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Yeltsin’s Plan to End Chechen War Foundering

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Eleven fruitless days after President Boris N. Yeltsin unveiled a peace plan for Chechnya, his strategy for ending the war was wedged Thursday between a Russian army commander who vowed to “smash” the rebels if they do not surrender and a political ally who urged the president to talk directly with Chechen separatist leader Dzhokar M. Dudayev.

Daily reports of ongoing fighting, and tough talk from the Russian military, suggest that prospects for a quick resolution of the 16-month-old war may be evaporating along with Yeltsin’s nominal “cease-fire.” Yeltsin supporters are growing worried that their candidate’s chances in the June 16 presidential election are being irreparably damaged by his inability to end the fighting, which has claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.

Yeltsin has continued to press his proposal for the appointment of intermediaries to negotiate with Dudayev, who told reporters earlier this week that the war would be over “in 15 minutes” if he and Yeltsin met face to face. Yeltsin has thus far refused such a meeting, flatly saying he will not meet with “terrorists.”

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Among the mediators will likely be the presidents of Kazakhstan and Tatarstan, and talks reportedly could begin as early as Tuesday. The Tatarstan president, Mintimer S. Shaimiyev, already was trying to contact Dudayev, Interfax news agency reported Thursday.

But that approach strikes some of Yeltsin’s supporters as cumbersome and time-consuming, and they are urging the president to show his mettle by negotiating personally with Dudayev.

Boris Nemtsov, the liberal governor of Nizhny Novgorod and a respected reformer who has remained loyal to Yeltsin, said Thursday that the president needs to “enter into talks with Dudayev without delay.” In an interview with Interfax, Nemtsov urged Yeltsin to travel to the area to open a dialogue. “Time is running out,” Nemtsov said, offering to accompany Yeltsin.

The governor also chastised Yeltsin’s aides, saying that their determination to win the war in Chechnya, a predominantly Muslim area and major oil transshipment point, could cost Yeltsin the election.

“The part of Yeltsin’s entourage which toys with illusions about the possibility of victory . . . not only leaves no chance for Yeltsin to implement his peace plan but also makes his defeat in the coming election possible,” Nemtsov said.

In addition to pursuing indirect talks, Yeltsin vowed to end Russia’s offensive and partially withdraw the forces he had sent to put down the independence drive. He also pronounced himself open to negotiating some degree of autonomy for Chechnya within Russia.

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But Russian military leaders, although applauding Yeltsin’s plan in public, seemed to be undermining it.

Gen. Anatoly Shkirko, commander of the Russian Interior Ministry troops, said Thursday that the separatists have a powerful defensive system capable of resisting Russian troops for a long time.

“Either the fighters will be smashed or let them give up their weapons,” Shkirko told Interfax.

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