Soviet Union 1991

Main text Chapter 185 Ending

(Fifth update completed)

"No, you won't." Facing Yanaev's threat, Kadyrov Jr. stood up and said bravely, "If such a bomb really falls on Chechnya, it will surely cause all the Soviet republics to attack your party. At that time, not to mention the republics, even the whole world will regard the Soviet Union as an enemy."

"You are happy for a while to pacify Chechnya, but what will you do in the more complicated political situation?" Kadyrov Jr.'s words were like a sharp thorn piercing Yanaev's nerve center. His temples jumped. He didn't expect that the young boy in front of him was even more courageous than Akhmadov beside him. Is it the courage of a newborn calf who is not afraid of a tiger, or the determination to fight to the death?

"And since General Secretary Yanaev has agreed to sit at the negotiation table with us to discuss the issue, the means of war must be excluded first, unless the differences in this negotiation are too great, and the second Chechen war will be carried out as a last resort. However, I still have one thing to remind General Secretary Yanaev. The vast majority of Chechens now are Muslims, and Russians do not occupy a dominant position in Chechnya, so you still have to consider whether to continue the previous practice."

"I'm sorry, Mr. Kadyrov. The Soviet Union has always been firm in its attitude towards religious beliefs. We will never allow the so-called religious police to appear in Chechnya, and we will never allow polygamy to appear in Chechnya. The people have finally freed themselves from the shackles on their bodies, and we will never let them return to the shackles of the past." Compared with the young Kadyrov, who was an old man and a young wife in history, Yanaev hated this practice. In the Soviet Union, both men and women are equal in personality, and it is for this reason that Yanaev took tough measures to suppress Islamic fundamentalism.

Anyone who dares to advocate that Muslim women in the Caucasus member states of the Soviet Union wear black robes, Yanaev dares to drag them out and throw them into the Kazan Psychiatric Hospital to receive treatment from KGB doctors!

"And Chechnya is discussing with us to maintain a strong armed force?" Yanaev glanced at Akhmadov with disdain, then turned to Kadyrov and said, "I just want to know whether your armed forces can prove that we can deal with the Soviet Union's steel torrent. We can flatten the Central European plains and let the red flag be planted all over the world. What qualifications do you Chechens have to talk to us about such conditions?"

The reason why Kadyrov was able to bargain with Putin was because the Russian army paid an extremely tragic price in the Chechen War, and coupled with the constant terrorist attacks in the country, they no longer had the strength to fight a war of attrition. But Yanaev is different now. The Soviet Union has a huge stockpile of arms. He can slowly consume it in the Chechen War, and after the trade with Asian countries was normalized, the Soviet economy began to gradually improve. Moreover, the Soviet army now occupies half of Chechnya. As long as the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party makes a decision, they can turn their turrets to deal with the Sufi armed forces.

"What are your conditions?" Seeing that the two sides still have great differences of opinion, Akhmadov wants to hear Yanaev's opinion.

"First, the Soviet army must have troops stationed in Chechnya. This is a condition that we will never compromise on. If there is a member state in the Soviet Union without troops stationed, can it still be called a Soviet member state?" Yanaev said bluntly, tapping the table with his index finger and reading out word by word, "and the number of troops stationed must be decided by us, and the Sufis have no right to choose."

"But your armed forces can be preserved in the form of Chechen police. The Soviet armed forces stationed in Chechnya have no right to dispatch public security incidents that can be resolved within your capabilities, but once the situation cannot be controlled, the Soviet army has the right to intervene." This is the compromise condition proposed by Yanaev, which is almost a replica of the "one country, two systems".

"Similarly, we will send the first secretary of the CPSU to Chechnya to re-establish Soviet agencies. No religious ideology can occupy the position of the national government. This is our second condition." Yanaev made it very clear that Chechnya's laws must be Soviet laws, not the shitty religious laws you have made.

"The third condition is to suppress the Wahhabi faction." This sentence is the focus of Yanaev, "I hope that the Sufi faction can unite with the Soviet government, either assimilate the Wahhabi faction. Or expel them from the Caucasus region and establish a unified Islamic faction."

Akhmadov took a deep breath. He didn't expect Yanaev to give such a great gift. If the previous two conditions offended their interests and dignity. Then in front of this great gift, these offenses are just scratching the itch. Even if it is only nominal unification, it is a great honor.

"You mean, a unified Islamic faction? Even if it is only nominal unification?" Even Kadyrov's eyes lit up when he heard this. At such a young age, he may not understand the true intention of unification. But thinking about becoming a spiritual leader of Chechnya like his father, or even the spiritual leader of the entire Caucasus, something called ambition quickly swelled in his heart. As long as there is the support of the Soviet Union, why should Chechnya worry about not being able to become a powerful republic?

"Yes, a unified faction. Anyone will follow the Sufis as long as you agree with the leadership of the Moscow Central Committee." Yanaev smiled and nodded, but there was a hidden murderous intent in his eyes.

Young Kadyrov and even Akhmadov have not seen through Yanayev's true intentions, and are immersed in the fantasy of a spiritual leader. The Caucasus region has a complex ethnic composition since ancient times. If the Chechen Sufis really have such a unified ambition, it will inevitably cause backlash from other sects and even other religions. Not only will Chechnya not benefit, it may also arouse the vigilance and hatred of surrounding countries. A country surrounded by enemies, what else can it do except kneeling and begging for the Soviet Union's asylum?

The checks and balances and infighting between the major member states have concentrated the ultimate power in the hands of the central government. The CPSU can be said to have played the role of an offshore balancer in the Transcaucasus region.

And now at least Yanayev has found a rope to restrain the Chechen horse, and firmly grasped the future master of Chechnya in his hands.

"We are willing to accept the conditions proposed by Moscow, and we are also willing to sign a treaty." Kadyrov said with a happy smile, not seeing through the Soviet conspiracy behind it. (To be continued.)

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