Special Operations (CSO), Major General Alexander Tikhonov.[91]

Detonator and explosives detection equipment controversy

In February 2000, Novaya Gazeta journalist Pavel Voloshin published an essay entitled What happened in Ryazan: Sugar or Hexogen?, that was partly based on his two-hour long interview with Yuri Tkachenko, the police explosives expert who defused the Ryazan bomb.[92] The essay noted that it's well known that a gas analyser that tested the vapours coming from the sacks indicated the presence of RDX. Tkachenko said that he was completely certain that the instrument was in correct working order. The gas analyser was of world-class quality, cost $20,000, and was maintained by a specialist who worked according to a strict schedule, making frequent prophylactic checks, because the device contained a radioactive source. Meticulous care in the handling of the gas analyser was a necessity because the lives of the bomb squad experts depended on the reliability of their equipment. Speaking of the detonator, Voloshin noted that people who disarmed the device (Tkachenko and his bomb squad) claimed that the detonator attached to the sacks was not a dummy and had been prepared on a professional level.[92][93] The police warrant officer who answered the original call and discovered the bomb insisted that there were no doubts it was a combat situation.[93]

In March 2000, the newspaper Ryazanskiye Vedomosti published an interview with Lieutenant Colonel Yuri Maximov, the head of the investigative section of the Ryazan UFSB. Maximov said that the Ryazan bomb squad was equipped with explosive vapour detector "М-02", but bomb-disposal experts didn't like it and used analytical kit "Exprei", which was more accurate.[94] Also in March 2000, the head of the Ryazan UFSB General Sergeyev appeared on TV show "Independent Investigation" commenting on the device used to detect the RDX. According to Sergeyev, it was packed in a briefcase and acted like a litmus test from school. The substance to be investigated was wiped by a collection paper, which was subsequently sprayed from an aerosol can. A change of the paper color indicated the presence of explosives. Sergeyev explained the false positive result by prior contamination of the lid of the briefcase, on which Tkachenko poured some sugar from the sacks to perform the test.[95]

At a press conference on the occasion of the Security Agency Worker's Day in December 2001, Tkachenko said that a gas analyser had not been used and the detonator was a shotgun shell that couldn't detonate any known explosives.[96]

In February 2003, Kommersant journalist Olga Allenova [ru] studied the criminal investigation file on the Ryazan incident, obtained by Russian State Duma member Sergei Kovalev. According to the proceedings, a bomb disposal expert who arrived to the scene had twice performed a test which didn't show the presence of explosive particles. The head of the bomb squad Tkachenko, who arrived soon after that, made a test himself and found the RDX. The investigator who questioned Yuri Tkachenko concluded that the detection of RDX was made possible by contamination of Yuri Tkachenko's hands, since the latter worked with explosives containing RDX on the day before the incident without wearing sterile gloves. Another detail concerned the type of a device used to detect the explosives. The report submitted by the Ryazan UFSB claimed that gas analyser "M-02" was used. However, during Tkachenko's questioning it was revealed that he had used the device "Exprel" for the analysis. The investigation has resolved the contradiction in the following way. The bomb squad in Ryazan is equipped with the gas analyser "М-02", but the latter has certain limitations. The device has a high degree of imprecision, and the analysis takes a long time. So, the bomb squad used the device "Exprel", which is more robust, accurate and easy to use. But since they were not supposed to possess that device, the bomb squad has submitted the paperwork which showed that the gas analyser "M-02" had been used.[70]

The case of private Alexei Pinyaev

In March 2000, Novaya Gazeta journalist Pavel Voloshin reported the account of Private Alexei P. (later identified as Pinyaev) of the 137th Regiment. Pinyaev guarded a storehouse with weapons and ammunition near the city of Ryazan. Together with a friend, he entered the storehouse to see the weapons. The friends were surprised to see that the storehouse contained sacks with the word "sugar" on them. Pinyaev and his friend were discouraged, but didn't want to leave the storehouse empty-handed. The two paratroopers cut a hole in one of the bags and put some sugar in a plastic bag. They made tea with the sugar, but the taste of the tea was terrible. They became frightened because the substance might turn out to be saltpeter, and brought the plastic bag to a platoon commander. He consulted a sapper, who identified the substance as hexogen.[97]

According to Felshtinsky and Pribylovsky, after the newspaper report FSB officers descended on Pinyayev’s unit, accused them of divulging a state secret and told them, "You guys can't even imagine what serious business you’ve got yourselves tangled up in." The regiment later sued publishers of Novaya Gazeta for insulting the honour of the Russian Army, since there was no Private Alexei Pinyayev in the regiment, according to their statement.[98]

A report aired by ORT in March 2000 and created by journalist Leonid Grozin and operator Dmitry Vishnevoy accused Novaya Gazeta of lying. According to Grozin and Vishnevoy, there is no storehouse at the test range of the 137th Regiment. Alexei Pinyaev has admitted meeting with Pavel Voloshin, but claimed that he was merely asked to confirm a pre-conceived story.[99]

At an FSB press conference in 2001, Private Pinyayev stated that there was no hexogen in the 137th Airborne Regiment and that he was hospitalised in December 1999 and no longer visited the test range.[96]

Explosives in the apartment bombings

After the bombing at Guryanova Street on September 9, the Moscow FSB reported that items removed from the scene showed traces of TNT and RDX (or "hexogen").[50][100][101]

Later FSB declared that the explosive used in the bombings was a mixture of aluminium powder, ammonium nitrate, TNT and sugar prepared by the perpetrators in a concrete mixer at a fertiliser factory in Urus-Martan, Chechnya.[31][102][103] Also, each bomb contained some plastic explosive used as an explosive booster.[30][31]

RDX is produced in only one factory in Russia, in the city of Perm.[104] According to David Satter, the FSB changed the story about the type of explosive, since it was difficult to explain how huge amounts of RDX disappeared from the closely guarded Perm facility.[104] According to Lieutenant General of the FSB Ivan Mironov, the precise composition of the explosive mixture was hard to determine, because no visible traces remain after the aluminium powder is consumed in a blast.[31]

Related events

War of Dagestan

On 7 August 1999, an Islamist group, led by Shamil Basayev and Ibn al-Khattab, invaded the Russian republic of Dagestan.

According to historian René De La Pedraja, the war in Chechnya was planned in advance by the Ministry of Internal Affairs, soon after the kidnapping of Gennady Shpigun. The ministry developed a plan for a limited military campaign to occupy the northern third of Chechnya up to the Terek River valley. Putin strongly supported the initial plan to occupy only the northern third of Chechnya. The invasion of militants in Dagestan accelerated the schedule for such a campaign. However, after the apartment bombings, "the usually cool and cautious Putin was swept away in the popular outrage" and decided to approve a much more ambitious campaign to subdue all of Chechnya. The Russian Army was not ready to pursue the extended campaign, which resulted in a prolonged conflict.[2]

Advance warnings about the impending bombings

In July 1999, Russian journalist Aleksandr Zhilin, writing in the Moskovskaya Pravda, warned that there would be terrorist attacks in Moscow organised by the government. Using a leaked Kremlin document as evidence, he added that the motive would be to undermine the opponents of the Russian President Boris Yeltsin. These included Moscow mayor Yury Luzhkov and former prime minister Yevgeny Primakov. However, this warning was ignored.[6][105]

According to Amy Knight, "even more significant is the fact that a respected and influential Duma deputy, Konstantin Borovoi, was told on September 9, the day of the first Moscow apartment bombing, that there was to be a terrorist attack in the city. His source was an officer of the Russian military intelligence (GRU). Borovoy transmitted this information to FSB officials serving on Yeltsin's Security Council, but he was ignored."[6][106]

Announcement of impending Volgodonsk bombings in the Russian Duma

On 13 September, just hours after the second explosion in Moscow, Russian Duma speaker Gennadiy Seleznyov of the Communist Party made an announcement, "I have just received a report. According to information from Rostov-on-Don, an apartment building in the city of Volgodonsk was blown up last night."[107][108][109][110][111] When the Volgodonsk bombing happened on 16 September, Vladimir Zhirinovsky demanded an explanation in the Duma the following day, but Seleznyov turned his microphone off.[107] Vladimir Zhirinovsky said in the Russian Duma: "Remember, Gennadiy Nikolaevich, how you told us that an apartment block has been blown up in Volgodonsk, three days prior to the blast? How should we interpret this? The State Duma knows that the apartment block was destroyed on Monday, and it has indeed been blown up on Thursday [same week]..."[112][113]

Alexander Litvinenko believed that someone had mixed up the order of the blasts, "the usual Kontora mess up". According to Litvinenko, "Moscow-2 was on the 13th and Volgodonsk on 16th, but they got it to the speaker the other way around". Investigator Mikhail Trepashkin confirmed that the man who gave Seleznyov the note was indeed an FSB officer.[114]

Later Seleznyov told a Russian newspaper that he actually referred to an explosion organized by criminal gangs, which took place in Volgodonsk and claimed no fatalities.[115][116]

In an August 2017 interview with Yuri Dud, Vladimir Zhirinovsky was asked about the incident in State Duma and claimed there was a misunderstanding.[117][118]

Sealing of all materials by the Russian Duma

The Russian Duma rejected two motions for a parliamentary investigation of the Ryazan incident.[119][120] In the Duma a pro-Kremlin party Unity, voted to seal all materials related to the Ryazan incident for the next 75 years and forbade an investigation into what happened.[79]

Claims and denials of responsibility for the blasts

On 9 September, an anonymous person, speaking with a Caucasian accent, phoned the Interfax news agency, saying that the blasts in Moscow and Buynaksk were "our response to the bombings of civilians in the villages in Chechnya and Dagestan."[34][121]

On 13 September 1999, Novaya Gazeta published a report by retired army major Vyacheslav Izmailov, which said that the editorial board of Novaya gazeta had received information about the planned terrorist attacks from its sources in Chechnya.[122][123] In a follow-up article published on 20 September 1999, Izmailov revealed that Novaya Gazeta had received the information on 8 September, twelve hours before the bombing on Guryanova street in Moscow, and immediately relayed it to the Chief Directorate Combating Organized Crime (GUBOP) of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.[124][123] The article has also identified the source as Alexander Kapanadze, a non-commissioned officer in the Russian Army who was taken captive by Chechens in 1995.[123] According to Izmailov, as many as 10 terrorist attacks have been planned.[124][64] In a documentary by Alexey Pivovarov, editor-in-chief of Novaya Gazeta Dmitry Muratov commented that Kapanadze has disappeared soon after he had met with GUBOP; none of his whereabouts are known.[125]

On 15 September, an unidentified man, again speaking with a Caucasian accent, called the ITAR-TASS news agency, claiming to represent a group called the Liberation Army of Dagestan. He said that the explosions in Buynaksk and Moscow were carried out by his organisation.[34] According to him, the attacks were a retaliation to the deaths of Muslim women and children during Russian air raids in Dagestan. "We will answer death with death," the caller said.[126] Russian officials from both the Interior Ministry and FSB, at the time, expressed scepticism over the claims and said there is no such organization.[127][128] On 15 September 1999, a Dagestani official also denied the existence of a "Dagestan Liberation Army".[129]

In an interview published in Lidove Noviny on September 9, Shamil Basayev denied responsibility for the bombings and said that it had been the work of Dagestanis. According to Basayev, the bombings were a retribution for the military operation of the Russian Army against "three small villages" in Dagestan.[130][131][127] In subsequent interviews, Basayev said he didn't know who perpetrated the bombings.[132][127]

In a 12 September interview with Associated Press, Ibn al-Khattab said that "From now on they will get our bombs everywhere! Let Russia await our explosions blasting through their cities! I swear we will do it!"[133][134] However, in a subsequent interview on 14 September to the Interfax agency in Grozny, Khattab denied responsibility for the bombings.[134][135]

Chechen Foreign Ministry issued an official statement on 14 September condemning Moscow blasts, and affirming that "Ichkeria stands firmly against terrorism in any manifestation".[135]

Domestic investigations

Criminal investigation and court ruling

In 2000, investigation of the Buynaksk attack was complete and seven people were convicted of the bombing.[136][137][138]

Russia's pre-trial investigation of the Moscow and Volgodonsk bombings was finished in 2002. According to the Russian State Prosecutor office,[103][139] all apartment bombings were executed under command of ethnic Karachay Achemez Gochiyayev and planned by Ibn al-Khattab and Abu Omar al-Saif, Arab militants fighting in Chechnya on the side of Chechen insurgents.[140][141] Al-Khattab and al-Saif were killed during the Second Chechen War. According to investigators, the explosives were prepared at a fertiliser factory in Urus-Martan Chechnya, by "mixing aluminium powder, nitre and sugar in a concrete mixer",[142] or by also putting there RDX and TNT.[103] From there they were sent to a food storage facility in Kislovodsk, which was managed by an uncle of one of the terrorists, Yusuf Krymshakhalov. Another conspirator, Ruslan Magayayev, leased a KamAZ truck in which the sacks were stored for two months. After everything was planned, the participants were organised into several groups which then transported the explosives to different cities.

