The Other Side of the Russo-Georgian War Story
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Submitted by: Kenn Jacobine ![]() Subscribe to this Author Paste this code into your site to promote this story! |
Type of Content: Article There has been a great deal of disinformation, ignoring of facts and downright lying on the part of the Bush Administration and members of the media this week pertaining to events in the Caucasus region. The Russo-Georgian War has really brought out the worst in the president and certain members of the so called “mainstream” media. For starters, as far as I can tell from my vantage point in Zambia, the western media generally has been remiss in detailing the historical facts as they relate to the conflict. The history behind a crisis is vitally important to ultimately determine who started the problem and what should be done to rectify it. Contrary to the views of President Bush and his media buddies, the Georgians, not the Russians are clearly at fault in this situation. As recently as yesterday the president said that South Ossetia and Abkhazia are a part of Georgia. Historically, both South Ossetia and Abkhazia have never been a part of Georgia except at times when they were made so by the force of an oppressor. This happened twice to South Ossetia - in the 18th Century when it was absorbed into Russia through an agreement with the Ottoman Empire and in the 1920s when the communists under Joseph Stalin made it a part of Georgia. As for Abkhazia, it was a separate entity historically until Stalin incorporated it into Georgia in 1931. Now, I don’t expect this president to know this since it would involve reading what he probably considers ancient history, but Bush should know that in the early 1990s after the Soviet Union fell apart there were two wars fought over South Ossetian and Abkhazian independence. Both peoples sought to rid themselves of the oppressive yolk placed upon them by their Soviet masters. A ceasefire agreement brought de facto independence to both South Ossetia and Abkhazia. A peacekeeping force largely made up of Russian troops was left responsible for maintaining order in the territories. With minor exceptions, order was in place until the night of August 7th 2008. On that night Georgian peacekeepers turned on their Russian comrades killing 10 and wounding dozens as Georgian president Saakashvili’s army invaded South Ossetia. According to the international news network Russia Today, the Georgian army began perpetrating a campaign of ethnic cleansing by assassinating clergy, shooting women and children in the streets and throwing grenades into random houses. These reports came complete with televised pictures of the carnage. As the Russians reacted to the aggression of the Georgians by coming to the aid of the defenseless South Ossetians, President Bush and his media cronies stirred up old Cold War sentiments in the U.S. by blasting the Russians for disproportionate use of force and imperialistic actions toward Georgia. In particular, Bush criticized Russian bombing of strategic locations inside Georgia even though this was precisely the same strategy his father pursued against Iraq to extract its army from Kuwait 17 years ago. In reality the Russian bombing was measured and incredibly effective. Saakashvili’s troops withdrew almost immediately from South Ossetia back to Georgia. It has been speculated that the Georgian president expected military support from the U.S. once he made his move into South Ossetia. Why else would he have attempted, foolishly, to fight a much bigger and better trained force and then blast the West after hostilities ended for not helping Georgia? In any event, after Georgian troops departed South Ossetia, Russian troops did pursue them into Georgia to put out any fire that was left in the Georgians to fight another day. This was a reasonable move given the U.S. did the same thing in Korea and Iraq (the road to Baghdad was a testament to the U.S. killing retreating Iraqi troops on Iraqi soil and the U.S. imposed no fly zone over two-thirds of Iraq after the war speaks for itself). Besides ignoring the history behind the crisis and giving the perception through fanning the flames of Cold War feelings that Russia was mostly to blame for the war, the president and his media cohorts have also left the impression that the U.S. alone is providing relief to the victims in the region. This is not true. Refugees from South Ossetia have taken shelter in hospitals, schools, and hastily organized camps in North Ossetia and Southern Russia. Additionally, Russia has pledged $400 million in aid to rebuild the region. Granted, with Saakashvili still in charge in Georgia probably no Russian money will make its way to Tbilisi. This brings us to another interesting aspect of the crisis omitted or denied by the president and his media comrades. Who is the president of Georgia, their ally, Mikhail Saakashvili? Who is this man that is American educated, fluent in English and slick in front of TV cameras? Well, many experts on Georgia believe he was the man most responsible for protests in Tbilisi last November because of his refusal to meet with opposition leaders, listen to criticism, and communicate with his people. You know all things that democratically elected leaders do. After the street protests fizzled down to several hundred protestors he was the man who dispersed them by employing police truncheons, rubber