Russia's Restless Frontier: The Chechnya Factor in Post-Soviet Russia
Two Russian authors and their British colleague produce a book different from any other on Chechnya. This is not an account of the wars themselves or of how the Russians got themselves into them or of the awful toll they have taken on their victims. Rather, it is a study of how the wars have affected Russia, especially its military, its Muslim population, its other territories in the North Caucasus, and its international relations. All this is measured in careful, balanced, nuanced, and analytically objective terms, and the book, in its original Russian, was badly needed by a Russian public burdened with simple and highly biased notions of the war. This updated version in English will convey to a larger audience the complex ramifications of these wars and create a heightened sense of the stakes as Russia, after Beslan, enters a new and more tragic phase of its struggle in Chechnya.
Related
The magisterial Cambridge History of the Cold War views the Cold War as an undifferentiated chunk of history. But the conflict between the superpowers was just one strand of history in the middle and late twentieth century, not the whole story.
Russia's post-Soviet orientation is in serious trouble. The West does not want to see any structure in Eurasia that permits Russian hegemony, but abetting continued chaos in the former Soviet space is hardly in the West's interest. Central Asia and the Caucasus are rife with flash points that could ignite and draw in outside powers, and the presence of nuclear weapons raises the stakes even higher. The United States should support integration, not division. For its part, Russia should work with nearby countries to help unite diverse peoples in a stabler system.
Reviews the status of Soviet Jews under present Soviet policy. The USA should link the emigration of Soviet Jews to the reduction of US-Soviet trade barriers.

Sign-up for free weekly updates from ForeignAffairs.com.