According to investigators, the explosion in Moscow mall on 31 August was committed by another man, Magomed-Zagir Garzhikaev on the orders from Shamil Basayev, according to the FSB.[143]

Court hearings on the Moscow and Volgodonsk attacks were held behind closed doors, and were completed in 2004. The process has produced 90 volumes of proceedings, 5 of which were classified.[136][144]

Court rulings

 
A photo of Al-Hattab (second from left) and Gochiyayev (second from right). The photo was allegedly fabricated by the FSB to prove the guilt by Gochiyaev[145]

According to the court ruling, Al-Khattab paid Gochiyayev $500,000 to carry out the attacks at Guryanova Street, Kashirskoye Highway, and Borisovskiye Prudy, and then helped to hide Gochiyayev and his accomplices in Chechnya.[146][58] In early September 1999, Magayayev, Krymshamkhalov, Batchayev and Dekkushev reloaded the cargo into a Mercedes-Benz 2236[147] trailer and delivered it to Moscow. En route, they were protected from possible complications by an accomplice, Khakim Abayev,[147] who accompanied the trailer in another car. In Moscow they were met by Achemez Gochiyayev, who registered in Hotel Altai under the fake name "Laipanov", and Denis Saitakov. The explosives were left in a warehouse in Ulitsa Krasnodonskaya, which was leased by pseudo-Laipanov (Gochiyayev). The next day, the explosives were delivered in "ZIL-5301 [ru]" vans to three addresses—Ulitsa Guryanova, Kashirskoye Shosse and Ulitsa Borisovskiye Prudy, where pseudo-Laipanov leased cellars.[147] Gochiyayev supervised the placement of the bombs in the rented cellars. Next followed the explosions at the former two addresses. The explosion at 16 Borisovskiye Prudy was prevented.[146][148][149][150]

According to the court, 4 September Buinaksk bombing was ordered by Al-Khattab.[136][138][146] Reportedly, since the perpetrators have managed to explode only one truck bomb instead of the two, Khattab called it a "botched job" and paid $300,000 for it, which was a part of the sum he originally promised.[151] One of the suspects confessed having loaded the trucks with sacks in Buynaksk, but claimed he did not know what they were intended for.[152]

The explosion in the mall on Manezhnaya Square was the subject of a separate court process held in Moscow in 2009. The court accused Khalid Khuguyev (Russian: Халид Хугуев) and Magumadzir Gadzhikayev (Russian: Магумадзаир Гаджиакаев) of organisation and execution of the 1999 explosions in the Manezhnaya Square mall and in hotel Intourist and sentenced them to 25 years and 15 years of imprisonment, correspondingly.[153]

Sentences

Adam Dekkushev [ru] and Yusuf Krymshakhalov [ru] have both been sentenced to life terms in a special regime colony.[154] Both defendants have pleaded guilty only to some of the charges. For instance, Dekkushev acknowledged that he knew the explosives he transported were to be used for an act of terror. Dekkushev also confirmed Gochiyaev's role in the attacks.[155] Dekkushev was extradited to Russia on 14 April 2002 to stand trial. Krymshakhalov was apprehended and extradicted to Moscow.[146][154] Achemez Gochiyaev, the head of the group that carried out the attacks and allegedly the main organiser, remains a fugitive, and is under an international search warrant.[154]

In a statement released in January 2004, the FSB said, "until we arrest Gochiyayev, the case [of the apartment block bombings of 1999] will not be closed."[156][157] In an interview with Dmitry Gordon published on May 18, 2020, former GRU officer Igor Strelkov said that during the initial stage of the Second Chechen war, he was a part of a group which attempted to capture Achemez Gochiyaev.[158]

Suspects and accused

In September 1999, hundreds of Chechen nationals (out of the more than 100,000 permanently living in Moscow) were briefly detained and interrogated in Moscow, as a wave of anti-Chechen sentiments swept the city.[159] However, no Chechens were tried for the Buinaksk, Moscow or Volgodonsk attacks. Rather, it were Dagestani Wahhabis in the case of the Buinaksk bombing, and Karachay Wahhabis in the case of Moscow and Volgodonsk attacks.[136]

According to the official investigation, the following people either delivered explosives, stored them, or harboured other suspects:

Moscow bombings
Volgodonsk bombing
  • Timur Batchayev (an ethnic Karachai),[171] killed in Georgia in the clash with police during which Krymshakhalov was arrested[103]
  • Zaur Batchayev (an ethnic Karachai)[172] killed in Chechnya in 1999–2000[103]
  • Adam Dekkushev (an ethnic Karachai),[173] arrested in Georgia, threw a grenade at police during the arrest, extradited to Russia and sentenced to life imprisonment in January 2004, after a two-month secret trial held without a jury[174][102]
Buinaksk bombing
  • Isa Zainutdinov (an ethnic Avar)[171] and native of Dagestan,[173] sentenced to life imprisonment in March 2001[175]
  • Alisultan Salikhov (an ethnic Avar)[171] and native of Dagestan,[173] sentenced to life imprisonment in March 2001[175]
  • Magomed Salikhov (an ethnic Avar)[171] and native of Dagestan,[176] arrested in Azerbaijan in November 2004, extradited to Russia, found not guilty on the charge of terrorism by the jury on 24 January 2006; found guilty of participating in an armed force and illegal crossing of the national border,[177] he was retried again on the same charges on 13 November 2006 and again found not guilty, this time on all charges, including the ones he was found guilty of in the first trial.[178] According to Kommersant Salikhov admitted that he made a delivery of paint to Dagestan for Ibn al-Khattab, although he was not sure what was really delivered.[179]
  • Ziyavudin Ziyavudinov (a native of Dagestan),[180] arrested in Kazakhstan, extradited to Russia, sentenced to 24 years in April 2002[181]
  • Abdulkadyr Abdulkadyrov (an ethnic Avar)[171] and native of Dagestan, sentenced to 9 years in March 2001[175]
  • Magomed Magomedov (Sentenced to 9 years in March 2001)[175]
  • Zainutdin Zainutdinov (an ethnic Avar)[171] and native of Dagestan, sentenced to 3 years in March 2001 and immediately released under amnesty[175]
  • Makhach Abdulsamedov (a native of Dagestan, sentenced to 3 years in March 2001 and immediately released under amnesty).[175]

Attempts at an independent investigation

The Russian Duma rejected two motions for a parliamentary investigation of the Ryazan incident.[119][120]

An independent public commission to investigate the bombings was chaired by Duma deputy Sergei Kovalyov.[182] The commission started its work in February 2002. On 5 March Sergei Yushenkov and Duma member Yuli Rybakov flew to London where they met Alexander Litvinenko and Mikhail Trepashkin. After this meeting, Trepashkin began working with the commission.[15]

However, the public commission was rendered ineffective because of government refusal to respond to its inquiries.[183][184][185] Two key members of the Commission, Sergei Yushenkov and Yuri Shchekochikhin, both Duma members, have died in apparent assassinations in April 2003 and July 2003, respectively.[186][187] Another member of the commission, Otto Lacis, was assaulted in November 2003[188] and two years later, on 3 November 2005, he died in a hospital after a car accident.[189]

The commission asked lawyer Mikhail Trepashkin to investigate the case. Trepashkin said he found that the basement of one of the bombed buildings was rented by FSB officer Vladimir Romanovich and that the latter was witnessed by several people. Trepashkin also investigated a letter attributed to Achemez Gochiyayev and found that the alleged assistant of Gochiyayev who arranged the delivery of sacks might have been Kapstroi-2000 vice president Alexander Karmishin, a resident of Vyazma.[190]

Trepashkin was unable to bring the alleged evidence to the court because he was arrested in October 2003 (on charges of illegal arms possession) and imprisoned in Nizhny Tagil, just a few days before he was to make his findings public.[191] He was sentenced by a Moscow military closed court to four years imprisonment on a charge of revealing state secrets.[192] Amnesty International issued a statement that "there are serious grounds to believe that Mikhail Trepashkin was arrested and convicted under falsified criminal charges which may be politically motivated, in order to prevent him continuing his investigative and legal work related to the 1999 apartment bombings in Moscow and other cities".[193]

In a letter to Olga Konskaya, Trepashkin wrote that some time before the bombings, Moscow's Regional Directorate against Organized Crimes (RUOP GUVD) arrested several people for selling the explosive RDX. Following that, Nikolai Patrushev's Directorate of FSB officers came to the GUVD headquarters, captured evidence and ordered the investigators fired. Trepashkin wrote that he learned about the story at a meeting with several RUOP officers in the year 2000. They claimed that their colleagues could present eyewitness accounts in a court. They offered a video tape with evidence against the RDX dealers. Mr Trepashkin did not publicise the meeting fearing for lives of the witnesses and their families.[194][195]

According to Trepashkin, his supervisors and the people from the FSB promised not to arrest him if he left the Kovalev commission and started working together with the FSB "against Alexander Litvinenko".[196]

On 24 March 2000, two days before the presidential elections, NTV Russia featured the Ryazan events of Fall 1999 in the talk show Independent Investigation. The talk with the residents of the Ryazan apartment building along with FSB public relations director Alexander Zdanovich and Ryazan branch head Alexander Sergeyev was filmed few days earlier. On 26 March, Boris Nemtsov voiced his concern over the possible shut-down of NTV for airing the talk.[197] Seven months later, NTV general manager Igor Malashenko [ru] said at the JFK School of Government that Information Minister Mikhail Lesin warned him on several occasions. Malashenko's recollection of Lesin's warning was that by airing the talk show NTV "crossed the line" and that the NTV managers were "outlaws" in the eyes of the Kremlin.[198] According to Alexander Goldfarb, Mr. Malashenko told him that Valentin Yumashev brought a warning from the Kremlin, one day before airing the show, promising in no uncertain terms that the NTV managers "should consider themselves finished" if they went ahead with the broadcast.[199]

Artyom Borovik was among the people who investigated the bombings.[200] He received numerous death threats and died in a suspicious plane crash in March 2000[201] that was regarded by Felshtinsky and Pribylovsky as a probable assassination.[47]

Journalist Anna Politkovskaya and former security service member Alexander Litvinenko, who investigated the bombings, were killed in 2006.[202]

Surviving victims of the Guryanova street bombing asked President Dmitry Medvedev to resume the official investigation in 2008,[203] but it was not resumed.

In a 2017 discussion at the RFE/RL Sergei Kovalyov said: "I think that the Chechen trace was skilfully fabricated. No one from the people who organized the bombings was found, and no one actually was looking for them".[204] He then was asked by Vladimir Kara-Murza if he believes that several key members of his commission, and even Boris Berezovskiy and Boris Nemtsov who "knew quite a few things about the bombings" were killed to prevent the independent investigation. Kovalev responded: "I cannot state with full confidence that the explosions were organized by the authorities. Although it's clear that the explosions were useful for them, useful for future President Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin, because he had just promised to "waste in the outhouse" (as he said) everyone who had any relation to terrorism. It was politically beneficial for him to scare people with terrorism. That is not proven. But what can be stated with full confidence is this: the investigation of both the Moscow explosions and the so-called "exercises" in Ryazan is trumped up. There can be various possibilities. It seems to me, that Ryazan should have been the next explosion, but I cannot prove that."

Russian government involvement theory

According to David Satter, Yuri Felshtinsky, Alexander Litvinenko, Vladimir Pribylovsky and Boris Kagarlitsky, the bombings were a successful false flag operation coordinated by the Russian state security services to win public support for a new full-scale war in Chechnya and to bring Putin to power.[205][16][17][18][67][206][19][207][208] Some of them described the bombings as typical "active measures" practised by the KGB in the past. The war in Chechnya boosted Prime Minister and former FSB Director Vladimir Putin's popularity, and brought the pro-war Unity Party to the State Duma and Putin to the presidency within a few months.

In February 2000, the US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright stated they have not seen any evidence that ties the bombings to Chechnya.[209][non-primary source needed]

During the testimony of David Satter in the United States House of Representatives, he stated that:

With Yeltsin and his family facing possible criminal prosecution, however, a plan was put into motion to put in place a successor who would guarantee that Yeltsin and his family would be safe from prosecution and the criminal division of property in the country would not be subject to reexamination. For "Operation Successor" to succeed, however, it was necessary to have a massive provocation. In my view, this provocation was the bombing in September 1999 of the apartment building bombings in Moscow, Buinaksk, and Volgodonsk. In the aftermath of these attacks, which claimed 300 lives, a new war was launched against Chechnya. Putin, the newly appointed prime minister who was put in charge of that war, achieved overnight popularity. Yeltsin resigned early. Putin was elected president and his first act was to guarantee Yeltsin immunity from prosecution.[210]

According to a reconstruction of the events by Felshtinsky and Pribylovsky:[211]

  • The bombings in Buynaksk were carried out by a team of twelve GRU officers who were sent to Dagestan and supervised by the head of GRU's 14th Directorate General Nikolai Kostechko. That version was partly based on a testimony by Aleksey Galkin. The bombing in Buynaksk was conducted by the GRU to avoid an "interagency conflict between the FSB and the Ministry of Defense".
  • In Moscow, Volgodonsk and Ryazan, the attacks were organized by the FSB through a chain of command that included director of the counter-terrorism department General German Ugryumov, FSB operatives Maxim Lazovsky, Vladimir Romanovich, Ramazan Dyshekov and others. Achemez Gochiyayev, Tatyana Korolyeva, and Alexander Karmishin rented warehouses that received shipments of hexogen disguised as sugar and did not know that the explosives were delivered.
  • Adam Dekkushev, Krymshamkhalov, and Timur Batchayev were recruited by FSB agents who presented themselves as "Chechen separatists" to deliver explosives to Volgodonsk and Moscow.
  • Names and the fate of FSB agents who planted the bomb in the city of Ryazan remain unknown.

