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Author Topic: War : Georgia vs Russia  (Read 3300 times)
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« Reply #45 on: August 16, 2008, 10:35:24 PM »

I am dissatissfied by Russian behaviour. They should've reached Tblisi few days ago, but no, they signed a ceasefire and promise to pull back like nothing happened. Aren't they supposed to be a super-power that no body can mess with? Georgian troops bombed the hek out of south Ossetia, killed 2000 people (1/2 of them hold russian passports) and attacked russian troops unprovoked! Russia has all the grounds to claim the georgian regime rogue and the georgian president a war criminal, who killed innocent civilians and russian troops. isn't that what the US claimed in Iraq ? Serbia ? They keep threatening poland, ukraine, czech and all the former soviet states, yet they lack the balls to take-over Georgia, which is 1/10 the size of Ukraine, and holds a strategic energy route.. Sorry, Mr. Putin, but I'm not impressed. not to mention how little Georgia with basic air defenses downed 10 of your planes.. 10 out of your 1200 out-dated fighters fleet   Undecided
It's because you missed the reason why the whole war started. Russia unlike USA acts accordingly to UN mandate of peace-keepers and our primary goal is to stop further bloodshed in the region. Only Americans retaliate to 2000+ victims killed in twin towers as  bombing down of two independent nations (Iraq and Afghanistan), while Russia hasn't reached the capital and never intended to. We respect democratically elected president and unlike Americans never planned regime-change coup. We don't need additional zone of responsibility, especially in such an unstable region like Caucasus (if it doesn't hurt our security, of course).
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« Reply #46 on: August 16, 2008, 10:49:38 PM »

I am dissatissfied by Russian behaviour. They should've reached Tblisi few days ago, but no, they signed a ceasefire and promise to pull back like nothing happened. Aren't they supposed to be a super-power that no body can mess with? Georgian troops bombed the hek out of south Ossetia, killed 2000 people (1/2 of them hold russian passports) and attacked russian troops unprovoked! Russia has all the grounds to claim the georgian regime rogue and the georgian president a war criminal, who killed innocent civilians and russian troops. isn't that what the US claimed in Iraq ? Serbia ? They keep threatening poland, ukraine, czech and all the former soviet states, yet they lack the balls to take-over Georgia, which is 1/10 the size of Ukraine, and holds a strategic energy route.. Sorry, Mr. Putin, but I'm not impressed. not to mention how little Georgia with basic air defenses downed 10 of your planes.. 10 out of your 1200 out-dated fighters fleet   Undecided
It's because you missed the reason why the whole war started. Russia unlike USA acts accordingly to UN mandate of peace-keepers and our primary goal is to stop further bloodshed in the region. Only Americans retaliate to 2000+ victims killed in twin towers as  bombing down of two independent nations (Iraq and Afghanistan), while Russia hasn't reached the capital and never intended to. We respect democratically elected president and unlike Americans never planned regime-change coup. We don't need additional zone of responsibility, especially in such an unstable region like Caucasus (if it doesn't hurt our security, of course).
This is rich.  What noble sacrifices! Roll Eyes

As for being a democracy, your government hardly fits the bill.  I'm ashamed and annoyed by my government's problems in foreign policy, but I condemn the claims of "humanitarianism" both my government used in Iraq and that which your nation used to nakedly serve as a lesson to less tractable nations in the former Soviet Union.  If humanitarianism had been the motive, South Ossetian militias would hardly have had free reign to torch and pillage ethnic Georgian towns and villages.
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« Reply #47 on: August 16, 2008, 11:50:20 PM »

More humanitarianism, I guess. Angryhttp://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/08/16/europe/EU-Georgia-South-Ossetia.php
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« Reply #48 on: August 17, 2008, 07:10:49 AM »

The war in Georgia is just a rebound in a 20 years old clanic conflict.

Poeple are talking as if Georgia, Ossetia, Abkhazia etc were countries with a President, a Foreign Minister and so on... Nope: They are regions controlled by large families controlling the business and political life and called mafias by the locals

If South Ossetia is controlled by Russia, it's only because the mafia there has russian links. While the Georgian mafias had to seek support somewhere else.

