A New Low

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There’s already an effort by right-wingers to connect the Boston bombers to immigration reform:

According to law enforcement sources, the brothers entered the U.S. in 2002 or 2003, and at least one of them has been a legal permanent resident since 2007. Some on the right are already pouncing on the news to cast doubt on the desirability of immigration reform.

Tyler Cowen thinks there “is a good chance these events doom immigration reform.” McArdle agrees:

I suspect that they’ve … wrecked the chances of immigration reform.  And immigrants from the Caucasus can expect much greater scrutiny from INS.

Sargent is waiting to see if this attempt to smear immigration reform moves beyond the fringe:

It’s unclear thus far how widespread the effort among conservatives will be to connect the Boston bombing suspects to the immigration reform debate. But it’s certainly something that bears watching. If this argument picks up steam, it will be another indication of how ferocious the resistance on the right to immigration reform is going to get.

The Questions We Need Answered

Benjamin Wittes hopes authorities can take the remaining suspect alive:

The most important thing, of course, is to apprehend and stop the remaining suspect before anyone else is killed or hurt. … But it is critically important to understand what, if any, connection these suspects have both to overseas terrorist groups and to domestic folks not yet tied to the bombing, and that project will be far easier if the surviving Mr. Tsarnaev is not killed. The question is important both for obvious reasons—if some group is attacking the United States, we need to understand with maximum precision who that is and who is involved—and for less obvious legal reasons: Is this a home-grown terrorist problem that’s purely a matter of criminal law? Is this a feature of the US’s existing armed conflict with Al Qaeda and its associated forces? Or is this some new overseas terrorist threat—an extra-AUMF threat—against the United States playing out in the streets of Cambridge and Watertown? Or is this an example of a blurry line between categories? The chance to interrogate a Mr. Tsarnaev who can still talk is the quickest and easiest way to answer these questions.

What’s The Deal With Chechnya?

There are reports that the brothers are originally from Chechnya or near Chechnya. CFR has a useful 2010 primer on terrorism inside the country:

From 1994 to 1996, Russia fought Chechen guerillas in a conflict that became known as the First Chechen War. Tens of thousands of civilians died, but Russia failed to win control of Chechnya’s mountainous terrain, giving Chechnya de facto independence. In May 1996, Yeltsin signed a ceasefire with the separatists, and they agreed on a peace treaty the following year.

But violence flared again three years later. In August 1999, Chechen militants invaded the neighboring Russian republic of Dagestan to support a local separatist movement. The following month, five bombs exploded in Russia over a ten-day period, killing almost three hundred civilians. Moscow blamed Chechen rebels for the explosions, which comprised the largest coordinated terrorist attack in Russian history.

The Dagestan invasion and the Russian bombings prompted Russian forces to launch the Second Chechen War, also known as the War in the North Caucasus. In February 2000, Russia recaptured the Chechen capital of Grozny, destroying a good part of the city center in the process, reasserting direct control over Chechnya. Tens of thousands of Chechens and Russians were killed or wounded in the two wars, and hundreds of thousands of civilians were displaced. Since the end of the second war, Chechen separatist activity has diminished, and the July 2006 death of separatist leaderShamil Basayev–in an explosion many see as the work of Russia’s internal security services–seems to have stifled the movement.

But USA Today points out that, in recent years, Chechen terrorists still “committed sporadic large-scale attacks in Russia”:

In March 2010, Chechen terrorists claimed responsible for bombings on the Moscow subway system that killed more than 40 people. In June 2010, the State Department added Chechen rebel Doku Umarov, who claimed responsibility for the March subway attack, to its terrorist list and froze his assets. The reduced turmoil inside Chechnya has been the result of massive efforts by the Russian security forces.

Hayes Brown adds:

Unfortunately, this does not tell us very much at the moment. An ethnicity does not indicate any sort of defined motive or ties to any possible group or groups and law enforcement has yet to provide any confirmation of the current reporting. Chechen groups also have traditionally focused their ire on Russia rather than targeting the United States. Finally, given their lengthy residence it is difficult to discern what — if any — ties or sympathies the two brothers have to Chechen terrorist groups. The older of the brothers — Tamerlan Tsarnaev — has been in the United States since as early as 1992 as a refugee and in 2002 hoped to box for the United States at the Salt Lake City Olympics.

Who Are The Tsarnaev Brothers?

Suspects Together- High Res

David Kenner finds a photo album featuring the suspect who died in a firefight last night, Tamerlan Tsarnaev:

One of the most interesting insights into Tamerlan’s personality so far comes from a photo album, titled “Will Box For Passport,” that photographer Johannes Hirn took of the slain suspect. Tamerlan was apparently a boxer who hoped to gain citizenship by being selected for the U.S. Olympic team: “Unless his native Chechnya becomes independent, Tamerlan says he would rather compete for the United States than for Russia,” Hirn wrote.

Other captions paint Tamerlan as a devoted Muslim. “I’m very religious,” he says at one point, noting that he does not smoke or drink alcohol. “There are no values anymore,” he says, worrying that “people can’t control themselves.”

Tamerlan also appears isolated and bewildered by American life. “I don’t have a single American friend,” he laments, despite living in the United States for five years. “I don’t understand them.”

He also apparently had a YouTube channel. Serwer explains:

Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the 26 year-old brother of the second Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, had a YouTube page where he posted religious videos, including a video of Feiz Mohammad, a fundamentalist Australian Muslim preacher who rails against the evils of Harry Potter. Among those videos is one dedicated to the prophecy of the Black Banners of Khurasan which is embraced by Islamic extremists—particularly Al Qaeda. The videos posted on what appears to be Tsarnaev’s YouTube page may shed light on the motivations for the attack on the Boston Marathon. The prophecy states that an invincible army will come from the region of “Khurasan,” a large portion of territory in central Asia.

Weigel points to what appears to Tamerlan’s Amazon wishlist:

Among the hits:

– How to Make Driver’s Licenses and Other ID on Your Home Computer

– The I.D. Forger: Homemade Birth Certificates & ​Other Documents Explained

– Secrets Of A Back Alley ID Man: Fake Id Construction Techniques Of The Underground

– The Lone Wolf And the Bear: Three Centuries of Chechen Defiance of Russian Rule

– Organized Crime: AN INSIDE GUIDE TO THE WORLD’S MOST SUCCESSFUL INDUSTRY

And, of course…

– How to Win Friends & Influ​ence People

The Showdown In Watertown

It’s Them

Confirmed by the Boston police commish and now NBC News:

Police press conference live now.

The Battle In Watertown

[Updated continuously. Live local-news feed here.]

Suspects Identified?

[The tweet speculation after the jump turned out to be a false, but it’s here for the record, and to show how Twitter quickly self-corrects in real-time.]

What The Hell Is Happening Around Cambridge? Ctd