Support

Historians, journalists and politicians

The view about the bombings being organized and perpetrated by Russian state security services was originally put forward by journalist David Satter and historians Yuri Felshtinsky and Vladimir Pribylovsky, in co-authorship with Alexander Litvinenko. It was later supported by a number of historians. Amy Knight, a historian of the KGB, wrote that it was "abundantly clear" that the FSB was responsible for carrying out the attacks and that Vladimir Putin's "guilt seems clear," since it was inconceivable that the FSB would have done so without the sanction of Putin, the agency's former director and by then Prime Minister of Russia.[14][212] In her book Putin's Kleptocracy, historian Karen Dawisha summarized evidence related to the bombings and concluded that "to blow up your own innocent and sleeping people in your capital city is an action almost unthinkable. Yet the evidence that the FSB was at least involved in planting a bomb in Ryazan is incontrovertible."[213] According to Timothy Snyder, "it seemed possible" that the perpetrators of the apartment bombings were FSB officers.[214] David Satter considered the bombings as a political provocation by the Russian secret services that was similar to the burning of the Reichstag.[215]

This view has been also supported by investigative journalists. In 2008, British journalist Edward Lucas concluded in his book The New Cold War: Putin's Russia and the Threat to the West that "The weight of evidence so far supports the grimmest interpretation: that the attacks were a ruthlessly planned stunt to create a climate of panic and fear in which Putin would quickly become the country's indisputable leader, as indeed he did."[79] In the September 2009 issue of GQ, veteran war correspondent Scott Anderson wrote about on Putin's role in the Russian apartment bombings, based in part on his interviews with Mikhail Trepashkin[216] The journal owner, Condé Nast, then took extreme measures[which?] to prevent an article by Anderson from appearing in the Russian media, both physically and in translation.[217]

Former Russian State Security Council chief Alexandr Lebed in his 29 September 1999 interview with Le Figaro said he was almost convinced that the government organised the terrorist acts.[218][219][220] Andrei Illarionov, a former key economic adviser to the Russian president, said that FSB involvement "is not a theory, it is a fact. There is no other element that could have organized the bombings except for the FSB."[221] Later Lebed's public relations staff claimed that he was quoted out of the context.[218]

Russian military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer noted that "The FSB accused Khattab and Gochiyaev, but oddly they did not point the finger at Chechen president Aslan Maskhadov's regime, which is what the war was launched against."[222]

A number of US politicians commented that they consider credible the allegations about Russian state security services as the actual organizers of the bombings. In 2003, U.S. senator John McCain said that "It was during Mr. Putin's tenure as Prime Minister in 1999 that he launched the Second Chechen War following the Moscow apartment bombings. There remain credible allegations that Russia's FSB had a hand in carrying out these attacks. Mr. Putin ascended to the presidency in 2000 by pointing a finger at the Chechens for committing these crimes, launching a new military campaign in Chechnya, and riding a frenzy of public anger into office."[207]

On 11 January 2017, senator Marco Rubio raised the issue of the 1999 bombings during the confirmation hearings for Rex Tillerson.[223] According to senator Rubio, "there's [an] incredible body of reporting, open source and other, that this was all—all those bombings were part of a black flag operation on the part of the FSB."[101] On 10 January 2018, senator Ben Cardin of the United States Senate Foreign Relations Committee released a report entitled "Putin's Asymmetric Assault on Democracy in Russia and Europe: Implications for U.S. National Security".[101] According to the report, "no credible evidence has been presented by the Russian authorities linking Chechen terrorists, or anyone else, to the Moscow bombings."

According to Satter, all four bombings that occurred had a similar "signature" which indicated that the explosives had been carefully prepared, a mark of skilled specialists. There is also no explanation as to how the terrorists were able to obtain tons of hexogen explosive and transport it to various locations in Russia; hexogen is produced in one plant in Perm Oblast for which the central FSB is responsible for the security. The culprits would also have needed to organise nine explosions (the four that occurred and the five attempted bombings reported by the authorities) in different cities in a two-week period. Satter's estimate for the time required for target plan development, site visits, explosives preparation, renting space at the sites and transporting explosives to the sites was four to four and a half months.[104]

In a speech to the Oxford Union on 12th March 2022, former MI6 officer Christopher Steele voiced support for the idea that the bombings were likely a false flag operation conducted by Russian security services in order to justify the war in Chechnya.[224]

Books and films

The theory of Russian government involvement has been supported in a number of books and movies on the subject.

David Satter, a senior fellow of the Hudson Institute, authored two books Darkness at Dawn: The Rise of the Russian Criminal State and The Less You Know, The Better You Sleep: Russia's Road to Terror and Dictatorship under Yeltsin and Putin (published by Yale University Press in 2003 and 2016) where he scrutinized the events and came to the conclusion that the bombings were organized by Russian state security services.(Satter 2003)[84]

In 2002, former FSB officer Alexander Litvinenko and historian Yuri Felshtinsky published a book Blowing up Russia: Terror from within.(Felshtinsky & Litvinenko 2007) According to authors the bombings and other terrorist acts have been committed by Russian security services to justify the Second Chechen War and to bring Vladimir Putin to power.[225]

In another book, Lubyanka Criminal Group, Litvinenko and Alexander Goldfarb described the transformation of the FSB into a criminal and terrorist organization, including conducting the bombings. (Litvinenko 2002) Former GRU analyst and historian Viktor Suvorov said that the book describes "a leading criminal group that provides "protection" for all other organized crime in the country and which continues the criminal war against their own people", like their predecessors NKVD and KGB. He added: "The book proves: Lubyanka [the KGB headquarters] was taken over by enemies of the people. ... If Putin's team can not disprove the facts provided by Litvinenko, Putin must shoot himself. Patrushev and all other leadership of Lubyanka Criminal Group must follow his example."[226]

Alexander Goldfarb and Marina Litvinenko published a book Death of a Dissident. They asserted that the murder of Mr. Litvinenko was "the most compelling proof" of the FSB involvement theory. According to the book, the murder of Litvinenko "gave credence to all his previous theories, delivering justice for the tenants of the bombed apartment blocks, the Moscow theater-goers, Sergei Yushenkov, Yuri Shchekochikhin, and Anna Politkovskaya, and the half-exterminated nation of Chechnya, exposing their killers for the whole world to see."[227]

A PBS Frontline documentary on Vladimir Putin also mentioned the theory and FSB involvement, citing the quick removal of rubble and bodies from the bombing scenes before any investigation could take place, the discovery of the Ryazan bomb, the deaths of several people who had attempted to investigate the bombings, as well as the defused Ryazan bomb being made of Russian military explosives and detonators.[228][229]

A documentary film Assassination of Russia was made in 2000 by two French producers who had previously worked on NTV's Sugar of Ryazan program.[230][231]

A documentary Nedoverie ("Disbelief") about the bombing controversy made by Russian director Andrei Nekrasov was premiered at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival. The film chronicles the story of Tatyana and Alyona Morozova, the two Russian-American sisters, who had lost their mother in the attack, and decided to find out who did it.[232][233][234] His next film on the subject was Rebellion: the Litvinenko Case. The film doesn't intend to investigate the Litvinenko murder, rather than that, its goal is to put the case into a wider context of the events unfolding in post-Soviet Russia.[235]

Yuli Dubov, author of The Big Slice, wrote a novel The Lesser Evil, based on the bombings. The main characters of the story are Platon (Boris Berezovsky) and Larry (Badri Patarkatsishvili). They struggle against an evil KGB officer, Old man (apparently inspired by the legendary Philipp Bobkov), who brings another KGB officer, Fedor Fedorovich (Vladimir Putin) to power by staging a series of apartment bombings.[236]

Criticism

In March 2000, Putin dismissed the allegations of FSB involvement in the bombings as "delirious nonsense." "There are no people in the Russian secret services who would be capable of such crime against their own people. The very allegation is immoral," he said.[237] An FSB spokesman said that "Litvinenko's evidence cannot be taken seriously by those who are investigating the bombings".[222] According to Strobe Talbott who was a United States Deputy Secretary of State during the events, "there was no evidence to support" the "conspiracy theory, although Russian public opinion did indeed solidify behind Putin in his determination to carry out a swift, decisive counteroffensive."[22]

According to Russian investigative journalist Andrei Soldatov, "From the start, it seemed that the Kremlin was determined to suppress all discussion ... When Alexander Podrabinek, a Russian human rights activist, tried to import copies of Litvinenko's and Felshtinsky's Blowing up Russia in 2003, they were confiscated by the FSB. Trepashkin himself, acting as a lawyer for two relatives of the victims of the blast, was unable to obtain information he requested and was entitled to see by law". However, Soldatov believed that the obstruction might reflect "'paranoia' rather than guilt on the part of the authorities". Consequently, Soldatov argued, that paranoia has produced the very conspiracy theories that the Russian Government intended to eradicate.[238] In their book The New Nobility, Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan believe that the Ryazan incident had actually been a training exercise.[23] According to the authors, such exercises are typical for Vympel, a unit of the FSB whose mission is to verify the efficacy of counterterrorism measures at sites such as nuclear plants.[23] In authors' opinion, the book Blowing Up Russia by Felshtinsky and Litvinenko contained no new evidence against the FSB, and claims by Trepashkin were highly dubious.[239] Soldatov and Borogan noted that the main point of allegations against the FSB was that Achemez Gochiyaev was an innocent businessman, who was made a scapegoat by the FSB and falsely accused of perpetrating the bombings. However, according to Soldatov and Borogan, Gochiyaev was a leader of a local Islamist group since the mid-1990s, and Dekkushev and Krymshamkhalov were members of the same group called "Muslim Society No. 3". According to Russian state security services, the group was founded in 1995, counted more than 500 members by 2001, and was responsible for a series of terrorist attacks in the 2000s. Soldatov and Borogan have also noted a partial admission of guilt by Dekkushev and Krymshamkhalov during a trial in 2003.[240]

According to Robert Bruce Ware, the simplest explanation for the apartment block blasts is that they were perpetrated by Islamist extremists from North Caucasus who sought retribution for the attacks of the Federal forces against the Islamist enclave in the central Dagestan, known as the Islamic Djamaat.[24] Ware points out that that would explain the timing of the attacks, and why there were no attacks after the date on which the insurgents were driven from Dagestan. It would also explain why no Chechen claimed responsibility. Also it would explain Basayev's reference to responsibility of Dagestanis and it would be consistent with the initial vow of Khattab to set off the bombs blasting through Russian cities.[24] Ware also criticizes an argument that David Satter and Rajan Menon use to support the view of Russian security services responsibility for the bombings—that the apartment block explosions involved hexogen, which is a highly controlled substance in Russia and is extraordinarily difficult to obtain. According to Ware, that's not the case, as sizable amounts of hexogen (as well as other weaponry) were readily available in Dagestan. As a proof, Ware cites the police reports of the program for voluntary surrender of arms in Dagestan which ran for a couple of months in 2003 and revealed large quantities of hexogen and ammonite.[24]

Max Abrahms, a researcher who is critical of the efficacy of terrorism in general, argued that the bombings were detrimental for the self-determination of Chechnya. He noted that the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria has achieved a de facto independence from Russia after the Khasavyurt Accord, with two thirds of Russian citizens favoring the separation of the breakaway republic. However, the public opinion in Russia has changed dramatically after the bombings. Most Russians started "baying for blood" and strongly supporting the war with Chechnya that became inevitable and led to the loss of the independence as a result of the bombings. According to Abrahms, this supports his theory that attacks by terrorist organizations have been always counterproductive for the perpetrators and therefore gave rise to conspiracy theories about alternative perpetrators who actually benefited from the events.[241]

Political scientist Ronald R. Pope in his review of David Satter's book Darkness at Dawn cited Kirill Pankratov's criticism, published as a contribution to Johnson's Russia List. Regarding the apartment bombings, Pankratov argued that the Russian authorities did not need an additional justification to wage a war against Chechnya, in view of high-profile kidnappings and the invasion of Dagestan. One of his other arguments was that the theory of FSB responsibility for the bombings implied that it had been able to keep the lid on the operation much more effectively than the FSB had been able to execute it.[242][25]

Political scientist Brian Taylor believes that there's too little evidence to decide which version of the events is correct, as the available evidence is fragmentary and controversial.[26] Taylor identifies several reasons to doubt the conspiracy version. First, while the bombings did propel Putin to power, by itself it's not the evidence that this was the goal of the attacks. Second, there was a casus belli even without the bombings—namely, the invasion of Dagestan and multiple kidnappings in the region in the preceding years. Third, if the goal of the bombings was to justify a new war, one or two bombings in Moscow would be more than adequate. Any subsequent bombings would be potentially dangerous, because they would increase the risk to expose the conspiracy. Fourth, he believes that a plot involving multiple players and a large number of FSB operatives could not be kept secret.[26] According to Taylor, it's plausible that FSB "simulated" an attack in Ryazan in order to claim credit for "uncovering" it; however the plot was foiled by vigilant local denizens and law enforcement personnel. The "training exercise" justification was improvised after the plot failed.[26]

