-Caveat Lector-

U.S. Rejects Chechen Separatist Chief Aslan Maskhadov is labeled
'damaged goods' after the taking of hostages at a Moscow theater by
rebels from the Caucasus region.

By Robyn Dixon and David Holley Times Staff Writers, Times Staff Writers

MOSCOW -- The leader of Chechnya's separatist movement, Aslan Maskhadov,
was repudiated and isolated Tuesday after a senior U.S. official called
him "damaged goods" with links to terrorism in the wake of last week's
seizure of a Moscow theater by bomb-toting Chechens.

America's tough rejection of the former Chechen president, whom
Washington had previously viewed as a potential negotiating partner with
the Russians, leaves the U.S. position on the separatist republic
broadly in line with that of Moscow.

While Washington still expresses concerns about abuses by Russian troops
in Chechnya, the U.S. official -- who spoke on condition he not be
identified -- stressed strong condemnation of Maskhadov and the
hostage-takers at the theater. He declared that the Chechen leader
should be excluded from any peace talks.

Maskhadov's spokesman, Ahmed Zakayev, has denied that Maskhadov was
involved in the attack and has denounced terrorism, but he has said he
could understand why the Chechens took their action. The theater
standoff ended Saturday when Russian forces stormed the building,
leaving about 50 of the attackers and more than 100 of the hostages dead.

Underscoring the harm the attackers did to the Chechens' cause
internationally, the U.S. official said Maskhadov had failed to
disassociate himself from terrorism. Withdrawal of Russian forces from
Chechnya was the key demand of the hostage-takers.

Chechens won a degree of autonomy for their republic in the Caucasus
region after defeating Russian troops in a 1994-96 war. Russian forces
marched back into the republic in 1999 and have battled guerrillas there since.

Adding to a sense of crisis in Moscow, a rebel missile brought down a
Russian military helicopter in Chechnya on Tuesday, killing four
soldiers, authorities said. Defense and security officials met with
President Vladimir V. Putin, then pledged even tougher measures against
Chechen separatists.

Putin's stance appeared to be paying off in terms of popular support. A
poll by the All-Russia Public Opinion Center released Tuesday showed
that 85% of respondents approved of Putin's handling of the theater
standoff. Russian health authorities have said that in addition to
nearly all the hostage-takers, 118 people died in the incident, all but
two from a gas used to knock out most of those in the theater before
Russian forces stormed it.

Washington has long labeled the Chechen conflict as an internal Russian
problem and criticized Russian methods there, but Tuesday's comments
confirm a marked shift in policy.

By early September, the U.S. ambassador to Moscow, Alexander Vershbow,
was saying publicly that America viewed Maskhadov with "increasing
skepticism" but that he should still be included in any peace talks.

Speaking Tuesday about the hostage ordeal, Vershbow said that some lives
probably could have been saved if Russian authorities had given medical
personnel more information about the kind of gas used to swiftly render
most of those in the theater unconscious before the assault by special forces.

"It's clear that with perhaps a little more information, at least a few
more of the hostages may have survived," Vershbow said.

"To the best of our knowledge, based on our own doctors who visited some
of the American hostages and were able to do their own assessment and
talk to some of the Russian medical officials, we do think that [the gas
used] was an opiate," he added. He said he believes it was a drug known
as fentanyl, long used as an anesthetic in hospitals in many countries.
"But we have still not received official confirmation of that fact from
Russian authorities," he said.

Still, Vershbow said he wouldn't second-guess the Russian decision to
launch the assault. "They had a difficult decision to make, and with the
bombs that were there they probably saved hundreds of lives, even if we
regret that more than 100 died, largely as a result of the gas," he said.

Some medical experts, however, have said that no general anesthetic
could have been delivered to the auditorium in sufficient concentrations
to put so many people to sleep so quickly.

The All-Russia Public Opinion Center poll also asked whether Russia
should take a far tougher approach in Chechnya, comparable to "resolute
actions ... America has carried out after Sept. 11." Of those surveyed,
54% said yes and 36% said no.

Since the United States declared its war against terrorism, it has
accepted Russian warnings that Chechen fighters were linked to
international terrorism and the Al Qaeda network.

The senior U.S. official who spoke Tuesday said that while there was no
evidence of a direct Al Qaeda link in last week's theater siege, it was
clear that Al Qaeda operatives had trained Chechen fighters in
Afghanistan and in Georgia's Pankisi Gorge, a lawless area just across
the border that Chechen fighters have used as a refuge.

U.S. concern about Maskhadov focuses on his links to another rebel
commander, Shamil Basayev.

The concerns grew after a meeting of Chechen separatist commanders last
summer. The Kavkaz-Tsentr Web site, which conveys the position of
Chechen separatists, reported in August that Maskhadov chaired a meeting
of all the commanders, with Basayev as his deputy.

The United States views Basayev, who took about 1,500 hostages at a
hospital in the Russian town of Budyonnovsk in 1995, as a terrorist.

The August meeting suggested reconciliation and cooperation between
Basayev and Maskhadov after earlier conflict.

The U.S. official said the affirmation that Maskhadov was working with
Basayev made Maskhadov an unsuitable negotiating partner.

"He forfeited any legitimacy he had," the official said. "He's either
unwilling to stand up to terrorists or incapable of it."

U.S. officials now believe it is up to Chechens to find an alternative
leader who can negotiate a peace process with Moscow.

But with Maskhadov and Basayev the main fighters leading the separatist
revolt, it is difficult to see how a realistic peace deal could be
forged in their absence.

The official said the separatists must sever links to international
terrorism and rethink their tactics before they can regain any legitimacy.

At least nine foreigners died in the theater incident, including an
American, a Dutch citizen, an Austrian, three Ukrainians, an Armenian, a
Belarussian and a 13-year-old girl from Kazakhstan, Russian authorities
said Tuesday.

U.S. Embassy officials were closely involved in attempts to free the
hostages. On the last night of the siege, they received several panicky
phone calls from Sandy Alan Booker, the American who died, speaking at
gunpoint. Booker was increasingly fearful for his life as the night wore on.

Authorities said 418 former hostages had been released from hospitals by
Tuesday and 245 remained hospitalized, 16 in grave condition. Of about
50 attackers killed, 41 or 42 were shot, some while they were
unconscious from the gas.

The Moscow Health Department said Tuesday that 44 people, including 42
hostage-takers, died of gunshot wounds, while Moscow Chief Prosecutor
Mikhail Avdyukov put the total shooting deaths at 45, including at least
41 hostage-takers.

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