It's not about oil. Let alone a pipeline route to Israel! LOL!
The pipeline overthere is quite small and has been shut down before the conflict started for safety reason and no one noticed it. No country depends on the Georgian pipeline. We can build such pipeline everywhere. Georgia is not the favorite transit place for oil.
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« Reply #49 on: August 17, 2008, 01:01:42 PM »

Just a quick point: the atrocities are not all on the Russian side. Georgia bombarded South Ossetian towns for 16 hours, razed them to the ground, before Russia retaliated. I think in that situation Russia could say "we have given the West 16 hours to stop this, now we will stop this."

Of course, they went well past this mark a long time ago. But lets not pretend that Georgia is entirely blameless.
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« Reply #50 on: August 17, 2008, 01:01:55 PM »

Askari, knowing full well few who post on IAP have much of a penchant for reading, even though this long article was posted in 2007, maybe we are actually seeing the
fruition of the Israeli involvement and their continued need for oil.  The article also provides interesting maps.  While it is more than clear, there is no possibility for Bush to
provide the military support that apparently was expected in this conflict, it may be worthwhile information to check out?

Oil and Israel       
By Andrea Crandall      
Feb/07/2007
Debate on the motivation for the Iraq War is shepherded into two camps: securing oil or  securing Israel. In reality, the war is being fought to secure oil through  Israel. US foreign policy is geared to make Israel its primary transport  route for Middle Eastern and Central Asian oil. This also accomplishes two Israeli aims: ending dependence on US aid and toppling uncooperative neighbors.

Richard Perle's memo to Benjamin Netanyahu, “A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing The Realm,4] Israeli leaders have fallen back on the commodity that helped create Israel in the first place.

http://sandersresearch.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1118

Have times changed that much in the past two years plus? Has Israel quit purchasing Russian oil? Does that U.S. oil corporation pipeline in the Caucuses mean nothing to
Israel as a closer source for oil?  Plenty of questions, but little other than lockstep answers.  But most of all have some of the responses been based more on the lockstep
mentality ignoring the reality that since the cold war ended and the USSR was no longer the reality, Russia has been in economic ascendency while the U.S. is now in dependency primarily with the Chinese bankers?


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« Reply #51 on: August 17, 2008, 03:50:54 PM »

Ha! Cass, always centering every conflict around Israel?

This is ridiculous.
There is no direct pipeline from georgia to Israel.
Israel is a tiny oil consumer, why focusing on the zionist/jews?

Nobody cares about the georgian pipeline, but georgian and russian themselves: In absence of ceasefire, no oil or gaz goes through it and no body is paying.
The russians and the georgian were forced into a ceasefire because they lost too much money in this silly war.

Russia has plenty of clients for their oil, they don't need a pipeline in Georgia.
Just look at the size of the russian oil industry... Why would they fight for that? If the russians want to control this pipeline, they'll buy a part via consortium.
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« Reply #52 on: August 17, 2008, 04:04:05 PM »

Apparently, Fred, you chose not to read. Nothing new, but expected.  Of course there is no direct pipeline between Georgia and Israel, it is located for transport by sea. In specific the Black Sea. The same location Bush couldn't send those Naval rescuers into.  But the maps on the post are instructive, but those who prefer to argue than read rarely bother.

You should know well that little takes place in the whole region Israel is not involved in. Think about Golda's long ago quote, "Let me tell you something that we Israelis have against Moses. He took us 40 years through the desert in order to bring us to the one spot in the Middle East that has no oil!" Golda Meir

And then there is this from the Jerusalem post only in June. The complete article since you don't appear to bother to read.

Is Israel indirectly buying Iranian oil?
Jun. 12, 2008
Abe Selig , THE JERUSALEM POST

Having adamantly denied for months that Israel could possibly be purchasing any oil originating in Iran, an Israeli official has now acknowledged that the Jewish state cannot be sure that Iranian oil is not coming here indirectly, and a former Israeli energy minister has told The Jerusalem Post that Iranian oil may have been imported indirectly for years and that he would have readily authorized such purchases himself.

"I don't see any problem if Iranian oil is arriving in Israel," said Moshe Shahal, who served as energy minister from 1984 to 1990, "because it's not coming straight from Iran."

Shahal explained that once oil is on the open market, its source becomes clouded. In a sense, he said, the oil loses its nationality while retaining its quality.