Yuri Luzhkov, a mayor of Moscow at the time of the bombings, believed that the bombings in Moscow were facilitated by the new piece of legislation[243] that established Freedom of movement within the country—which was restricted prior to 1993. According to Luzhkov, the law made it possible for Chechen terrorists to bring weapons to Moscow and store them there, as well as purchase auto vehicles and provide housing for tens of bandits who had arrived in Moscow. According to Luzhkov, "for three months, after having arrived in Moscow, a terrorist could live wherever he wanted and stay with anyone, without notifying the police", which allowed the criminals to prepare the bombings.[244]

Sealing information by the US government

On 14 July 2016, David Satter filed Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests with the State Department, the CIA and the FBI, inquiring about documents pertaining to the apartment bombings, the Ryazan incident and persons who tried to investigate the bombings and were killed.[223] The agencies acknowledged receipt of the requests, but Satter received no other response within the statutory time limit. On 29 August 2016, Satter filed suit against the Department of Justice and other agencies involved.[245] However, CIA refused even to acknowledge the existence of any relevant records because doing so would reveal "very specific aspects of the Agency's intelligence interest, or lack thereof, in the Russian bombings."[223]

The State Department responded with a redacted copy of a cable from the U.S. embassy in Moscow. According to the cable, on 24 March 2000, a former member of Russian intelligence services told a U.S. diplomat that the real story about the Ryazan incident could never be known because it "would destroy the country." The informant said the FSB had "a specially trained team of men" whose mission was "to carry out this type of urban warfare".[101] The informant has also said that Viktor Cherkesov, the FSB's first deputy director and an interrogator of Soviet dissidents was "exactly the right person to order and carry out such actions."[223]

David Satter made a renewed FOIA request, and on 22 March 2017, State Department responded that documents concerning the U.S. assessment of the bombings would remain secret. A draft Vaughn index, a document used by agencies to justify withholdings in FOIA cases, said that the release of that information had "the potential to inject friction into or cause serious damage" to relationships with the Russian Government that were "vital to U.S. national security".[246]

On 16 March 2018, the case Satter v. Department of Justice was closed.[247]

Impact on survivors

Multiple survivors of the bombings have developed disabilities, with many of them diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. In 2006 Irina Khalai, a survivor of the Volgodonsk bombing, founded the NGO "Volga-Don", which promotes legislation for the legal recognition of victims of terrorist attacks.[248]

Chronology of events

  • 5 August 1999: Shamil Basayev enters western Dagestan from Chechnya, starting the War of Dagestan
  • 9 August 1999: Stepashin is dismissed and Putin becomes prime minister
  • 22 August 1999: The forces of Shamil Basayev withdraw back into Chechnya
  • 25 August 1999: Russian jets make bombing runs against 16 sites in Chechnya[249]
  • 31 August 1999: Bombing in Moscow, Manezhnaya Square, 29 people are injured
  • 4 September 1999: Bombing in Buynaksk, 64 people killed, 133 are injured
  • 9 September 1999: Bombing in Moscow, Pechatniki, 94 people are killed, 249 are injured
  • 13 September 1999: Bombing in Moscow, Kashirskoye highway, 118 are killed
  • 13 September 1999: A bomb is defused and a warehouse containing several tons of explosives and six timing devices is found in Moscow
  • 13 September 1999: Russian Duma speaker Gennadiy Seleznyov makes an announcement about the bombing of an apartment building in the city of Volgodonsk that will take place three days later
  • 16 September 1999: Bombing in Volgodonsk, 18 are killed, 288 injured
  • 23 September 1999: An apartment bomb is found in the city of Ryazan. Vladimir Rushailo announces that police prevented a terrorist act. Vladimir Putin praises the vigilance of the citizens and calls for the air bombing of Grozny
  • 23–24 September 1999: According to David Satter, FSB agents who planted the bomb in Ryazan are arrested by local police[84]
  • 24 September 1999: Nikolai Patrushev declares that the incident was a training exercise and frees the FSB agents
  • 24 September 1999: Second Chechen War begins

See also

References

  1. ^ Yeltsin 2000, pp. 335–338
  2. ^ a b De La Pedraja 2018, pp. 147–148
  3. ^ Ответ Генпрокуратуры на депутатский запрос о взрывах в Москве 10 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian), machine translation 25 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ "September 1999 Russian apartment bombings timeline - Blog - The Fifth Estate". CBC. 8 January 2015. from the original on 15 September 2020. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  5. ^ Goldfarb & Litvinenko 2007, pp. 190, 196
  6. ^ a b c Knight, Amy (22 November 2012). "Finally, We Know About the Moscow Bombings". New York Review of Books. from the original on 7 December 2021.
  7. ^ "Russian bomb scare turns out to be anti-terror drill". CNN. 24 September 1999. from the original on 20 August 2019. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  8. ^ "Russian Federation: Amnesty International's concerns and recommendations in the case of Mikhail Trepashkin". Amnesty International. 23 March 2006. from the original on 22 November 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  9. ^ . MN.RU. Archived from the original on 29 February 2012. Retrieved 29 January 2012.
  10. ^ . Beta.echo.msk.ru. 25 July 2002. Archived from the original on 16 February 2012. Retrieved 29 January 2012.
  11. ^ (in Russian) Volgodonsk (Rostov region) apartment bombing; criminal investigation of Moscow and Buynaksk apartment bombings 29 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine, an interview with FSB public relations director Alexander Zdanovich and MVD head of information Oleg Aksyonov by Vladimir Varfolomeyev, Echo of Moscow, 16 September 1999. computer translation 8 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "President Putin 'probably' approved Litvinenko murder". BBC News. 21 January 2016. from the original on 9 September 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2021.
  13. ^ Petersson, Bo; Hutcheson, Derek (2021). "Rising from the ashes. The role of Chechnya in contemporary Russian politics". Language and Society in the Caucasus. Understanding the past, navigating the present. Lund: Universus Press. p. 149. ISBN 978-91-87439-67-4. from the original on 9 July 2021. Retrieved 30 June 2021. Even if their guilt was never conclusively proven and the circumstances of the bomb blasts were shrouded in mystery, the attacks were widely attributed to Chechen terrorists (Dawisha 2014, 207–223). Together, these events provided Putin with the casus belli that he needed to initiate the Second Chechen War.
  14. ^ a b c Amy Knight (22 November 2012). "Finally, We Know About the Moscow Bombings". The New York Review of Books. from the original on 7 December 2021. Retrieved 5 April 2017. The evidence provided in The Moscow Bombings makes it abundantly clear that the FSB of the Russian Republic, headed by Patrushev, was responsible for carrying out the attacks.
  15. ^ a b Satter, David (17 August 2016). "The Unsolved Mystery Behind the Act of Terror That Brought Putin to Power". National Review. from the original on 26 April 2018. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  16. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 29 January 2012.
  17. ^ a b Felshtinsky & Pribylovsky 2008, pp. 105–111
  18. ^ a b Video on YouTube In Memoriam Aleksander Litvinenko, Jos de Putter, Tegenlicht documentary VPRO 2007, Moscow, 2004 Interview with Anna Politkovskaya
  19. ^ a b ’’The consolidation of Dictatorship in Russia’’ by Joel M. Ostrow, Georgiy Satarov, Irina Khakamada p.96
  20. ^ Salter, Lamar; Lopez, Linette; Kakoyiannis, Alana (22 March 2018). "How a series of deadly Russian apartment bombings in 1999 led to Putin's rise to power". Business Insider. from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  21. ^ Stein, Jeff (7 February 2022). "Russian 'False Flag' Ukraine Plot Wouldn't Be Its First". Military.com. from the original on 18 February 2022. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
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Bibliography

