Why Are We Baiting the Bear?
Is the Senate trying to reignite the Cold War?
If so, it is going about it the right way.
Before departing for a five-week vacation, the Senate voted to declare Abkhazia and South Ossetia to be provinces of Georgia illegally occupied by Russian troops who must get out and return to Russia.
The Senate voice vote was unanimous.
What is wrong with Senate Resolution 175?
Just this. Neither Abkhazia nor South Ossetia has been under Georgian control for 20 years. When Georgia seceded from Russia, these ethnic enclaves rebelled and seceded from Georgia.
Abkhazians and Ossetians both view the Tbilisi regime of Mikhail Saakashvili, though a favorite of Washington, with contempt, and both have lately declared formal independence.
Who are we to demand that they return to the rule of Tbilisi?
In co-sponsoring S.R. 175, Sen. Lindsey Graham contended that “Russia’s invasion of Georgian land in 2008 was an act of aggression, not only to Georgia but to all new democracies.”
This is neocon propaganda. Russian troops are in those enclaves because in August 2008 Georgia invaded South Ossetia to re-annex it, and they killed and wounded scores of Russian peacekeepers. Tbilisi’s invasion brought the Russian army on the run, which threw the Georgians out and occupied slices of Georgia itself.
While the Russian troops withdrew from Georgian territory, they remained in Abkhazia and South Ossetia as a deterrent to Saakashvili, whose agents have been working Capitol Hill to push the United States into a confrontation with Russia on Georgia’s side.
S.R. 175, the work of Graham and Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, declares it to be U.S. policy “to recognize Abkhazia and South Ossetia as regions of Georgia occupied by the Russian Federation.” But the Russians are far more welcome there than are the Georgians.
Twice the Georgians have been expelled by force. Both times, Ossetians and Abkhazians helped throw them out. Why are we demanding that the Georgians be permitted to march back in and re-impose an alien rule that clearly is detested by these people? Is this the American spirit of ’76?
When the Senate says “regions of Georgia” are “occupied,” it implies that Russia seized the territories. But as a European Union investigation has confirmed, the 2008 war began with the Georgian invasion of South Ossetia.
And what business is all of this of the United States’?
Why are we provoking a Russia for whom the Caucasus — ablaze as it is with secessionism, Islamism, and terrorism — is a vital national interest?
Going on across this inflamed region are ethno-national struggles for self-determination, the resolution of which, 6,000 miles from the United States, is none of our concern. How would Abraham Lincoln have reacted had Czar Alexander II declared the Russian Empire was recognizing the independence of Virginia and demanding that the breakaway enclave of West Virginia be returned to Richmond?
Can we not see how hypocritical we appear?
When Kosovo, birthplace of Serbia, was being torn away by Albanian Muslims — and Serbs were fighting to hold on — Bill Clinton ordered Serbia bombed for 78 days and sent U.S. troops to occupy the breakaway province and plant a U.S. base there, Camp Bondsteel.
When we recognized Kosovo as independent, Russia recognized Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Is there not a certain symmetry here? And do we not have enough on our plate in Libya, Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Afghanistan, and Pakistan not to be telling Russians how they should behave in lands closer to them than Grenada or Cuba is to us?
The Russian city of Sochi on the Black Sea, which is to host the 2014 Winter Olympics, is as close to Abkhazia as Dulles Airport is to Washington, D.C.
East of Sochi lie Ingushetia and Dagestan, targets of terrorist attacks by Islamists seeking to create a caliphate. Moscow’s subways and Domodedovo Airport have been hit by terrorist bombs out of the Caucasus. In the airport attack, 35 were killed and 100 injured.
President Dmitry Medvedev, who has been friendly to the United States and gave the order to Russia’s army to reverse the Georgia invasion, describes the Caucasus as the greatest threat Russia faces.
Why are we siding with Georgia, a nation of 5 million, against a Russia that seems to be on the side of self-determination? And when we recall how JFK and Ronald Reagan reacted when Russians were meddling in Cuba and Central America, can we not understand their resentment?
Medvedev believes that Saakashvili launched his 2008 attack after a visit by Condoleezza Rice, during which he may have been flashed a green light. Russia’s foreign minister believes that the Senate resolution backing Georgia has created a “revanchist mood” in Tbilisi.