"The national oil companies sell their oil to buyers who in turn sell the oil on the free market," Shahal went on. And it was entirely possible that Israel had therefore been buying oil that originated in Iran for years. "The people selling the barrels of oil never see a barrel of oil in their life, they're just making the sales," he said.

"In my time, people came to me and said we had the opportunity to buy oil from all kinds of exotic locations - including Libyan oil or Syrian oil - countries with whom we obviously don't have normal relations," said former Labor MK Shahal, now a lawyer in Tel Aviv. "I approved those purchases, because it was good oil, and it wasn't coming directly from the governments of those countries, but from private sellers on the free market."

Today, he said, "I don't believe there is a target to specifically buy oil from Iran. But if it is being purchased, it would be through these types of opportunities."

The issue arose earlier this year, when EnergiaNews.com, an Israeli Web site that follows business and energy-related stories, asserted that Iranian oil was regularly reaching Israel, despite the dire state of relations between the two countries, with Teheran regularly predicting Israel's imminent demise and Israel leading the calls for greater international efforts, including wideranging trade sanctions, to thwart Iran's nuclear program. EnergiaNews.com reported that the oil was being transported and purchased through one of the world's largest commercial ports, Rotterdam.

"This is well known around the world," said Moshe Shalev, the editor of EnergiaNews and the author of the article. Shalev said that after the oil is purchased through a third party, the Haifa-based oil company, Eilat-Ashkelon Pipeline, stores it and then moves it to Bazan, Israel's largest oil refinery, also located in Haifa, to prepare it for commercial consumption.

Shalev cited a source with ties to Bazan as initially leaking the story. He maintained that the Eilat-Ashkelon Pipeline has Iranian ties dating back to the time of the shah.

The National Infrastructures Ministry initially flatly denied any such supply route. Spokesman Assaf Azoulai told the Post, "Every oil shipment to Israel comes with certification as to where it's from, and Israel is not purchasing oil from Iran."

But Azoulai subsequently told the Post, "We buy oil from the biggest producers in the world, and there's no way of knowing where it comes from." Nonetheless, he still maintained, the "rumor" of Israel buying Iranian oil was "nonsense."

In a written reply to the Post, an Eilat-Ashkelon Pipeline spokeswoman denied the EnergiaNews claim that her company buys oil at all, stating that it only provides "logistical services at the port and assists in the transportation of oil."

The Eilat-Ashkelon Pipeline was set up to transport oil from the shah's Iran to Israel. Such trade dated back to the 1950s, but the pipeline was opened in 1968 to ease the supply. Iranian oil, which was shipped to Eilat, was both consumed in Israel and transported on to Europe. After Iran's Islamic revolution in 1979, all direct contacts with Israel - oil deals included - were severed.

A spokesman for Bazan also categorically rejected the idea that his company uses oil originating in Iran. "That's absolutely not true," he said. "We know where all of our oil comes from, and none of it comes from Iran. It is all labeled and orderly. We are not buying oil from Iran, period."

A spokeswoman at the Iranian Embassy in London also distanced the Islamic Republic from any such supply. "I can confirm that Iran has no deal with a company having anything to do with Israel," she told the Post.

But echoing Shahal's explanation, world oil market specialist Shmuel Even said that Israel may very well be making such purchases indirectly.

"Oil is a commodity, like gold," he said. "You can buy it from anybody and sell it to everybody. It's quite possible that Israeli companies are buying oil in Europe which originated in Iran. But it's not official, it's on the free market, and I don't think it's a political issue."

The harbor master at Rotterdam Port, T. Selegars, said that both Iranian and Israeli ships came through his port, and that the Iranians were depositing shipments of crude oil there.

"A hundred million tons of oil are transported through the port every year, and ships come through from all over the world," he said. "Iranian ships are bringing oil to Rotterdam, and it is theoretically possible that oil is transported from here to Israel."

After the EnergiaNews piece was first published, in March, an oped article in the UK's Guardian newspaper termed the alleged Israel-Iran connection the "definition of hypocrisy" given Israel's call for heightened economic pressure on Teheran.

The story was also cited by the Swiss newspaper Sonntag after Israel complained that the Swiss foreign minister's March visit to Iran and subsequent signing of a multi-billion euro contract for natural gas was an "act unfriendly to Israel."

Quoting an "energy expert from one of the leading Israeli papers," the Swiss report stated, "Israel has been importing Iranian oil for many years." That article went on to mention that the purchases were made on the free market and not directly from Iran.