External links

  •   Media related to 1999 Russian apartment bombings at Wikimedia Commons

russian, apartment, bombings, were, series, explosions, that, four, apartment, blocks, russian, cities, buynaksk, moscow, volgodonsk, september, 1999, killing, more, than, injuring, more, than, spreading, wave, fear, across, country, bombings, together, with, . The Russian apartment bombings were a series of explosions that hit four apartment blocks in the Russian cities of Buynaksk Moscow and Volgodonsk in September 1999 killing more than 300 injuring more than 1 000 and spreading a wave of fear across the country The bombings together with the Invasion of Dagestan triggered the Second Chechen War 1 2 The handling of the crisis by Vladimir Putin who was prime minister at the time boosted his popularity greatly and helped him attain the presidency within a few months Russian apartment bombingsPart of the Second Chechen WarLocationBuynaksk Moscow and VolgodonskDate4 16 September 1999TargetResidential apartment buildings in RussiaAttack typeTime bombing car bomb truck bomb terrorismWeaponsVarious explosivesDeaths307Injured1 000 PerpetratorsIbn Al Khattab Achemez Gochiyayev and their accomplices Involvement of the Russian government FSB and GRU Various other accusationsThe blasts hit Buynaksk on 4 September and in Moscow on 9 and 13 September On 13 September Russian Duma speaker Gennadiy Seleznyov made an announcement in the Duma about receiving a report that another bombing had just happened in the city of Volgodonsk A bombing did indeed happen in Volgodonsk but only three days later on 16 September Chechen militants were blamed for the bombings but denied responsibility along with Chechen president Aslan Maskhadov A suspicious device resembling those used in the bombings was found and defused in an apartment block in the Russian city of Ryazan on 22 September 3 4 On 23 September Vladimir Putin praised the vigilance of the inhabitants of Ryazan and ordered the air bombing of Grozny which marked the beginning of the Second Chechen War 5 Three FSB agents who had planted the devices at Ryazan were arrested by the local police 6 The next day FSB director Nikolay Patrushev announced that the incident in Ryazan had been an anti terror drill and the device found there contained only sugar 7 The official Russian investigation of the Buynaksk bombing was completed in 2001 while the investigation of Moscow and Volgodonsk bombings was completed in 2002 In 2000 seven people were convicted of perpetrating the Buynaksk attack According to the court ruling on the Moscow and Volgodonsk bombings which was announced in 2004 the attacks were organised and led by Achemez Gochiyaev who remains at large All bombings the court ruled were ordered by Islamist warlords Ibn Al Khattab and Abu Omar al Saif who have been killed Five other suspects have been killed and six have been convicted by Russian courts on terrorism related charges State Duma deputy Yuri Shchekochikhin filed two motions for a parliamentary investigation of the events but the motions were rejected by the State Duma in March 2000 An independent public commission to investigate the bombings was chaired by Duma deputy Sergei Kovalev 8 The commission was rendered ineffective because of government refusal to respond to its inquiries Two key members of the Kovalev Commission Sergei Yushenkov and Yuri Shchekochikhin have since died in apparent assassinations 9 10 The Commission s lawyer and investigator Mikhail Trepashkin was arrested and served four years in prison for revealing state secrets 11 Former FSB agent Alexander Litvinenko who defected and blamed the FSB for the bombings was poisoned and killed in London in 2006 A British inquiry later determined that Litvinenko s murder was probably carried out with the approval of Putin and Patrushev 12 The attacks were widely attributed to Chechen terrorists despite their guilt never being conclusively proven 13 Some historians and journalists claim the bombings were coordinated by Russian state security services to help bring Putin into the presidency 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Others disagree with such theories or argue that there is insufficient evidence to assign responsibility for the attacks 22 23 24 25 26 Independent investigations have faced obstruction from the Russian government 27 28 Contents 1 Bombings 1 1 Overview 1 2 Manezhnaya Square Moscow 1 3 Buynaksk Dagestan 1 4 Moscow Pechatniki 1 5 Moscow Kashirskoye highway 1 6 Moscow prevented bombings 1 7 Volgodonsk Rostov Oblast 1 8 Ryazan incident 1 8 1 Detonator and explosives detection equipment controversy 1 8 2 The case of private Alexei Pinyaev 1 9 Explosives in the apartment bombings 2 Related events 2 1 War of Dagestan 2 2 Advance warnings about the impending bombings 2 3 Announcement of impending Volgodonsk bombings in the Russian Duma 2 4 Sealing of all materials by the Russian Duma 2 5 Claims and denials of responsibility for the blasts 3 Domestic investigations 3 1 Criminal investigation and court ruling 3 1 1 Court rulings 3 1 2 Sentences 3 1 3 Suspects and accused 3 1 3 1 Moscow bombings 3 1 3 2 Volgodonsk bombing 3 1 3 3 Buinaksk bombing 3 2 Attempts at an independent investigation 4 Russian government involvement theory 4 1 Support 4 1 1 Historians journalists and politicians 4 1 2 Books and films 4 2 Criticism 5 Sealing information by the US government 6 Impact on survivors 7 Chronology of events 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksBombings EditOverview Edit Five apartment bombings took place and at least three attempted bombings were prevented 29 All bombings had the same signature based on the nature and the volume of the destruction In each case a powerful explosive was used and the timers were set to go off at night and inflict the maximum number of civilian casualties 30 31 32 The explosives were placed to destroy the weakest most critical elements of the buildings and force them to collapse like a house of cards 33 The individuals behind the bombings were able to obtain or manufacture several tons of powerful explosives and deliver them to numerous destinations across Russia 33 34 Manezhnaya Square Moscow Edit On 31 August 1999 at 20 00 local time a bomb exploded in the amusement arcade of the Manezh Square shopping complex of Moscow 35 36 37 At least 29 people were injured 38 39 40 41 According to the FSB the explosion had been caused by a bomb of about 300 grams of explosives 36 On 2 September 1999 an unknown person called and claimed that the bombing was committed by the militant organization the Liberation Army of Dagestan 42 Buynaksk Dagestan Edit On 4 September 1999 at 22 00 a car bomb detonated outside a five story apartment building in the city of Buynaksk in Dagestan near the border of Chechnya The building was housing Russian border guard soldiers and their families 43 Sixty four people were killed and 133 were injured in the explosion 44 45 On 4 September 1999 another bomb was discovered shortly after the explosion and detonated in the city of Buynaksk in Dagestan 43 46 The defused bomb was in a car containing 2 706 kilograms 5 966 lb of explosive material It was discovered by local residents in a parking lot surrounded by an army hospital and residential buildings 47 Moscow Pechatniki Edit Bombing at Guryanova Street One section of the building completely collapsed On 9 September 1999 shortly after midnight at 20 00 GMT 48 a bomb detonated on the ground floor of an apartment building in southeast Moscow 19 Guryanova Street The explosive power was equivalent to 300 400 kilograms 660 880 lb of TNT The nine story building was destroyed killing 106 people inside with early reports giving 93 dead 49 and injuring 249 others and damaging 19 nearby buildings 48 A total of 108 apartments were destroyed during the bombing An FSB spokesman announced that traces of RDX and TNT were found on items removed from the site of the explosion 50 Residents said a few minutes before the blast four men were seen speeding away from the building in a car 51 Boris Yeltsin ordered the search of 30 000 residential buildings in Moscow for explosives 52 He took personal control of the investigation of the blast 34 Putin declared 13 September a day of mourning for the victims of the attacks 48 Moscow Kashirskoye highway Edit Rescuers digging for survivors after Kashira road bombing On 13 September 1999 at 05 00 a large bomb exploded in a basement of an apartment block on Kashirskoye Highway in southern Moscow about 6 kilometres 3 7 mi from the place of the last attack This was the deadliest blast in the chain of bombings because the apartment was built with brick with 119 people killed and 200 injured 53 The eight story building was flattened littering the street with debris and throwing some concrete pieces hundreds of meters away 49 Moscow prevented bombings Edit Apartment on Borisovskiye Prudy street Moscow where one of the bombs was found and disarmed in September 1999 On September 13 1999 the police found and defused bombs in an apartment block on Borisovskiye Prudy street and Kapotnya in Moscow 54 55 According to Litvinenko Felshtinsky and Goldfarb on 13 September 1999 Achemez Gochiyaev called and reported about bombs planted in several locations Gochiyaev claimed that he was framed by his old acquaintance an FSB officer who asked him to rent basements as storage facilities at four locations where bombs were later found After the second explosion on Kashirskoye highway Gochiyaev recognized he was set up called the police and told them about the basements of two other buildings at Borisovskie Prudy and Kapotnya where the explosives were actually found and explosions averted 56 57 In 2002 Felshtinsky and Litvinenko obtained a written testimony from Achemez Gochiyaev as well as a video recording and several photographs about it 58 59 The same statement was received by Prima News agency 60 According to Russian newspaper Kommersant and the public relations centre of the FSB further bombings in Moscow were prevented with the help of a real estate agent who called the police after the second bombing in Moscow and told about his client who rented basements in the two buildings which were blown up in Moscow The client was identified as Achemez Gochiyaev 61 62 63 Volgodonsk Rostov Oblast Edit Volgodonsk bomb partially destroyed an apartment block A truck bomb exploded on 16 September 1999 outside a nine story apartment complex in the southern Russian city of Volgodonsk killing 17 people and injuring 69 52 The bombing took place at 5 57 am 64 Surrounding buildings were also damaged The blast also happened 14 km 9 mi from a nuclear power plant 64 Prime Minister Putin signed a decree calling on law enforcement and other agencies to develop plans within three days to protect industry transportation communications food processing centres and nuclear complexes 64 Ryazan incident Edit At 20 30 on 22 September 1999 Alexei Kartofelnikov a resident of an apartment building in the city of Ryazan noticed two suspicious men who carried sacks into the basement from a car 47 65 66 While the license plate indicated that the car was registered in Moscow a sheet of paper was taped over the last two digits and the number written on it implied that the car was local 67 Kartofelnikov alerted the police but by the time they arrived the car and the men were gone The policemen found three sacks of white powder in the basement each weighing 50 kg 110 lb A detonator and a timing device were attached to the sacks 32 The detonator was reported by a Russian newspaper to be a 12 gauge shotgun shell filled with powder 68 The timer was set to 5 30 AM 32 Yuri Tkachenko the head of the local bomb squad disconnected the detonator and the timer Reportedly Tkachenko tested the three sacks of white substance with a MO 2 gas analyser which detected RDX vapors 69 Inhabitants of the apartment building were evacuated 68 According to David Satter residents of neighboring buildings fled their homes in terror to the effect that nearly 30 000 residents spent the night on the street Police and rescue vehicles converged from different parts of the city As many as 1 200 local police officers were put on alert the railroad stations and the airport were surrounded and roadblocks were set up on highways leaving the city 69 At 01 30 on 23 September 1999 explosive engineers of the Ryazan UFSB took a sample of substance from the suspicious looking sacks to a firing ground located about 1 6 km 1 mi away from Ryazan for testing 68 70 During the substance tests at that area they tried to explode it by means of a detonator which was also made from a shotgun shell but the substance failed to detonate 68 71 72 73 74 75 76 At 05 00 Radio Rossiya reported about the attempted bombing noting that the bomb was set up to go off at 05 30 In the morning Ryazan resembled a city under siege Composite sketches of three suspected terrorists two men and a woman were posted everywhere in the city and shown on TV At 08 00 Russian television reported the attempt to blow out the building in Ryazan and identified the explosive used in the bomb as RDX 71 Vladimir Rushailo announced later that police prevented a terrorist act A news report at 16 00 reported that the explosives failed to detonate during their testing outside the city 68 71 72 73 77 78 At 19 00 Vladimir Putin praised the vigilance of the inhabitants of Ryazan and called for the air bombing of the Chechen capital Grozny in response to the terrorism acts 32 He said 79 If the sacks which proved to contain explosive were noticed that means there is a positive side to it if only the fact that the public is reacting correctly to the events taking place in our country today I d like to thank the public No panic no sympathy for the bandits On 23 September Natalia Yukhnova a telephone service employee in Ryazan tapped into a suspicious phone call to Moscow and overheard the following instruction Leave one at a time there are patrols everywhere 80 81 82 The called number was traced to a telephone exchange unit serving FSB offices 83 When arrested the detainees produced FSB identification cards They were soon released on orders from Moscow 84 85 14 86 The position of Russian authorities on the Ryazan incident changed significantly over time Initially it was declared by the FSB and federal government to be a real threat However after the people who planted the bomb were identified the official version changed to security training 87 On 24 September FSB director Nikolai Patrushev announced that it was an exercise that was being carried out to test responses after the earlier blasts 88 89 The Ryazan FSB reacted with fury and issued a statement saying 79 This announcement came as a surprise to us and appeared at the moment when the FSB had identified the places of residence in Ryazan of those involved in planting the explosive device and was prepared to detain them FSB also issued a public apology about the incident 88 In a show Independent Investigation on NTV Evgeniy Savostyanov former director of Moscow and Moscow Oblast regional FSB branch has criticized the FSB for performing such exercise on residential buildings with inhabitants inside and without notifying local authorities 90 In excerpts from the planned Ryazan operation first published in 2002 it was stated that the exercise was overseen by the head of the FSB s Center of Special Operations CSO Major General Alexander Tikhonov 91 Detonator and explosives detection equipment controversy Edit In February 2000 Novaya Gazeta journalist Pavel Voloshin published an essay entitled What happened in Ryazan Sugar or Hexogen that was partly based on his two hour long interview with Yuri Tkachenko the police explosives expert who defused the Ryazan bomb 92 The essay noted that it s well known that a gas analyser that tested the vapours coming from the sacks indicated the presence of RDX Tkachenko said that he was completely certain that the instrument was in correct working order The gas analyser was of world class quality cost 20 000 and was maintained by a specialist who worked according to a strict schedule making frequent prophylactic checks because the device contained a radioactive source Meticulous care in the handling of the gas analyser was a necessity because the lives of the bomb squad experts depended on the reliability of their equipment Speaking of the detonator Voloshin noted that people who disarmed the device Tkachenko and his bomb squad claimed that the detonator attached to the sacks was not a dummy and had been prepared on a professional level 92 93 The police warrant officer who answered the original call and discovered the bomb insisted that there were no doubts it was a combat situation 93 In March 2000 the newspaper Ryazanskiye Vedomosti published an interview with Lieutenant Colonel Yuri Maximov the head of the investigative section of the Ryazan UFSB Maximov said that the Ryazan bomb squad was equipped with explosive vapour detector M 02 but bomb disposal experts didn t like it and used analytical kit Exprei which was more accurate 94 Also in March 2000 the head of the Ryazan UFSB General Sergeyev appeared on TV show Independent Investigation commenting on the device used to detect the RDX According to Sergeyev it was packed in a briefcase and acted like a litmus test from school The substance to be investigated was wiped by a collection paper which was subsequently sprayed from an aerosol can A change of the paper color