Humint Events Online: Shafted by Bushco

Monday, August 11, 2008

Shafted by Bushco

One soldier, his face a mask of exhaustion, cradled a Kalashnikov.

“We killed as many of them as we could,” he said. “But where are our friends?”


It was the question of the day. As Russian forces massed Sunday on two fronts, Georgians were heading south with whatever they could carry. When they met Western journalists, they all said the same thing: Where is the United States? When is NATO coming?

Since the conflict began, Western leaders have worked frantically to broker a cease-fire. But for Georgians — so boisterously pro-American that Tbilisi, the capital, has a George W. Bush Street — diplomacy fell far short of what they expected.

Even in the hinterlands, at kebab stands and in farming villages, people fleeing South Ossetia saw themselves as trapped between great powers. Ossetian refugees heading north to Russia gushed their gratitude to Dmitri A. Medvedev and Vladimir V. Putin, the Russian leaders. Georgians around Gori spoke of America plaintively, uncertainly. They were beginning to feel betrayed.
(snip)
“The biggest problem here is you, your country,” he said. “You said that the Soviets were an evil empire, but it’s you that are the empire.

“Not you personally, of course,” he added. “But your government.”

On the other side of the line of battle, Georgians had begun to question the strength of their alliance with the United States.

In recent years, Mr. Bush has lavished praise on Georgia — and the so-called Rose Revolution that brought Mikheil Saakashvili to power — as a model of democracy-building. The feeling was mutual: when Mr. Bush visited Tbilisi in 2005, the authorities estimated that 150,000 people showed up to see him. He famously climbed up on a platform and wiggled his hips to loud Georgian folk music.


More along these lines from Fred Kaplan.

Of course, this isn't the first time a Bush has egged on a conflict only to leave the would-be allies in the lurch.

Meanwhile, Condi Rice can't be bothered to interrupt her vacation to try to calm the situation.

Lastly, Chris Floyd has a bunch of good stuff to read on the Georgia issue: here, here, here.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

when the soviet union collapsed in the '90s, ossetia voted to remain a part of russia.
the us and israel have both supplied arms and advisors to georgia who then perpetrated a despicable pearl harbor-like sneak attack against ossetia, killing thousands of people.
it is amusing to watch the likes of fox *news* try to villify russia for their response to georgia's sneak attack whilst downplaying said sneak attack.

9:51 AM  

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