This article can also be read at http://www.jpost.com /servlet/Satellite?cid=1212659723371&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Guess you never bother to even read Israeli sites on-line?  Add this one from DEBKAfile posted on August 8, 2008

Israel backs Georgia in Caspian Oil Pipeline Battle with Russia
DEBKAfile Exclusive Report
August 8, 2008, 4:26 PM (GMT+02:00)

Georgian tanks and infantry, aided by Israeli military advisers, captured the capital of breakaway South Ossetia, Tskhinvali, early Friday, Aug. 8, bringing the Georgian-Russian conflict over the province to a military climax.
Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin threatened a “military response.”

Former Soviet Georgia called up its military reserves after Russian warplanes bombed its new positions in the renegade province.

In Moscow’s first response to the fall of Tskhinvali, president Dimitry Medvedev ordered the Russian army to prepare for a national emergency after calling the UN Security Council into emergency session early Friday.
Reinforcements were rushed to the Russian “peacekeeping force” present in the region to support the separatists.

Georgian tanks entered the capital after heavy overnight heavy aerial strikes, in which dozens of people were killed.

Lado Gurgenidze, Georgia's prime minister, said on Friday that Georgia will continue its military operation in South Ossetia until a "durable peace" is reached. "As soon as a durable peace takes hold we need to move forward with dialogue and peaceful negotiations."

DEBKAfile’s geopolitical experts note that on the surface level, the Russians are backing the separatists of S. Ossetia and neighboring Abkhazia as payback for the strengthening of American influence in tiny Georgia and its 4.5 million inhabitants. However, more immediately, the conflict has been sparked by the race for control over the pipelines carrying oil and gas out of the Caspian region.

The Russians may just bear with the pro-US Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvili’s ambition to bring his country into NATO. But they draw a heavy line against his plans and those of Western oil companies, including Israeli firms, to route the oil routes from Azerbaijan and the gas lines from Turkmenistan, which transit Georgia, through Turkey instead of hooking them up to Russian pipelines.

Saakashvili need only back away from this plan for Moscow to ditch the two provinces’ revolt against Tbilisi. As long as he sticks to his guns, South Ossetia and Abkhazia will wage separatist wars.

DEBKAfile discloses Israel’s interest in the conflict from its exclusive military sources:

Jerusalem owns a strong interest in Caspian oil and gas pipelines reach the Turkish terminal port of Ceyhan, rather than the Russian network. Intense negotiations are afoot between Israel Turkey, Georgia, Turkmenistan and Azarbaijan for pipelines to reach Turkey and thence to Israel’s oil terminal at Ashkelon and on to its Red Sea port of Eilat.From there, supertankers can carry the gas and oil to the Far East through the Indian Ocean.

Aware of Moscow’s sensitivity on the oil question, Israel offered Russia a stake in the project but was rejected.

Last year, the Georgian president commissioned from private Israeli security firms several hundred military advisers, estimated at up to 1,000, to train the Georgian armed forces in commando, air, sea, armored and artillery combat tactics. They also offer instruction on military intelligence and security for the central regime. Tbilisi also purchased weapons, intelligence and electronic warfare systems from Israel.

These advisers were undoubtedly deeply involved in the Georgian army’s preparations to conquer the South Ossetian capital Friday.

In recent weeks, Moscow has repeatedly demanded that Jerusalem halt its military assistance to Georgia, finally threatening a crisis in bilateral relations. Israel responded by saying that the only assistance rendered Tbilisi was “defensive.”

This has not gone down well in the Kremlin. Therefore, as the military crisis intensifies in South Ossetia, Moscow may be expected to punish Israel for its intervention.

http://debka.com/article_print.php?aid=1358

Yet another map is included on the link.

Reading can be such an advantage, particularly in a discussion of foreign policy as do maps.