indicated the presence of explosives Sergeyev explained the false positive result by prior contamination of the lid of the briefcase on which Tkachenko poured some sugar from the sacks to perform the test 95 At a press conference on the occasion of the Security Agency Worker s Day in December 2001 Tkachenko said that a gas analyser had not been used and the detonator was a shotgun shell that couldn t detonate any known explosives 96 In February 2003 Kommersant journalist Olga Allenova ru studied the criminal investigation file on the Ryazan incident obtained by Russian State Duma member Sergei Kovalev According to the proceedings a bomb disposal expert who arrived to the scene had twice performed a test which didn t show the presence of explosive particles The head of the bomb squad Tkachenko who arrived soon after that made a test himself and found the RDX The investigator who questioned Yuri Tkachenko concluded that the detection of RDX was made possible by contamination of Yuri Tkachenko s hands since the latter worked with explosives containing RDX on the day before the incident without wearing sterile gloves Another detail concerned the type of a device used to detect the explosives The report submitted by the Ryazan UFSB claimed that gas analyser M 02 was used However during Tkachenko s questioning it was revealed that he had used the device Exprel for the analysis The investigation has resolved the contradiction in the following way The bomb squad in Ryazan is equipped with the gas analyser M 02 but the latter has certain limitations The device has a high degree of imprecision and the analysis takes a long time So the bomb squad used the device Exprel which is more robust accurate and easy to use But since they were not supposed to possess that device the bomb squad has submitted the paperwork which showed that the gas analyser M 02 had been used 70 The case of private Alexei Pinyaev Edit In March 2000 Novaya Gazeta journalist Pavel Voloshin reported the account of Private Alexei P later identified as Pinyaev of the 137th Regiment Pinyaev guarded a storehouse with weapons and ammunition near the city of Ryazan Together with a friend he entered the storehouse to see the weapons The friends were surprised to see that the storehouse contained sacks with the word sugar on them Pinyaev and his friend were discouraged but didn t want to leave the storehouse empty handed The two paratroopers cut a hole in one of the bags and put some sugar in a plastic bag They made tea with the sugar but the taste of the tea was terrible They became frightened because the substance might turn out to be saltpeter and brought the plastic bag to a platoon commander He consulted a sapper who identified the substance as hexogen 97 According to Felshtinsky and Pribylovsky after the newspaper report FSB officers descended on Pinyayev s unit accused them of divulging a state secret and told them You guys can t even imagine what serious business you ve got yourselves tangled up in The regiment later sued publishers of Novaya Gazeta for insulting the honour of the Russian Army since there was no Private Alexei Pinyayev in the regiment according to their statement 98 A report aired by ORT in March 2000 and created by journalist Leonid Grozin and operator Dmitry Vishnevoy accused Novaya Gazeta of lying According to Grozin and Vishnevoy there is no storehouse at the test range of the 137th Regiment Alexei Pinyaev has admitted meeting with Pavel Voloshin but claimed that he was merely asked to confirm a pre conceived story 99 At an FSB press conference in 2001 Private Pinyayev stated that there was no hexogen in the 137th Airborne Regiment and that he was hospitalised in December 1999 and no longer visited the test range 96 Explosives in the apartment bombings Edit After the bombing at Guryanova Street on September 9 the Moscow FSB reported that items removed from the scene showed traces of TNT and RDX or hexogen 50 100 101 Later FSB declared that the explosive used in the bombings was a mixture of aluminium powder ammonium nitrate TNT and sugar prepared by the perpetrators in a concrete mixer at a fertiliser factory in Urus Martan Chechnya 31 102 103 Also each bomb contained some plastic explosive used as an explosive booster 30 31 RDX is produced in only one factory in Russia in the city of Perm 104 According to David Satter the FSB changed the story about the type of explosive since it was difficult to explain how huge amounts of RDX disappeared from the closely guarded Perm facility 104 According to Lieutenant General of the FSB Ivan Mironov the precise composition of the explosive mixture was hard to determine because no visible traces remain after the aluminium powder is consumed in a blast 31 Related events EditWar of Dagestan Edit Main article War of Dagestan On 7 August 1999 an Islamist group led by Shamil Basayev and Ibn al Khattab invaded the Russian republic of Dagestan According to historian Rene De La Pedraja the war in Chechnya was planned in advance by the Ministry of Internal Affairs soon after the kidnapping of Gennady Shpigun The ministry developed a plan for a limited military campaign to occupy the northern third of Chechnya up to the Terek River valley Putin strongly supported the initial plan to occupy only the northern third of Chechnya The invasion of militants in Dagestan accelerated the schedule for such a campaign However after the apartment bombings the usually cool and cautious Putin was swept away in the popular outrage and decided to approve a much more ambitious campaign to subdue all of Chechnya The Russian Army was not ready to pursue the extended campaign which resulted in a prolonged conflict 2 Advance warnings about the impending bombings Edit In July 1999 Russian journalist Aleksandr Zhilin writing in the Moskovskaya Pravda warned that there would be terrorist attacks in Moscow organised by the government Using a leaked Kremlin document as evidence he added that the motive would be to undermine the opponents of the Russian President Boris Yeltsin These included Moscow mayor Yury Luzhkov and former prime minister Yevgeny Primakov However this warning was ignored 6 105 According to Amy Knight even more significant is the fact that a respected and influential Duma deputy Konstantin Borovoi was told on September 9 the day of the first Moscow apartment bombing that there was to be a terrorist attack in the city His source was an officer of the Russian military intelligence GRU Borovoy transmitted this information to FSB officials serving on Yeltsin s Security Council but he was ignored 6 106 Announcement of impending Volgodonsk bombings in the Russian Duma Edit On 13 September just hours after the second explosion in Moscow Russian Duma speaker Gennadiy Seleznyov of the Communist Party made an announcement I have just received a report According to information from Rostov on Don an apartment building in the city of Volgodonsk was blown up last night 107 108 109 110 111 When the Volgodonsk bombing happened on 16 September Vladimir Zhirinovsky demanded an explanation in the Duma the following day but Seleznyov turned his microphone off 107 Vladimir Zhirinovsky said in the Russian Duma Remember Gennadiy Nikolaevich how you told us that an apartment block has been blown up in Volgodonsk three days prior to the blast How should we interpret this The State Duma knows that the apartment block was destroyed on Monday and it has indeed been blown up on Thursday same week 112 113 Alexander Litvinenko believed that someone had mixed up the order of the blasts the usual Kontora mess up According to Litvinenko Moscow 2 was on the 13th and Volgodonsk on 16th but they got it to the speaker the other way around Investigator Mikhail Trepashkin confirmed that the man who gave Seleznyov the note was indeed an FSB officer 114 Later Seleznyov told a Russian newspaper that he actually referred to an explosion organized by criminal gangs which took place in Volgodonsk and claimed no fatalities 115 116 In an August 2017 interview with Yuri Dud Vladimir Zhirinovsky was asked about the incident in State Duma and claimed there was a misunderstanding 117 118 Sealing of all materials by the Russian Duma Edit The Russian Duma rejected two motions for a parliamentary investigation of the Ryazan incident 119 120 In the Duma a pro Kremlin party Unity voted to seal all materials related to the Ryazan incident for the next 75 years and forbade an investigation into what happened 79 Claims and denials of responsibility for the blasts Edit On 9 September an anonymous person speaking with a Caucasian accent phoned the Interfax news agency saying that the blasts in Moscow and Buynaksk were our response to the bombings of civilians in the villages in Chechnya and Dagestan 34 121 On 13 September 1999 Novaya Gazeta published a report by retired army major Vyacheslav Izmailov which said that the editorial board of Novaya gazeta had received information about the planned terrorist attacks from its sources in Chechnya 122 123 In a follow up article published on 20 September 1999 Izmailov revealed that Novaya Gazeta had received the information on 8 September twelve hours before the bombing on Guryanova street in Moscow and immediately relayed it to the Chief Directorate Combating Organized Crime GUBOP of the Ministry of Internal Affairs 124 123 The article has also identified the source as Alexander Kapanadze a non commissioned officer in the Russian Army who was taken captive by Chechens in 1995 123 According to Izmailov as many as 10 terrorist attacks have been planned 124 64 In a documentary by Alexey Pivovarov editor in chief of Novaya Gazeta Dmitry Muratov commented that Kapanadze has disappeared soon after he had met with GUBOP none of his whereabouts are known 125 On 15 September an unidentified man again speaking with a Caucasian accent called the ITAR TASS news agency claiming to represent a group called the Liberation Army of Dagestan He said that the explosions in Buynaksk and Moscow were carried out by his organisation 34 According to him the attacks were a retaliation to the deaths of Muslim women and children during Russian air raids in Dagestan We will answer death with death the caller said 126 Russian officials from both the Interior Ministry and FSB at the time expressed scepticism over the claims and said there is no such organization 127 128 On 15 September 1999 a Dagestani official also denied the existence of a Dagestan Liberation Army 129 In an interview published in Lidove Noviny on September 9 Shamil Basayev denied responsibility for the bombings and said that it had been the work of Dagestanis According to Basayev the bombings were a retribution for the military operation of the Russian Army against three small villages in Dagestan 130 131 127 In subsequent interviews Basayev said he didn t know who perpetrated the bombings 132 127 In a 12 September interview with Associated Press Ibn al Khattab said that From now on they will get our bombs everywhere Let Russia await our explosions blasting through their cities I swear we will do it 133 134 However in a subsequent interview on 14 September to the Interfax agency in Grozny Khattab denied responsibility for the bombings 134 135 Chechen Foreign Ministry issued an official statement on 14 September condemning Moscow blasts and affirming that Ichkeria stands firmly against terrorism in any manifestation 135 Domestic investigations EditCriminal investigation and court ruling Edit In 2000 investigation of the Buynaksk attack was complete and seven people were convicted of the bombing 136 137 138 Russia s pre trial investigation of the Moscow and Volgodonsk bombings was finished in 2002 According to the Russian State Prosecutor office 103 139 all apartment bombings were executed under command of ethnic Karachay Achemez Gochiyayev and planned by Ibn al Khattab and Abu Omar al Saif Arab militants fighting in Chechnya on the side of Chechen insurgents 140 141 Al Khattab and al Saif were killed during the Second Chechen War According to investigators the explosives were prepared at a fertiliser factory in Urus Martan Chechnya by mixing aluminium powder nitre and sugar in a concrete mixer 142 or by also putting there RDX and TNT 103 From there they were sent to a food storage facility in Kislovodsk which was managed by an uncle of one of the terrorists Yusuf Krymshakhalov Another conspirator Ruslan Magayayev leased a KamAZ truck in which the sacks were stored for two months After everything was planned the participants were organised into several groups which then transported the explosives to different cities According to investigators the explosion in Moscow mall on 31 August was committed by another man Magomed Zagir Garzhikaev on the orders from Shamil Basayev according to the FSB 143 Court hearings on the Moscow and Volgodonsk attacks were held behind closed doors and were completed in 2004 The process has produced 90 volumes of proceedings 5 of which were classified 136 144 Court rulings Edit A photo of Al Hattab second from left and Gochiyayev second from right The photo was allegedly fabricated by the FSB to prove the guilt by Gochiyaev 145 According to the court ruling Al Khattab paid Gochiyayev 500 000 to carry out the attacks at Guryanova Street Kashirskoye Highway and Borisovskiye Prudy and then helped to hide Gochiyayev and his accomplices in Chechnya 146 58 In early September 1999 Magayayev Krymshamkhalov Batchayev and Dekkushev reloaded the cargo into a Mercedes Benz 2236 147 trailer and delivered it to Moscow En route they were protected from possible complications by an accomplice Khakim Abayev 147 who accompanied the trailer in another car In Moscow they were met by Achemez Gochiyayev who registered in Hotel Altai under the fake name Laipanov and Denis Saitakov The explosives were left in a warehouse in Ulitsa Krasnodonskaya which was leased by pseudo Laipanov Gochiyayev The next day the explosives were delivered in ZIL 5301 ru vans to three addresses Ulitsa Guryanova Kashirskoye Shosse and Ulitsa Borisovskiye Prudy where pseudo Laipanov leased cellars 147 Gochiyayev supervised the placement of the bombs in the rented cellars Next followed the explosions at the former two addresses The explosion at 16 Borisovskiye Prudy was prevented 146 148 149 150 According to the court 4 September Buinaksk bombing was ordered by Al Khattab 136 138 146 Reportedly since the perpetrators have managed to explode only one truck bomb instead of the two Khattab called it a botched job and paid 300 000 for it which was a part of the sum he originally promised 151 One of the suspects confessed having loaded the trucks with sacks in Buynaksk but claimed he did not know what they were intended for 152 The explosion in the mall on Manezhnaya Square was the subject of a separate court process held in Moscow in 2009 The court accused Khalid Khuguyev Russian Halid Huguev and Magumadzir Gadzhikayev Russian Magumadzair Gadzhiakaev of organisation and execution of the 1999 explosions in the Manezhnaya Square mall and in hotel Intourist and sentenced them to 25 years and 15 years of imprisonment correspondingly 153 Sentences Edit Adam Dekkushev ru and Yusuf Krymshakhalov ru have both been sentenced to life terms in a special regime colony 154 Both defendants have pleaded guilty only to some of the charges For instance Dekkushev acknowledged that he knew the explosives he transported were to be used for an act of terror Dekkushev also confirmed Gochiyaev s role in the attacks 155 Dekkushev was extradited to Russia on 14 April 2002 to stand trial Krymshakhalov was apprehended and extradicted to Moscow 146 154 Achemez Gochiyaev the head of the group that carried out the attacks and allegedly the main organiser remains a fugitive and is under an international search warrant 154 In a statement released in January 2004 the FSB said until we arrest Gochiyayev the case of the apartment block bombings of 1999 will not be closed 156 157 In an interview with Dmitry Gordon published on May 18 2020 former GRU officer Igor Strelkov said that during the initial stage of the Second Chechen war he was a part of a group which attempted to capture Achemez Gochiyaev 158 Suspects and accused Edit In September 1999 hundreds of Chechen nationals out of the more than 100 000 permanently living in Moscow were briefly detained and interrogated in Moscow as a wave of anti Chechen sentiments swept the city 159 However no Chechens were tried for the Buinaksk Moscow or Volgodonsk attacks Rather it were Dagestani Wahhabis in the case of the Buinaksk bombing and Karachay Wahhabis in the case of Moscow and Volgodonsk attacks 136 According to the official investigation the following people either delivered explosives stored them or harboured other suspects Moscow bombings Edit Ibn al Khattab a Saudi born Mujahid who was poisoned by the FSB in 2002 Achemez Gochiyayev an ethnic Karachai 160 has not been arrested he is still at large 161 Denis Saitakov an ethnic Tatar from Uzbekistan 162 killed in Georgia in 1999 2000 103 163 Khakim Abayev an ethnic Karachai 160 killed by FSB special forces in May 2004 in Ingushetia 164 Ravil Akhmyarov a Russian citizen 165 Surname indicates an ethnic Tatar killed in Chechnya in 1999 2000 103 Yusuf Krymshamkhalov an ethnic Karachai and resident of Kislovodsk 166 167 arrested in Georgia in December 2002 extradited to Russia and sentenced to life imprisonment in January 2004 after a two month secret trial held without a jury 168 169 