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“When it became clear that my father was no longer of this world, my mother was invited, through the agency of the elders, to remarry with a man from another village, whom she did not know. It did not matter. He became my new father, and the six children of their marriage my brothers and sisters,” said Vakha. “Likewise my aunt, who had also lost her husband, entered a new marriage with another man who already had inherited two other wives. They had five new children.”

And how many wives did Vakha have, I asked as delicately as possible.

“One,” he replied. “The time when it was necessary to procreate simply to rebuild the community is over—at least for the time being.”

The rest of Vakha’s story reflected those of tens of thousands of other Chechens, exiled and officially forgotten in Central Asia. A community identity based on pain was central to their being, its remembrance the one thing that held them back from oblivion through assimilation.

“You see that writing on the wall?” Vakha Khuzurev asked me, indicating the Latin-script inscription behind the Raised Hands monument. “It says ‘Never Forgetand Never Forgive’ None of us ever will.”

The rest of the weekend was dull, comparatively speaking. President Dudayev hosted a press conference and answered questions about his putative threat to explode a nuclear device in a Moscow subway if the Kremlin tried to impinge on Chechen independence in any way. The next day was the state funeral of Zviad Gamsakhurdia, with much wailing and gnashing of teeth and solemn vows of revenge by exiled Georgians against the KGB stooge Eduard Shevardnadze, the CIA flunky Boris Yeltsin, and the rest of the despicable, uncaring world, generally speaking for the Zviadists, life itself was a conspiracy.

Our host, Djohar Dudayev, had the final eulogy, extolling his friend and fellow president Zviad Gamsakhurdia as a “great son” of the Caucasus, whose example in life and exemplary death would stand as a model for all those seeking freedom from imperialism and the Russian yoke. Clumps of dirt were thrown on the coffin and my extraordinary introduction to the “rogue republic” in the North Caucasus was at an end.

“Djohar,” chuckled Stanley. “The world is going to be a lot less colorful place without the Chechens. I give it six months before the tanks roll.”

Stanley was off by three months.

In August 1994 there was a shootout between government security personnel and members of the well-armed Chechen “opposition.”

In September Dudayev’s forces retaliated and took out henchmen loyal to the “opposition” leader, Umar Avtorkhanov.

In October, a spate of trainjackings and other banditry attributed to the Chechens in the mainstream Russian media had the country up in arms.

Then, in November the “opposition” made a move on Grozny itself. Remarkably, the thugs were in possession of aircraft, which came roaring over the city, dropping bombs.

“‘Opposition?!’” cried Dudayev at a press conference on the eleventh floor of the presidential palace, as MIG-29 fighter-bombers screamed through the sky and strafed the city. “You want evidence of Russian involvement? Look out the window!”

The few journalists there, including my friend Lawrence Sheets, then of Reuters, tried their best to take notes while hiding under the furniture. Still, the Russians attempted to deny involvement—even when Dudayev’s men captured dozens of young men in Russian uniforms in the aftermath of a tank blitz gone bad.

Finally, on December 31st the Russian Minister of Defense, Pavel Grachev, came clean.

“An action has begun in Chechnya to restore constitutional order,” he blithely announced. “It should be completed within a matter of hours.”

War, the expected one, had finally broken out in my patch. But I was thousands of miles away, back in the United States, unable to get an assignment to join the fray.

It was doubly maddening because I was obliged to watch the battle for Grozny unfold in thirty-second news bites on American television, crunched in between diet pill and Dodge commercials, a flashed reference to conflict in a strange, distant, and ultimately unfathomable place. The only thing I could do was wear my papakh, acquired in the Grozny bazaar the year before, and hope that it attracted sufficient interest for rank strangers to stop and ask where the hat was from, and thus allow me the opportunity to rant and proselytize.

Then I got the phone call. A low-budget offer from a small television agency in Philadelphia known as Video News International, that wanted to contract me out to ABC’s Nightline to make a documentary on “the Chechen spirit.” It would be a solo trip behind the lines that required an illegal entry into Russia at war.

I was back in the saddle again.

3

MASTERPIECE OF CONFUSION

She emerged from the evening-fog-mottled ditch by the side of the road, a lone woman dressed in a nightgown, waving at us while walking out into the middle of the highway.

“Slow down,” I said from the back seat, tapping Isa on the shoulder. “That woman—”

“Don’t worry about her,” said Isa. “She’s without intelligence.”

“I beg your pardon?” I started to say—and just then the woman in the nightgown lurched toward our car, an insane grin stretched across her face from ear to ear.

“AaaiiIIIEE!” she screeched.

The driver swung the car to the left and into the far ditch, narrowly avoiding a collision with a stray cow before lurching back up to the right. We regained the road a moment later and turned on the headlights. They illuminated a nightmare landscape; a road that was lined by men and women, old and young, all dressed in rags, and shouting, cheering, and jeering. Behind them I could make out the shape of a long, official-looking two-story building. The front doors were open, as were the outside gates.

“Good God!” gasped Isa. “Someone has opened the cages at the insane asylum!”

There were lunatics literally all over the road.

“HeyyyyyooooUUU!” cackled another patient, lunging at our vehicle with one hand extended while fondling himself with the other. He was dressed in a greatcoat, but naked underneath. Other members of the audience seemed to be throwing things; possibly they were just waving.

“Drive! Drive!” barked Isa at our driver, cranking his head around to look out the back window as we roared away. I did the same—just in time to watch the next car, also running without lights behind us, narrowly avoid running over the wailing woman in the nightgown to the cheers (or jeers) of her peers gathered on the Shali-Grozny road.

That was only the most surreal of a series of encounters Isa and I had that first day in Chechnya at war in mid-February 1995. After crossing the Akchay River near Khazavyurt, that same morning we proceeded on foot across the mud and muck of early spring farmlands. Our destination was an oil derrick set on a small hill that defined the horizon for miles around. The derrick was idle, but a small force of Chechen volunteers had occupied several outlying buildings. Their self-assumed task was to defend the oil installation when the Russians attacked, as all were sure they would.

“I fight with the kinjal,” said the group leader, a man named Vakha, referring to the traditional Chechen close-combat weapon, a stubby, double-edged swordlike bayonet. “The reason for this is that I prefer slitting Russians throats to wasting ammunition.”