If there is another invasion of Georgia and a new war, the U.S. Senate will not be without major moral responsibility. Is there to be no end to this country’s meddling in other nations’ quarrels and wars?
COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM
Read more by Patrick J. Buchanan
- A Decade of War – for What? – May 3rd, 2012
- Tomorrow’s Man – or Yesterday’s? – April 26th, 2012
- Bibi’s Dilemma — and Barack’s – April 16th, 2012
- Is the GOP Becoming a War Party? – March 8th, 2012
- Will Bibi Break Obama? – March 1st, 2012





Johnny in Wi.
August 22nd, 2011 at 10:35 pm
The only way to stop this is to put someone in office who will bring our troops home to their families. The world can defend itself. They are big boys now. Ron Paul is the soldiers best friend. Ron Paul is tied with Obama in a statistical dead heat in the Gallup Poll. That means that the guy who has been called a kook and a joke by the media is in the catbird seat for President. The other four leading candidates including Obama are braindead hacks who haven't got clue how to do the job. Ron Paul does his own thinking. The others are run by pollsters and handlers. Ron Paul is the only one not run by the Israeli Lobby. SEND THEM A MESSAGE: VOTE RON PAUL FOR PEACE AND PROSPERITY.
the lion
August 22nd, 2011 at 11:40 pm
How often have we heard the Words, UN Peacekeepers are USELESS? well in 2008 Georgia attacked South Ossetia, Georgia also attacked Russian troops on the Russian Border. ( I wonder how these Senators would feel if someone shelled the United States?) Russian Peacekeepers didnt stand by and watch, they responded! They repulsed the Georgians from Sth Ossetia, and entered Georgia, where they took the main east west Highway to stop flanking Manoevers and territory for 40 miles. The range of the Georgian Artillery and Rockets, Russia didnt take the Oil Pipeline a few more miles south, it had nothing to do with Peacekeeping. Now it also must be remembered that Russia had the Formal Job as UN peacekeepers and they still do, a job that is renewed every year in the UN Security council, where the United States has a veto if it didnt want Russia to have that Authority!
Emilyrose
August 23rd, 2011 at 12:16 am
Lets get down to the root of the problem.
Georgia ia little more then Israeli controlled Georgia.
Many of those behind the attack on South Ossetia, both political and even military were dual Israeli/Georgian citizens.
This Senate proposition is nothing more than another example of Israeli paid for American politicians obeying their masters in Tel Aviv.
In many ways it is more a problem for the American people than for the Russians.
They know what they are dealing with and dealing with, as Russians.
The American people are bought and sold, have a Government acting on behalf of a foreign power, are continually lied to, and haven't the wit to do something about it.
The caucasus – the reborn Khazaria.
Long may the Russsians protect the planet against it, another potential abomination like that shitty little strip of occupied land on the West of Palestine.
Simon Saivil
August 23rd, 2011 at 2:52 am
Mr. Buchanan is a rather unprincipled opportunist. His "defence" of Ossetia and Abkhazia is a wilted fig leaf:
"….Just this. Neither Abkhazia nor South Ossetia has been under Georgian control for 20 years. When Georgia seceded from Russia, these ethnic enclaves rebelled and seceded from Georgia…."
This is exactly what happened in Yugoslavia 20 years ago: Croatia under US/NATO/EU tutelage broke away from Yugoslavia. The Serbs of Croatia, in turn, broke away from Croatia. Mr. Buchanan was a co-host of the Crossfire on CNN at the time. He was a big supporter of Croatian secession and dismantling of Yugoslavia, referring to the Croatian insurgency cum secession as a "healthy nationalism." For what were the Serbs to him that he should cry for them!
The problem with written and recorded statements is that they can be retrieved and quoted. Mr. Buchanan should not assume that the readers are too indifferent to remember.
Ian
August 23rd, 2011 at 5:30 am
Buchanan still having difficult coming clean:
"Can we not see how hypocritical we appear? "
No, we are hypocritical and have been so a long time.Appearance of hypocrisy is the least of our problems.
"East of Sochi lie Ingushetia and Dagestan, targets of terrorist attacks by Islamists seeking to create a caliphate."