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« Reply #53 on: August 17, 2008, 06:03:58 PM »

This news is a week old. Georgian POV are forced to clean the city from the rubble and destroyed arms.
No law prohibits this.
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« Reply #54 on: August 17, 2008, 08:48:30 PM »

Ha! Cass, always centering every conflict around Israel?
He is a member of stromfront.org so in your place i wouldn't wonder why he somehow manages to stick Israel to any shithole around the world.
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« Reply #55 on: August 18, 2008, 02:36:11 PM »

Cass

I'v been reading the whole articles. Yet I still wonder why you posted them.
The first is irrelevant (it's talking of some Iran oil being purchased indirectly by israel - Interrsting but nothing to do with the Georgian conflict)

The second is plain BS: Why would Israel be behind a conflict which precisely shut down the pipeline supposed to bring them oil?
It's Shaakashvili who attacked Ossetia first and it was very bad for the multinational consortium operating the pipeline. Probably for that reason Shaakashvili didn't get the US support he expected. he goofed with oil and now the West arranged a cease-fire behind his back.
Secondly, the article pretends to let me believe that Israel would have been involved in a conflict AGAINST Russia? And about oil on top of that? Come on...

The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline is providing oil to a wide range of countries, via a wide range of companies, each owning from 2 to 12% stakes in the pipeline.
Israel is at best a small partner here. Israel uses maybe 0.3% of this oil. And you talk as if the pipeline was build for them. Absurd.
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« Reply #56 on: August 18, 2008, 09:19:00 PM »

Fred the point was Israel like most any other issue in the region is head over heels involved with both arms and oil with both the Georgian government as they they are with Russia.  At times it takes a little effort to read and as a  result connect the dots.  In this case they may get screwed from a number of directions. The U.S., Russian and
they've already hauled the arms dealers out of Georgia.  There are many sources showing the oil and arms involvement, but if one choose to live in denial of reality, there isn't much I can do other than ask you to read and make the effort to understand some complex issues.  See if you can figure out what is going on here and see if you think Israel might be involved.

Back-door US-Russian contacts to de-escalate war of words - after Moscow threatens to nuke Poland
DEBKAfile Special Report and Analysis
August 16, 2008, 9:02 AM (GMT+02:00)
DEBKAfile reports that both powers have begun acting to cool the rhetoric and review relations, after spokesmen in Washington - and especially Moscow - raised the threat level of their oratory to its highest pitch since the Cold War’s end.

Friday night, Aug. 15, Russia’s deputy chief of staff Gen. Anatoly Nogovitsyn warned Poland it was “exposing itself to a strike 100 percent.”

He said any new US assets in Europe could come under Russian nuclear attack. Russian forces would target “the allies of countries having nuclear weapons” to destroy them “as a first priority,” said Gen. Nogovitsyn.
At the Black Sea resort of Sochi, Russian president Dimitry Medvedev dismissed the claim that the US missile interceptors in Poland were a deterrent against rogue states like Iran as “a fairy tale,” insisting they were aimed against Russia. Warsaw, which will receive 10 batteries in return for American aid to boost its air defenses, later invited Russia to visit the site and see for itself.

President George W. Bush said "The Cold War is over… Bullying and intimidation are not acceptable ways to conduct foreign policy in the 21st century."

He said Russia’s invasion of Georgia had damaged its credibility and the US stands with the people of Georgia and called for the withdrawal of “invading forces from all Georgian territory.”

Russian and Georgian presidents have both signed the ceasefire brokered by France. But Russian troops and tanks and marauding irregulars in the areas under their control had still not left Georgia by Saturday Saturday. Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said extra security arrangements needed to be put in place before a withdrawal could begin, in defiance of US demand that Russian troops leave immediately.

After meeting German chancellor Angela Merkel, Medvedev said he could not see South Ossetia and Abkhazia living with Georgia in one state.”

US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice persuaded Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvili to sign on the dotted line Friday night. DEBKAfile’s political sources report that, as in most cases when international tensions and violence reach dangerous levels, the big powers have instituted secret diplomacy to cool the situation before it gets out of hand in order to formulate new modes of conduct and relations.
This process began with Rice’s visit to France and Tbilsi.

And then add this one.

Russia considers nuclear missiles for Syria, Mediterranean, Baltic
DEBKAfile Special Report

August 17, 2008, 9:25 AM (GMT+02:00)
DEBKAfile's military sources report Moscow's planned retaliation for America's missile interceptors in Poland and US-Israeli military aid to Georgia may come in the form of installing Iskandar surface missiles in Syria and its Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad.

Russian Baltic and Middle East warships, submarines and long-range bombers may be armed with nuclear warheads, according to Sunday newspapers in Europe.