Stanislav Lyubichev a traffic police inspector resident of Kislovodsk Stavropol Krai 166 who helped the truck with explosives pass the checkpoint after getting a sack of sugar as a bribe sentenced to four years in May 2003 170 Volgodonsk bombing Edit Timur Batchayev an ethnic Karachai 171 killed in Georgia in the clash with police during which Krymshakhalov was arrested 103 Zaur Batchayev an ethnic Karachai 172 killed in Chechnya in 1999 2000 103 Adam Dekkushev an ethnic Karachai 173 arrested in Georgia threw a grenade at police during the arrest extradited to Russia and sentenced to life imprisonment in January 2004 after a two month secret trial held without a jury 174 102 Buinaksk bombing Edit Isa Zainutdinov an ethnic Avar 171 and native of Dagestan 173 sentenced to life imprisonment in March 2001 175 Alisultan Salikhov an ethnic Avar 171 and native of Dagestan 173 sentenced to life imprisonment in March 2001 175 Magomed Salikhov an ethnic Avar 171 and native of Dagestan 176 arrested in Azerbaijan in November 2004 extradited to Russia found not guilty on the charge of terrorism by the jury on 24 January 2006 found guilty of participating in an armed force and illegal crossing of the national border 177 he was retried again on the same charges on 13 November 2006 and again found not guilty this time on all charges including the ones he was found guilty of in the first trial 178 According to Kommersant Salikhov admitted that he made a delivery of paint to Dagestan for Ibn al Khattab although he was not sure what was really delivered 179 Ziyavudin Ziyavudinov a native of Dagestan 180 arrested in Kazakhstan extradited to Russia sentenced to 24 years in April 2002 181 Abdulkadyr Abdulkadyrov an ethnic Avar 171 and native of Dagestan sentenced to 9 years in March 2001 175 Magomed Magomedov Sentenced to 9 years in March 2001 175 Zainutdin Zainutdinov an ethnic Avar 171 and native of Dagestan sentenced to 3 years in March 2001 and immediately released under amnesty 175 Makhach Abdulsamedov a native of Dagestan sentenced to 3 years in March 2001 and immediately released under amnesty 175 Attempts at an independent investigation Edit The Russian Duma rejected two motions for a parliamentary investigation of the Ryazan incident 119 120 An independent public commission to investigate the bombings was chaired by Duma deputy Sergei Kovalyov 182 The commission started its work in February 2002 On 5 March Sergei Yushenkov and Duma member Yuli Rybakov flew to London where they met Alexander Litvinenko and Mikhail Trepashkin After this meeting Trepashkin began working with the commission 15 However the public commission was rendered ineffective because of government refusal to respond to its inquiries 183 184 185 Two key members of the Commission Sergei Yushenkov and Yuri Shchekochikhin both Duma members have died in apparent assassinations in April 2003 and July 2003 respectively 186 187 Another member of the commission Otto Lacis was assaulted in November 2003 188 and two years later on 3 November 2005 he died in a hospital after a car accident 189 The commission asked lawyer Mikhail Trepashkin to investigate the case Trepashkin said he found that the basement of one of the bombed buildings was rented by FSB officer Vladimir Romanovich and that the latter was witnessed by several people Trepashkin also investigated a letter attributed to Achemez Gochiyayev and found that the alleged assistant of Gochiyayev who arranged the delivery of sacks might have been Kapstroi 2000 vice president Alexander Karmishin a resident of Vyazma 190 Trepashkin was unable to bring the alleged evidence to the court because he was arrested in October 2003 on charges of illegal arms possession and imprisoned in Nizhny Tagil just a few days before he was to make his findings public 191 He was sentenced by a Moscow military closed court to four years imprisonment on a charge of revealing state secrets 192 Amnesty International issued a statement that there are serious grounds to believe that Mikhail Trepashkin was arrested and convicted under falsified criminal charges which may be politically motivated in order to prevent him continuing his investigative and legal work related to the 1999 apartment bombings in Moscow and other cities 193 In a letter to Olga Konskaya Trepashkin wrote that some time before the bombings Moscow s Regional Directorate against Organized Crimes RUOP GUVD arrested several people for selling the explosive RDX Following that Nikolai Patrushev s Directorate of FSB officers came to the GUVD headquarters captured evidence and ordered the investigators fired Trepashkin wrote that he learned about the story at a meeting with several RUOP officers in the year 2000 They claimed that their colleagues could present eyewitness accounts in a court They offered a video tape with evidence against the RDX dealers Mr Trepashkin did not publicise the meeting fearing for lives of the witnesses and their families 194 195 According to Trepashkin his supervisors and the people from the FSB promised not to arrest him if he left the Kovalev commission and started working together with the FSB against Alexander Litvinenko 196 On 24 March 2000 two days before the presidential elections NTV Russia featured the Ryazan events of Fall 1999 in the talk show Independent Investigation The talk with the residents of the Ryazan apartment building along with FSB public relations director Alexander Zdanovich and Ryazan branch head Alexander Sergeyev was filmed few days earlier On 26 March Boris Nemtsov voiced his concern over the possible shut down of NTV for airing the talk 197 Seven months later NTV general manager Igor Malashenko ru said at the JFK School of Government that Information Minister Mikhail Lesin warned him on several occasions Malashenko s recollection of Lesin s warning was that by airing the talk show NTV crossed the line and that the NTV managers were outlaws in the eyes of the Kremlin 198 According to Alexander Goldfarb Mr Malashenko told him that Valentin Yumashev brought a warning from the Kremlin one day before airing the show promising in no uncertain terms that the NTV managers should consider themselves finished if they went ahead with the broadcast 199 Artyom Borovik was among the people who investigated the bombings 200 He received numerous death threats and died in a suspicious plane crash in March 2000 201 that was regarded by Felshtinsky and Pribylovsky as a probable assassination 47 Journalist Anna Politkovskaya and former security service member Alexander Litvinenko who investigated the bombings were killed in 2006 202 Surviving victims of the Guryanova street bombing asked President Dmitry Medvedev to resume the official investigation in 2008 203 but it was not resumed In a 2017 discussion at the RFE RL Sergei Kovalyov said I think that the Chechen trace was skilfully fabricated No one from the people who organized the bombings was found and no one actually was looking for them 204 He then was asked by Vladimir Kara Murza if he believes that several key members of his commission and even Boris Berezovskiy and Boris Nemtsov who knew quite a few things about the bombings were killed to prevent the independent investigation Kovalev responded I cannot state with full confidence that the explosions were organized by the authorities Although it s clear that the explosions were useful for them useful for future President Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin because he had just promised to waste in the outhouse as he said everyone who had any relation to terrorism It was politically beneficial for him to scare people with terrorism That is not proven But what can be stated with full confidence is this the investigation of both the Moscow explosions and the so called exercises in Ryazan is trumped up There can be various possibilities It seems to me that Ryazan should have been the next explosion but I cannot prove that Russian government involvement theory EditAccording to David Satter Yuri Felshtinsky Alexander Litvinenko Vladimir Pribylovsky and Boris Kagarlitsky the bombings were a successful false flag operation coordinated by the Russian state security services to win public support for a new full scale war in Chechnya and to bring Putin to power 205 16 17 18 67 206 19 207 208 Some of them described the bombings as typical active measures practised by the KGB in the past The war in Chechnya boosted Prime Minister and former FSB Director Vladimir Putin s popularity and brought the pro war Unity Party to the State Duma and Putin to the presidency within a few months In February 2000 the US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright stated they have not seen any evidence that ties the bombings to Chechnya 209 non primary source needed During the testimony of David Satter in the United States House of Representatives he stated that With Yeltsin and his family facing possible criminal prosecution however a plan was put into motion to put in place a successor who would guarantee that Yeltsin and his family would be safe from prosecution and the criminal division of property in the country would not be subject to reexamination For Operation Successor to succeed however it was necessary to have a massive provocation In my view this provocation was the bombing in September 1999 of the apartment building bombings in Moscow Buinaksk and Volgodonsk In the aftermath of these attacks which claimed 300 lives a new war was launched against Chechnya Putin the newly appointed prime minister who was put in charge of that war achieved overnight popularity Yeltsin resigned early Putin was elected president and his first act was to guarantee Yeltsin immunity from prosecution 210 According to a reconstruction of the events by Felshtinsky and Pribylovsky 211 The bombings in Buynaksk were carried out by a team of twelve GRU officers who were sent to Dagestan and supervised by the head of GRU s 14th Directorate General Nikolai Kostechko That version was partly based on a testimony by Aleksey Galkin The bombing in Buynaksk was conducted by the GRU to avoid an interagency conflict between the FSB and the Ministry of Defense In Moscow Volgodonsk and Ryazan the attacks were organized by the FSB through a chain of command that included director of the counter terrorism department General German Ugryumov FSB operatives Maxim Lazovsky Vladimir Romanovich Ramazan Dyshekov and others Achemez Gochiyayev Tatyana Korolyeva and Alexander Karmishin rented warehouses that received shipments of hexogen disguised as sugar and did not know that the explosives were delivered Adam Dekkushev Krymshamkhalov and Timur Batchayev were recruited by FSB agents who presented themselves as Chechen separatists to deliver explosives to Volgodonsk and Moscow Names and the fate of FSB agents who planted the bomb in the city of Ryazan remain unknown Support Edit Historians journalists and politicians Edit The view about the bombings being organized and perpetrated by Russian state security services was originally put forward by journalist David Satter and historians Yuri Felshtinsky and Vladimir Pribylovsky in co authorship with Alexander Litvinenko It was later supported by a number of historians Amy Knight a historian of the KGB wrote that it was abundantly clear that the FSB was responsible for carrying out the attacks and that Vladimir Putin s guilt seems clear since it was inconceivable that the FSB would have done so without the sanction of Putin the agency s former director and by then Prime Minister of Russia 14 212 In her book Putin s Kleptocracy historian Karen Dawisha summarized evidence related to the bombings and concluded that to blow up your own innocent and sleeping people in your capital city is an action almost unthinkable Yet the evidence that the FSB was at least involved in planting a bomb in Ryazan is incontrovertible 213 According to Timothy Snyder it seemed possible that the perpetrators of the apartment bombings were FSB officers 214 David Satter considered the bombings as a political provocation by the Russian secret services that was similar to the burning of the Reichstag 215 This view has been also supported by investigative journalists In 2008 British journalist Edward Lucas concluded in his book The New Cold War Putin s Russia and the Threat to the West that The weight of evidence so far supports the grimmest interpretation that the attacks were a ruthlessly planned stunt to create a climate of panic and fear in which Putin would quickly become the country s indisputable leader as indeed he did 79 In the September 2009 issue of GQ veteran war correspondent Scott Anderson wrote about on Putin s role in the Russian apartment bombings based in part on his interviews with Mikhail Trepashkin 216 The journal owner Conde Nast then took extreme measures which to prevent an article by Anderson from appearing in the Russian media both physically and in translation 217 Former Russian State Security Council chief Alexandr Lebed in his 29 September 1999 interview with Le Figaro said he was almost convinced that the government organised the terrorist acts 218 219 220 Andrei Illarionov a former key economic adviser to the Russian president said that FSB involvement is not a theory it is a fact There is no other element that could have organized the bombings except for the FSB 221 Later Lebed s public relations staff claimed that he was quoted out of the context 218 Russian military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer noted that The FSB accused Khattab and Gochiyaev but oddly they did not point the finger at Chechen president Aslan Maskhadov s regime which is what the war was launched against 222 A number of US politicians commented that they consider credible the allegations about Russian state security services as the actual organizers of the bombings In 2003 U S senator John McCain said that It was during Mr Putin s tenure as Prime Minister in 1999 that he launched the Second Chechen War following the Moscow apartment bombings There remain credible allegations that Russia s FSB had a hand in carrying out these attacks Mr Putin ascended to the presidency in 2000 by pointing a finger at the Chechens for committing these crimes launching a new military campaign in Chechnya and riding a frenzy of public anger into office 207 On 11 January 2017 senator Marco Rubio raised the issue of the 1999 bombings during the confirmation hearings for Rex Tillerson 223 According to senator Rubio there s an incredible body of reporting open source and other that this was all all those bombings were part of a black flag operation on the part of the FSB 101 On 10 January 2018 senator Ben Cardin of the United States Senate Foreign Relations Committee released a report entitled Putin s Asymmetric Assault on Democracy in Russia and Europe Implications for U S National Security 101 According to the report no credible evidence has been presented by the Russian authorities linking Chechen terrorists or anyone else to the Moscow bombings According to Satter all four bombings that occurred had a similar signature which indicated that the explosives had been carefully prepared a mark of skilled specialists There is also no explanation as to how the terrorists were able to obtain tons of hexogen explosive and transport it to various locations in Russia hexogen is produced in one plant in Perm Oblast for which the central FSB is responsible for the security The culprits would also have needed to organise nine explosions the four that occurred and the five attempted bombings reported by the authorities in different cities in a two week period Satter s estimate for the time required for target plan development site visits explosives preparation renting space at the sites and transporting explosives to the sites was four to four and a half months 104 In a speech to the Oxford Union on 12th March 2022 former MI6 officer Christopher Steele voiced support for the idea that the bombings were likely a false flag operation conducted by Russian security services in order to justify the war in Chechnya 224 Books and films Edit The theory of Russian government involvement has been supported in a number of books and movies on the subject David Satter a senior fellow of the Hudson Institute authored two books Darkness at Dawn The Rise of the Russian Criminal State and The Less You Know The Better You Sleep Russia s Road to Terror and Dictatorship under Yeltsin and Putin published by Yale University Press in 2003 and 2016 where he scrutinized the events and came to the conclusion that the bombings were organized by Russian state security services Satter 2003 84 In 2002 former FSB officer Alexander Litvinenko and historian Yuri Felshtinsky published a book Blowing up Russia Terror from within Felshtinsky amp Litvinenko 2007 According to authors the bombings and other terrorist acts have been committed by Russian security services to justify the Second Chechen War and to bring Vladimir Putin to power 225 In another book Lubyanka Criminal Group Litvinenko and Alexander Goldfarb described the transformation of the FSB into a criminal and terrorist organization including conducting the bombings Litvinenko 2002 Former GRU analyst and historian Viktor Suvorov said that the book describes a leading criminal group that provides protection for all other organized crime in the country and which continues the criminal war against their own people like their predecessors NKVD and KGB He added The book proves