Any sightings of Saladin in the Caucasus ?
plumbob
August 23rd, 2011 at 5:31 am
The explanation is quite simple. There are three men the Neocons (read Israel) cannot buy and control and therefore hate with a passion. These three men are Vladimir Putin, Hugo Chavez and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who have all informed Israel that they can stick their money where the sun don't shine because they don't want it or need it. Therefore AIPAC (who controls congress) lashes out in rage and frustration at Putin by instructing the US Senate to pass Senate Resolution 175.
omop
August 23rd, 2011 at 5:37 am
Mr Buchanan's commentary adheres to the truism made by Winston Churchill many years ago as to "the farther backward one can look, the farther forward one can see". In now way though does he claim that one does not repeat historical disasters.
Generalissimo X
August 23rd, 2011 at 7:24 am
why are we baiting the bear? because a bunch of straussian neoncon zionist slimeballs are hell bent are starting wwIII. now that they've destroyed our republic and economy, the world is next.
Jay
August 23rd, 2011 at 8:06 am
"How would Abraham Lincoln have reacted had Czar Alexander II declared the Russian Empire was recognizing the independence of Virginia and demanding that the breakaway enclave of West Virginia be returned to Richmond?"
Buchanan is completely correct in his other analyses, but in this case the Czar did meddle in support of the Union side and sent Russia's entire Atlantic and Pacific fleets to New York and San Francisco. Russia was the first foreign nation to support the Union.
Jay
August 23rd, 2011 at 8:16 am
An alternate explanation is one that is as old as the magician's misdirection. By focusing on Georgia, the federal Congress doesn't have to focus on Israel. Reasonable people would think that establishing the principle of secession for Kosovo would settle the principle of statehood for the Palestinians and the principle of self-determination for Ossetia and Abkhazia. Alas, this is not to be. The principles of reciprocity and universalism have little value in today's corrupt world.
So let's all look at Ossetia and Abkhazia, and ignore Palestine.
RickR30
August 23rd, 2011 at 8:43 am
If there were nothing for Congress to do, it'd still ignore Palestine. Which may not be a bad thing. If it were to focus on it, all it would do is issue statements of support to israel and give the israelis more money and weapons to kill Palestinians.
RickR30
August 23rd, 2011 at 8:46 am
Putin is the neocons' enemy and by demonizing him and Russia they awaken Cold War resentments present in all those old bastards in the Senate who've been sitting there consuming tax payer money since before the Bolshevik revolution.
AntiFed1791
August 23rd, 2011 at 9:06 am
Here we go again. This is so Brzezinski. The guy only knows one opening chess move. ….sigh.
ML3
August 23rd, 2011 at 9:47 am
Is Saakashvilli a dictator puppet of the West? Is this like his 6th year as President? He's been known to blackout the media when it suits him – and he seems like an aggressive, obnoxious liar with his hand out for favors.
Maybe Caesar Obama should invoke R2P before does any more harm to Abkhazians, South Ossetians, Russians, or Georgians.
Emilyrose
August 23rd, 2011 at 10:01 am
And Kosovo.
Whilst maintaining the massive Camp Bondsteel on Chinese money.
Of course nothing must stand in the way of the biggest drug traffickers on the planet – the CIA and their quest for the 'black ops' budget.
Emilyrose
August 23rd, 2011 at 10:04 am
His main puppet master is Israel.
John_Muhammad
August 23rd, 2011 at 10:46 am
"" Medvedev believes that Saakashvili launched his 2008 attack after a visit by Condoleezza Rice, during which he may have been flashed a green light. ""
A 'Green Light' for an invasion? We've also heard this before, and it was connected with Saddam Hussein getting a 'green light' from the US to invade Kuwait. We got our money's worth out of that one, as it gave us an excuse to crush Iraq in the following years.
Get out your checkbooks, boys- there's about to be a base-building boom in Georgia.
Chris Herz
August 23rd, 2011 at 2:32 pm
Operations by the USA and NATO, not only in Georgia but also in the 'Stans are indeed aimed at imperial expansion into these regions — at Russia's expense.
Sometimes I wonder if these Einsteins in Washington know how to read a map.