In Georgia, Russian troops and tanks advanced to within 30 km of Tbilisi Saturday, Aug. 15. A Russian general said Sunday they had started pulling out after president Dimitry Medvedev signed the ceasefire agreement with Georgia and president George W. Bush called again for an immediate withdrawal.

After routing Georgia over the breakaway enclaves of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Moscow appears to be eying Poland, the Middle East, and possibly Ukraine, as the main arenas for its reprisals.

One plan on the table in Moscow, DEBKAfile's sources report, is the establishment of big Russian military, naval and air bases in Syria and the release of advanced weapons systems withheld until now to Iran (the S-300 air-missile defense system) and Syria (the nuclear-capable 200 km-range Iskandar surface missile).

Shortly before the Georgian conflict flared, Moscow promised Washington not to let Iran and Syria have these sophisticated pieces of hardware.

The Iskander's cruise attributes make its launch and trajectory extremely hard to detect and intercept. If this missile reaches Syria, Israel will have to revamp its anti-missile defense array and Air Force assault plans for the third time in two years, as it constitutes a threat which transcends all its defensive red lines.

Moscow's war planners know this and are therefore considering new sea and air bases in Syria as sites for the Iskander missiles. Russia would thus keep the missiles under its hand and make sure they were not transferred to Iran. At the same time, Syrian crews would be trained in their operation.

DEBKAfile's military sources report Syrian president Bashar Assad will be invited to Moscow soon to finalize these plans in detail.

Military spokesmen in Moscow said Saturday and Sunday that Russian military planners to started redesigning the nation’s strategic plans for a fitting response to America's decision to install 10 missile interceptors in Poland and the war developments in Georgia.

The chairman of the Israeli Knesset foreign affairs and defense committee, Tzahi Hanegbi, spoke out strongly Sunday, Aug. 17, against treasury plans to slash the defense budget. He warned that the military faced grave confrontations in the coming year - possibly on several fronts.

In five hours of arm-twisting, she persuaded Saakashvili to accept clarifications to the ceasefire accord which contradict Washington’s spirited assurances for Georgia’s “territorial integrity.”

Russian troops allowed to remain in Georgia would be “very limited to a light patrolling ability, such as a few kilometers outside of South Ossetia, not the right to maintain a presence inside Georgia.”

Furthermore, “Russian peacekeepers” would be allowed to “implement additional security measures” until international security can be put in place.

This clause authorizes on behalf of the US and Europe the narrow security strips, which DEBKAfile’s military sources revealed two days ago the Russians are establishing 300-500 meters deep outside the South Ossetian and Abkhazian borders with Georgia.

This American concession was designed as initial impetus for quiet diplomacy with Russia on a settlement in Georgia.

The other concession, which will unfold in time, is the removal of the Georgian president, another of Moscow’s conditions for ending the crisis. It is hard to see Saakasvhili surviving the outcry at home when the extent of his military and diplomatic failures is revealed to his people.

Furthermore, his highly charged speech Friday was watched with pursed lips by Condoleezza Rice and clearly embarrassed his sponsors in Washington. While Bush declared the Cold War is over, Saakashvili heaped verbal coals on the standoff with Russia to keep it ablaze.

Could it be that after Georgia decided to "tweak the bear" and Bush decided to put missiles in Poland and the
Ukraine, Israel might not want nuclear missiles in Syria an a Russian flotilla off their coast.  Looks to me like they're caught in the middle or up that creek without a paddle.  Just my opinion.

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« Reply #57 on: August 19, 2008, 08:59:15 AM »

instead of posting anti Israeli propaganda you could spend some time learning how to post!
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« Reply #58 on: August 19, 2008, 12:12:07 PM »

Cass
How long are your going to post articles which are less and less relevant to your claims of Israel involvement?
This string of articles which you post and which I read is going nowhere. Yourself, you are not able to say something coherent. It's so vague and confusing, that I still don't know what we have to open our eyes upon.
One article said that Israel had hundreds of military instructors in Georia, which from all evidences is not true.
And I still don't know what Israel would do there. Israel which is struggling with Hezbullah and Hamas, certainly won't want to mess with Russia for some inter-village vendettas in Georgia...

mdma
Cass is "she", not "he".
She has a prodigious imagination, but I can't follow it, it's too far fetched this time...

« Last Edit: August 19, 2008, 12:17:48 PM by Fredledingue » Logged

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