Lubyanka the KGB headquarters was taken over by enemies of the people If Putin s team can not disprove the facts provided by Litvinenko Putin must shoot himself Patrushev and all other leadership of Lubyanka Criminal Group must follow his example 226 Alexander Goldfarb and Marina Litvinenko published a book Death of a Dissident They asserted that the murder of Mr Litvinenko was the most compelling proof of the FSB involvement theory According to the book the murder of Litvinenko gave credence to all his previous theories delivering justice for the tenants of the bombed apartment blocks the Moscow theater goers Sergei Yushenkov Yuri Shchekochikhin and Anna Politkovskaya and the half exterminated nation of Chechnya exposing their killers for the whole world to see 227 A PBS Frontline documentary on Vladimir Putin also mentioned the theory and FSB involvement citing the quick removal of rubble and bodies from the bombing scenes before any investigation could take place the discovery of the Ryazan bomb the deaths of several people who had attempted to investigate the bombings as well as the defused Ryazan bomb being made of Russian military explosives and detonators 228 229 A documentary film Assassination of Russia was made in 2000 by two French producers who had previously worked on NTV s Sugar of Ryazan program 230 231 A documentary Nedoverie Disbelief about the bombing controversy made by Russian director Andrei Nekrasov was premiered at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival The film chronicles the story of Tatyana and Alyona Morozova the two Russian American sisters who had lost their mother in the attack and decided to find out who did it 232 233 234 His next film on the subject was Rebellion the Litvinenko Case The film doesn t intend to investigate the Litvinenko murder rather than that its goal is to put the case into a wider context of the events unfolding in post Soviet Russia 235 Yuli Dubov author of The Big Slice wrote a novel The Lesser Evil based on the bombings The main characters of the story are Platon Boris Berezovsky and Larry Badri Patarkatsishvili They struggle against an evil KGB officer Old man apparently inspired by the legendary Philipp Bobkov who brings another KGB officer Fedor Fedorovich Vladimir Putin to power by staging a series of apartment bombings 236 Criticism Edit In March 2000 Putin dismissed the allegations of FSB involvement in the bombings as delirious nonsense There are no people in the Russian secret services who would be capable of such crime against their own people The very allegation is immoral he said 237 An FSB spokesman said that Litvinenko s evidence cannot be taken seriously by those who are investigating the bombings 222 According to Strobe Talbott who was a United States Deputy Secretary of State during the events there was no evidence to support the conspiracy theory although Russian public opinion did indeed solidify behind Putin in his determination to carry out a swift decisive counteroffensive 22 According to Russian investigative journalist Andrei Soldatov From the start it seemed that the Kremlin was determined to suppress all discussion When Alexander Podrabinek a Russian human rights activist tried to import copies of Litvinenko s and Felshtinsky s Blowing up Russia in 2003 they were confiscated by the FSB Trepashkin himself acting as a lawyer for two relatives of the victims of the blast was unable to obtain information he requested and was entitled to see by law However Soldatov believed that the obstruction might reflect paranoia rather than guilt on the part of the authorities Consequently Soldatov argued that paranoia has produced the very conspiracy theories that the Russian Government intended to eradicate 238 In their book The New Nobility Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan believe that the Ryazan incident had actually been a training exercise 23 According to the authors such exercises are typical for Vympel a unit of the FSB whose mission is to verify the efficacy of counterterrorism measures at sites such as nuclear plants 23 In authors opinion the book Blowing Up Russia by Felshtinsky and Litvinenko contained no new evidence against the FSB and claims by Trepashkin were highly dubious 239 Soldatov and Borogan noted that the main point of allegations against the FSB was that Achemez Gochiyaev was an innocent businessman who was made a scapegoat by the FSB and falsely accused of perpetrating the bombings However according to Soldatov and Borogan Gochiyaev was a leader of a local Islamist group since the mid 1990s and Dekkushev and Krymshamkhalov were members of the same group called Muslim Society No 3 According to Russian state security services the group was founded in 1995 counted more than 500 members by 2001 and was responsible for a series of terrorist attacks in the 2000s Soldatov and Borogan have also noted a partial admission of guilt by Dekkushev and Krymshamkhalov during a trial in 2003 240 According to Robert Bruce Ware the simplest explanation for the apartment block blasts is that they were perpetrated by Islamist extremists from North Caucasus who sought retribution for the attacks of the Federal forces against the Islamist enclave in the central Dagestan known as the Islamic Djamaat 24 Ware points out that that would explain the timing of the attacks and why there were no attacks after the date on which the insurgents were driven from Dagestan It would also explain why no Chechen claimed responsibility Also it would explain Basayev s reference to responsibility of Dagestanis and it would be consistent with the initial vow of Khattab to set off the bombs blasting through Russian cities 24 Ware also criticizes an argument that David Satter and Rajan Menon use to support the view of Russian security services responsibility for the bombings that the apartment block explosions involved hexogen which is a highly controlled substance in Russia and is extraordinarily difficult to obtain According to Ware that s not the case as sizable amounts of hexogen as well as other weaponry were readily available in Dagestan As a proof Ware cites the police reports of the program for voluntary surrender of arms in Dagestan which ran for a couple of months in 2003 and revealed large quantities of hexogen and ammonite 24 Max Abrahms a researcher who is critical of the efficacy of terrorism in general argued that the bombings were detrimental for the self determination of Chechnya He noted that the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria has achieved a de facto independence from Russia after the Khasavyurt Accord with two thirds of Russian citizens favoring the separation of the breakaway republic However the public opinion in Russia has changed dramatically after the bombings Most Russians started baying for blood and strongly supporting the war with Chechnya that became inevitable and led to the loss of the independence as a result of the bombings According to Abrahms this supports his theory that attacks by terrorist organizations have been always counterproductive for the perpetrators and therefore gave rise to conspiracy theories about alternative perpetrators who actually benefited from the events 241 Political scientist Ronald R Pope in his review of David Satter s book Darkness at Dawn cited Kirill Pankratov s criticism published as a contribution to Johnson s Russia List Regarding the apartment bombings Pankratov argued that the Russian authorities did not need an additional justification to wage a war against Chechnya in view of high profile kidnappings and the invasion of Dagestan One of his other arguments was that the theory of FSB responsibility for the bombings implied that it had been able to keep the lid on the operation much more effectively than the FSB had been able to execute it 242 25 Political scientist Brian Taylor believes that there s too little evidence to decide which version of the events is correct as the available evidence is fragmentary and controversial 26 Taylor identifies several reasons to doubt the conspiracy version First while the bombings did propel Putin to power by itself it s not the evidence that this was the goal of the attacks Second there was a casus belli even without the bombings namely the invasion of Dagestan and multiple kidnappings in the region in the preceding years Third if the goal of the bombings was to justify a new war one or two bombings in Moscow would be more than adequate Any subsequent bombings would be potentially dangerous because they would increase the risk to expose the conspiracy Fourth he believes that a plot involving multiple players and a large number of FSB operatives could not be kept secret 26 According to Taylor it s plausible that FSB simulated an attack in Ryazan in order to claim credit for uncovering it however the plot was foiled by vigilant local denizens and law enforcement personnel The training exercise justification was improvised after the plot failed 26 Yuri Luzhkov a mayor of Moscow at the time of the bombings believed that the bombings in Moscow were facilitated by the new piece of legislation 243 that established Freedom of movement within the country which was restricted prior to 1993 According to Luzhkov the law made it possible for Chechen terrorists to bring weapons to Moscow and store them there as well as purchase auto vehicles and provide housing for tens of bandits who had arrived in Moscow According to Luzhkov for three months after having arrived in Moscow a terrorist could live wherever he wanted and stay with anyone without notifying the police which allowed the criminals to prepare the bombings 244 Sealing information by the US government EditOn 14 July 2016 David Satter filed Freedom of Information Act FOIA requests with the State Department the CIA and the FBI inquiring about documents pertaining to the apartment bombings the Ryazan incident and persons who tried to investigate the bombings and were killed 223 The agencies acknowledged receipt of the requests but Satter received no other response within the statutory time limit On 29 August 2016 Satter filed suit against the Department of Justice and other agencies involved 245 However CIA refused even to acknowledge the existence of any relevant records because doing so would reveal very specific aspects of the Agency s intelligence interest or lack thereof in the Russian bombings 223 The State Department responded with a redacted copy of a cable from the U S embassy in Moscow According to the cable on 24 March 2000 a former member of Russian intelligence services told a U S diplomat that the real story about the Ryazan incident could never be known because it would destroy the country The informant said the FSB had a specially trained team of men whose mission was to carry out this type of urban warfare 101 The informant has also said that Viktor Cherkesov the FSB s first deputy director and an interrogator of Soviet dissidents was exactly the right person to order and carry out such actions 223 David Satter made a renewed FOIA request and on 22 March 2017 State Department responded that documents concerning the U S assessment of the bombings would remain secret A draft Vaughn index a document used by agencies to justify withholdings in FOIA cases said that the release of that information had the potential to inject friction into or cause serious damage to relationships with the Russian Government that were vital to U S national security 246 On 16 March 2018 the case Satter v Department of Justice was closed 247 Impact on survivors EditMultiple survivors of the bombings have developed disabilities with many of them diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder In 2006 Irina Khalai a survivor of the Volgodonsk bombing founded the NGO Volga Don which promotes legislation for the legal recognition of victims of terrorist attacks 248 Chronology of events Edit5 August 1999 Shamil Basayev enters western Dagestan from Chechnya starting the War of Dagestan 9 August 1999 Stepashin is dismissed and Putin becomes prime minister 22 August 1999 The forces of Shamil Basayev withdraw back into Chechnya 25 August 1999 Russian jets make bombing runs against 16 sites in Chechnya 249 31 August 1999 Bombing in Moscow Manezhnaya Square 29 people are injured 4 September 1999 Bombing in Buynaksk 64 people killed 133 are injured 9 September 1999 Bombing in Moscow Pechatniki 94 people are killed 249 are injured 13 September 1999 Bombing in Moscow Kashirskoye highway 118 are killed 13 September 1999 A bomb is defused and a warehouse containing several tons of explosives and six timing devices is found in Moscow 13 September 1999 Russian Duma speaker Gennadiy Seleznyov makes an announcement about the bombing of an apartment building in the city of Volgodonsk that will take place three days later 16 September 1999 Bombing in Volgodonsk 18 are killed 288 injured 23 September 1999 An apartment bomb is found in the city of Ryazan Vladimir Rushailo announces that police prevented a terrorist act Vladimir Putin praises the vigilance of the citizens and calls for the air bombing of Grozny 23 24 September 1999 According to David Satter FSB agents who planted the bomb in Ryazan are arrested by local police 84 24 September 1999 Nikolai Patrushev declares that the incident was a training exercise and frees the FSB agents 24 September 1999 Second Chechen War beginsSee also EditList of people allegedly involved in Russian apartment bombings List of deaths related to Russian apartment bombingsReferences Edit Yeltsin 2000 pp 335 338 a b De La Pedraja 2018 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from the original on 9 August 2020 Retrieved 25 April 2020 Russia acknowledges bombing raids in Chechnya CNN 26 August 1999 Archived from the original on 19 September 2000 Bibliography EditStavitsky Vasily 2000 Krovavyj terror in Russian TsOS FSB Rossii Olma Press ISBN 978 5224014125 Yeltsin Boris 2000 Midnight Diaries PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1 58648 011 0 Klebnikov Paul 2000 Godfather of the Kremlin Boris Berezovsky and the looting of Russia Harcourt ISBN 978 0 15 100621 2 Reddaway Peter Glinski Dmitri 2001 The Tragedy of Russia s Reforms Market Bolshevism Against Democracy United States Institute of Peace Press ISBN 1 929223 06 4 Talbott Strobe 2002 The Russia Hand A Memoir of Presidential Diplomacy Random House ISBN 978 0 375 50714 4 Litvinenko Alexander 2002 LPG Lubianskaia Prestupnaia Gruppirovka Ofitser FSB Daet Pokazaniia in Russian Grani p 255 ISBN 978 0 9723878 0 4 Hoffman David 2002 The Oligarchs Wealth amp Power in the New Russia PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1 58648 001 1 Satter David 2003 Darkness at Dawn The Rise of the Russian Criminal State Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09892 8 Evangelista Matthew 2004 The Chechen Wars Will Russia Go the Way of the Soviet Union Brookings Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8157 2497 1 Murphy Paul 2004 The Wolves of Islam Russia and the Faces of Chechen Terror Potomac Books Inc ISBN 978 1 57488 830 0 Jack Andrew 2005 Inside Putin s Russia Can There Be Reform Without Democracy Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518909 4 Sakwa Richard 2005 Chechnya From Past to Future Anthem Press ISBN 978 1 84331 164 5 Goldfarb Alexander Litvinenko Marina 2007 Death of a Dissident Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 5165 2 Felshtinsky Yuri Litvinenko Alexander 2007 Blowing up Russia Terror from within Translated from Russian by Geoffrey Andrews and Co 2nd ed Gibson Square Books ISBN 978 1 903933 95 4 Felshtinsky Yuri Pribylovsky Vladimir 20 April 2008 The Age of Assassins The Rise and Rise of Vladimir Putin London Gibson Square Books ISBN 978 1 906142 07 0 retrieved 23 May 2010 Sakwa Richard 2008 Putin Russia s choice 2nd ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 40765 6Ware Robert Bruce Kisriev Enver 2009 Dagestan Russian Hegemony and Islamic Resistance in the North Caucasus Routledge ISBN 978 0765620286Akhmadov Ilyas Lanskoy Miriam Brzezinski Zbigniew 2010 The Chechen Struggle Independence Won and Lost Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 10534 8 Soldatov Andrei Borogan Irina 2010 The New Nobility The Restoration of Russia s Security State and the Enduring Legacy of the KGB PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1 58648 802 4 Dunlop John 2012 The Moscow Bombings of September 1999 Examinations of Russian Terrorist Attacks at the Onset of Vladimir Putin s Rule Stuttgart Ibidem ISBN 978 3 8382 0388 1 Williams Brian Glyn 2015 Inferno in Chechnya The Russian Chechen Wars the Al Qaeda Myth and the Boston Marathon Bombings ForeEdge ISBN 978 1 61168 737 8 Pokalova Elena 2015 Chechnya s Terrorist Network The Evolution of Terrorism in Russia s North Caucasus Praeger ISBN 978 1 44083 154 6 Satter David 2016 The Less You Know the Better You Sleep Russia s Road to Terror and Dictatorship under Yeltsin and Putin Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 30021 142 9 De La Pedraja Rene 2018 The Russian Military Resurgence Post Soviet Decline and Rebuilding 1992 2018 McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 1 47666 991 5External links Edit Media related to 1999 Russian apartment bombings at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Russian apartment bombings amp oldid 1140935465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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