Metrojet crash cause still unclear but could benefit Putin
MOSCOW
(AP) — No matter what caused the fatal crash of a Russian airliner in
Egypt, the answer will almost certainly hit Russia hard — but not
President Vladimir Putin.
Associated Press
Mon, Nov 9, 2015, 3:45pm EST - US Markets close in 15 mins
Metrojet crash cause still unclear but could benefit Putin
Since a Metrojet Airbus A321-200 crashed in Egypt's Sinai peninsula on Oct. 31, killing all 224 people aboard, Russian officials have assiduously refrained from speculating on the cause of the crash and upbraided the news media for doing so. Most of those killed were Russian tourists.
But Russia's sudden decision Friday to suspend passenger flights to all destinations in Egypt — a move it said reflects concerns about Egyptian airport security — strongly suggests that officials' prime suspicion is that a bomb was spirited aboard the Metrojet before it left the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh. A faction of the militant Islamic State group claimed it had downed the airliner in retaliation for Russia launching airstrikes on IS positions in Syria a month earlier.
The possibility of a technical failure of the plane, which had suffered tail damage in a 2001 accident, is receding from speculation although not overtly rejected.
The crash has provoked a national wave of grief and anxiety, and if terrorism is proven, many Russians could reconsider the wisdom of the country's airstrikes in Syria against opponents of Syrian President Bashar Assad's government, which include IS.
Putin's support hit an all-time high of nearly 90 percent after the Syria airstrikes began in September, according to the state-run pollster VTsIOM. That could erode if a bombing is confirmed.
"People
should have known that we were taking a colossal risk. Today something
is obvious that somehow wasn't obvious a month ago," analyst Gleb
Pavlovsky, a former Kremlin political adviser, was quoted as saying in
the online newspaper Gazeta.
But although such concerns could be
strong, they are unlikely to gain enough momentum to threaten Putin's
policies or his hold on power.
"Doubts
could arise: 'Do we really need to be there? What are we actually doing
there?' ... They are not catastrophic for the government but they are
not pleasant," Alexei Makarkin of the Moscow-based Center for Political
Technologies told The Associated Press.
A
proven terror attack on a plane full of Russian tourists could be a
traumatic reminder to Russians of the vulnerability they felt to
terrorism connected to the wars in Chechnya, including the twin plane
suicide bombings on one night in 2004. As Moscow's conflict with
insurgents in Chechnya and other North Caucasus areas has dwindled,
Russians have breathed easier — the last major terrorist attack in
Russia were the December 2013 bombings in Volgograd that killed 32
people ahead of Russia hosting the 2014 Winter Olympics in nearby Sochi.
A plane attack could revive that unease but it would also be
fundamentally different. It could even galvanize support for more
airstrikes in Syria.
"The
source of the attack is a foreign one, and it's hard to blame Putin for
the mere fact of IS activities," analyst Tatiana Stanovaya wrote in the
online publication Slon. "A terrorist attack against Russian citizens
means a declaration of war on all Russians. The Syria campaign will thus
become not a matter of Putin's ambitions, but of national revenge."
Makarkin suggested that many Russians had already been disappointed about Russia's "lack of a blitzkrieg" in Syria.
A
technical cause of the Metrojet crash would be an unsettling reminder
for Russians about the messy years after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet
Union, when Russian airlines became notorious for aging, badly
maintained aircraft and improperly trained pilots. In the past decade,
Russia's major airlines have sharply modernized their fleets and raised
service to international standards.
If
the Metrojet plane or its crew were found to be at fault, that would
tarnish Russians' pride and confidence in their revitalized airlines and
revive persistent suspicions about business ethics and aviation
regulators' competence or corruption.
But Makarkin said Putin himself would likely avoid being hit by any blowback.
"Corruption
is not linked to Putin and the government in the popular perception.
People's wrath will be targeted on corrupt officials and greedy
businessmen," he said.
For
now, Russian officials' restraint in not favoring one crash cause
explanation over another may be a useful strategy, Stanovaya said.
"The
less evidence to back up this or that theory that is out there, the
more room the Russian government will have to pick and choose the one
that suits it the most," she wrote. "They may (eventually) favor
terrorism by using it as an additional argument in favor of beefing up
its military operation against IS."
___
Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow contributed
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