The Truth About Russia in Georgia

I finally got around to reading one of the most most illuminating reports of the Russian-Georgian conflict… and I hope you will take the time to read the piece in its entirety. There should be no doubts about Russia’s complicity in starting this war… and the need to aid the Georgians… a people very much like most of us from the cureltys done to them by (essentially) Russian mercinaries.

While you are at it, why not consider donating to Michael… who would not be risking his life but for your support.

Virtually everyone is wrong. Georgia didn’t start it on August 7, nor on any other date. The South Ossetian militia started it on August 6 when its fighters fired on Georgian peacekeepers and Georgian villages with weapons banned by the agreement hammered out between the two sides in 1994. At the same time, the Russian military sent its invasion force bearing down on Georgia from the north side of the Caucasus Mountains on the Russian side of the border through the Roki tunnel and into Georgia. This happened before Saakashvili sent additional troops to South Ossetia and allegedly started the war…

“The next provocation: On April 16 Putin signs a presidential decree recognizing the documents of Abkhazians and South Ossetians in Russia and vice versa. This effectively integrates these two territories into Russia’s legal space. The Georgians were furious. So you have all these provocations mounting and mounting and mounting. Meanwhile, as of July, various air corps start moving from the rest of Russia to get closer to the Caucasus. These are obscure details, but they are available…

On the 6th of August the shelling intensifies from Ossetian positions. And for the first time since the war finished in 1992, they are using 120mm guns.”

“Can I stop you for a second?” I said. I was still under the impression that the war began on August 7 and that Georgian President Saakashvili started it when he sent troops into South Ossetia’s capital Tskhinvali. What was all this about the Ossetian violence on August 6 and before?

He raised his hand as if to say stop.

“That was the formal start of the war,” he said….

“On the evening of the 7th, the Ossetians launch an all-out barrage focused on Georgian villages, not on Georgian positions. Remember, these Georgian villages inside South Ossetia – the Georgians have mostly evacuated those villages, and three of them are completely pulverized. That evening, the 7th, the president gets information that a large Russian column is on the move. Later that evening, somebody sees those vehicles emerging from the Roki tunnel [into Georgia from Russia]. Then a little bit later, somebody else sees them. That’s three confirmations. It was time to act….

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Back in the USSR!

Medvedev

About 2 years ago I read a book by John Lewis Gaddis entitled: “The Cold War: A New History“. The Cold war was, at the time, a very vague, amorphous concept; I neither knew who the players were nor the reasons why the war ended. I walked away from that book both excited and educated–excited about the tension and drama that had occurred, educated about the seriousness of the times and the unique personalities that were so dominant during that era. I recall wishing I could have lived through that era–not because it was a great time to be alive–but because of the value a perspective of the events, news coverage, and debate surrounding that era would be in understanding the world TODAY. We can’t, of course, re-live a bygone era… or maybe we can…

“We are not afraid of anything, including the prospect of a Cold War,” Medvedev recently stated according to the lastest article at the TimesOnline.

Sergei Lavrov, the Russian Foreign Minister, accused Washington of “battleship diplomacy” and insisted the presence of the warships “does not make the situation more stable”.

Mr Medvedev said that the port of Poti was open to shipping but accused the Americans of trying to smuggle weapons to the Georgians. “And what the Americans call humanitarian cargoes – of course, they are bringing in weapons.”

“Battleship Diplomacy???” Really! And what, may I ask, do you call rolling hundreds of tanks into Georgian territory Meddie? Aggressive negotiations? Yup, Russian tanks at Georgian ports are the epitome of stability. Spare me. Oh, and all of a sudden you don’t like weapons transfers to countries you are at odds with? Well, you should have thought about that BEFORE you sold IRAN a bunch of surface-to-air missiles! NOW YOU KNOW WHAT IF FEELS LIKE MEDDIE! Get used to it. I’m not about to have my chain yanked by a couple of corrupt dictators threatening nuclear war because they’ve got an power inferiority complex… it’s like a diagnosable condition shared by all Russian elite, i swear.

And another thing… what the hell has soft power and negotiations gotten us with respect to Russia? It’s gotten us NOWHERE… they bade their time until the moment the west let its guard down… became overly-dependant on foreign oil, cut their defense budgets, dismantled their nuclear weapons… and now Russia rears its ugly head again ! Somehow I’m not surprised.