GROZNY – The word was on the streets by the beginning of the month. The market in the center of this Russian-occupied and nearly razed city had never been busier. Truckloads of bread sold out every hour. Cucumbers, garlic and tomatoes, the staples of summer life here, were moving by the crate. Read more »
The New Yorker
How the Chechen Guerrillas Shocked Their Russian Foes
August 18th, 1996 from The New Yorker > Articles
if ($post->post_parent == 23 ) { ?>
} else { ?>
} ?>
if (is_single() || in_category(4)) { ?>
} else { ?>
} ?>
if (is_page(2)){ ?>
} else { ?>
} ?>
if (is_front_page()) { ?>
} else { ?>
} ?>
if (is_category(3)) { ?>
} else { ?>
} ?>
about the author
Michael Specter has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1998.
Read More
tags
Africa
agriculture
AIDS
Aleksandr Ivanovich
Alternative Medicine
Archangel
autism
avian flu
babies
Bill Gates
biofuels
biology
biotechnology
Book Reviews
brain
Bush
canaries
cancer research
carbon footprint
Chechnya
Chernobyl
climate change
cold war
crime
crystal meth
denialism
dietary suppemements
Einstein
email
environment
Evolution
fashion
fingerprints
flu vaccination
food
Frank Nuovo
Freud
genetically engineered food
Genetics
Georgia
gmo
Google
green
Gucci
h1n1
Heidmann
hiv
human trafficking
hunger
Iceland
India
Infectious Diseases
internet
Isreal
Italy
John Galliano
Kirsan
Kremlin
Lance Armstrong
Larry Kramer
Lawrence Steele
London
Lowell Weicker
medicine
Mikhail Gorbachev
Milan
Monsanto
Moscow
Naples
New Yorker
New York Times
nobel
Nokia
NPR
organic
organic food
pandemic
Paris
peta
Peter Singer
Phoenix Virus
Prada
puff daddy
puffy
Putin
rehabilitation
Retroviruses
Richard Branson
Russia
satellites
science
Scientists
sean combs
Shevardnadze
Solzhenitsyn
South Africa
sports
Starbucks
swine flu
synthetic biology
tailor
TB
technology
Tesco
thimerosal
Tony Blair
Turkey
Uganda
Ukraine
vaccination
vaccine
vaccines
Valentino
Venice
water
water shortage
Yeltsin
Yumashevrecent articles
latest blog posts