bullets, and tear gas. He also pulled the opposition television stations from the airwaves. Under international pressure, he did call for early elections, but they took place one month after the protests, which gave the opposition party no time to organize, and according to international observers were fraught with vote rigging. It’s no wonder Bush prefers to divert attention away from Saakashvili and on to the Russians. It’s allies like that that make some of our enemies look good. Lastly, there has been at least one incident of blatant dishonesty and one incident of cover-up in the coverage of the war by the U.S. media. Aleksandr Zhukov, a cameraman from the Russia Al-Yaum channel indicated that footage he shot of wrecked tanks and destroyed buildings in the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali was later used by CNN who then claimed it showed damage done by the Russian military in the Georgian town of Gori. This is clear dishonesty or at the very least incredibly shoddy journalism. The cover-up involved Fox News’ Shepard Smith interviewing young American Amanda Kokoava and her aunt who happened to be in Tskhinvali when the Georgians invaded. As the pair was retelling their firsthand account of the Georgian invasion for the TV audience, old Shep cut them off and went to a commercial break. After the break, they were cut off again as they attempted to again describe the brutality of the Georgian invasion. Perhaps Fox News needs to better screen their interviewees in the future? The bottom line is that it is one thing for a U.S. president to manipulate the facts to suit his policy; it is another thing for the media to help him do it. Life experience has taught me not to expect too much from this president or really any president for that matter. The media in a democracy serves a very important role in holding elected officials accountable. During the Russo-Georgian conflict the U.S. media has let us down by assisting the president in his campaign of disinformation, ignoring the facts and downright lying. If there is a second Cold War which results from the actions of this president during this conflict, the U.S. media will have to bear a large part of the blame for its complicity in the events leading to it. Kenn Jacobine teaches History and English for the American International School of Lusaka, Zambia. Send him email at lovesliberty@gmail.com.
Created 13 weeks 5 days ago
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The following is from an email I received from my friend, Dennis.
yep, sounds correct. i don't think the georgians were ethnic-cleansing though. russian media is goverment-controlled too, so that's where it came from. stereotypically speaking the georgian military are a bunch of hotheads so i doubt they had a humane plan for invasion.
the history here has a lot of parallels to california in 1800s. S.ossetia has a large russian-speaking russian-cultured population so naturally there is resistance to georgian rule. georgia may have democratic politics but it's still mostly run by fundamentalist highlanders. and when pressed against the wall s.ossetia will almost certainly accept annexation to russia as an autonomous republic.
stalin's cabinet was crazy - whatever rearrangements they did was for administrative purposes. i guess they figured ossetia was to small to account by itself and russia was already big enough, so off it goes to georgia.
as an ironic side note, during 1991 hostilities for independence, a guerilla army successfully fought in south ossetia, i'm pretty sure on russian behalf with russian training and hardware.
in 1993-94 they gained power in checnya and attempted to cleanse it of russians (as in killing thousands of civs)(which was ignored by russian media). when russian army rolled into grozny the chechen guerias totally wiped them out. superpowers forge their own enemies.
in the end i am sure the russian government's involvement has a lot to do with political/border control and natural resources.
BTW i was wrong about the chechen commander in s.ossetia - it was in dagestan. i've read a detailed russian webpage several months ago but can't find it now. wikipedia has a decent short overview:
http://en. wikipedia. org/wiki/Dzhokhar_Dudayev
In regard to a poll posted on CNN’s website, the Media Channel writes:
"Surprisingly, 92% of readers thought that the Russians were justified. Taking into account CNN’s boneheaded and overwhelmingly pro-Georgian coverage, the poll didn’t make any sense. Were sheepish CNN viewers actually using their brain? It didn’t seem likely. Well, the poll no longer appears on the site. It was taken down after charges of manipulation started surfacing. Apparently, Russian bloggers circulated the poll and called on Russians to let their voice be heard. And if there’s one thing CNN doesn’t like doing, it’s hearing what those damn Russkies have to say. CNN had no idea that this seemingly innocuous poll would demonstrate the huge rift in opinion between the West and Russia and underline the importance that information warfare has played in this conflict, not to mention show whom CNN was really rooting for."
Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal and he has written two very strong worded attacks against the Bush Administration regarding it's anti-Russian policy. This one is a must read:
The Neocons Do Georgia
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_3628.shtml