Bush to Putin, "Get
out now!". Putin to Bush, "Nyet!"
By Mike Whitney
21/08/08 "ICH"
-- - When Vladimir Putin heard President Bush demand
that Russian troops "leave Georgia territory immediately",
he did what any sensible leader of a great nation would do;
he yawned, scratched his belly and ambled over to the
Kremlin frig to see if there were any left-overs from last
night's imperial banquet with the French dignitaries. He may
have even smiled wistfully to himself as he peered over the
Chicken Kiev and the Siberian cutlets, thinking, "Nyet,
George; South Ossetia's future is no longer negotiable".
The illusion created by the western media, is that Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Putin are
hanging on every word that emerges from the White House and
gaging their strategy accordingly. Wrong. In fact, they're
not even listening; they can't be bothered. Whatever Bush
says is irrelevant. Who cares? Not Putin, that's for sure.
Moscow is working out the details of its so-called
"withdrawal plans" with the United Nations, not Washington.
Bush isn't even a part of the process; he has no say-so at
all. None. His fulminations might add a few toxins to the
jet stream, but other than that, they make no difference at
all. Putin is in the driver's seat now.
American's are convinced that their activities in the world
still matter. That's because Americans are marinated in a
culture of narcissism. In truth, "American exceptionalism"
is just a misunderstanding of one's own basic
insignificance. The dust-up in South Ossetia will help
dispel some of those illusions and clarify what little
influence the US really has. Bush demagoguery and
foot-stomping won't change a thing; he's wasting his time.
This is Russia' backyard. They'll decide the outcome. Bush
should stop his jabbering and mind his own business.
And, no; there won't be a war
with Russia; that's all just more handwringing speculation
from liberal pundits. It's pure rubbish. The Bush
administration will do what US policymakers always do when
faced with a well-armed adversary; thrust their sabers into
the air and rattle them ferociously while beating a hasty
retreat. "Cut and run" is not a neocon bullet-point; it's a
summary of 60 years of foreign policy. In fact, the US and
its good friend, Israel, sing from the same hymnal; they
love blasting-away at defenseless women and children in Gaza
or Falluja, but stear-clear of the guys with guns and
rocket-launchers. Israel lost a mere 118 men in its 34 Day
war with Hezbollah before they decided to pack it in and go
home. Putin knows that; that's why he's been sending
anti-aircraft weaponry to Iran hoping it will dissuade
Israel from doing something foolish, like blowing up what's
left of the Middle East. And, it's a good plan, too. Bush
and Olmert have already shown that moral considerations
don't make a bit of difference; what matters is weapons and
men who know how to use them.
Now that the Russian army is in South Ossetia, Bush,
Cheney, Rice have been getting madder and more frustrated by
the day. "Get out now or face the consequences", they growl.
But, Putin, with obvious disdain, just shrugs his shoulders
and says, "Make me".
Everyone in the world knows what's going on. They can see
that Putin has drawn a line in the sand and is openly
challenging American credibility. This is the perfect
opportunity for Bush to prove that he's really the War
President he says he is and not just a cardboard-cutout
fraudster. He can show those smug Ruskis who's really the
boss. After all, he has Putin's address, doesn't he? He can
order his war machine to turn north and head for Georgia,
guns blazing. What's stopping him?
South Ossetia is a tipping point; the culmination of 8
years of persistent violence and aggression. It is the
moment of truth. Now we'll see what the real 'governing
principle' of the administration's foreign policy is: is it
the Bush Doctrine or the Wimp Doctrine? Many of the pundits
and analysts are convinced that Bush and his clatter of
gangsters will lead us into WW3, but it won't happen. It's
just more hot air. There are more chickens in the Bush White
House than there are at a KFC Poultry Farm. They're only too
eager to send some other mother's sons to fight their wars,
but they'd never risk losing anything themselves. Go ahead
George; you're the war president, President. Show the world
those aren't Lima beans hanging between your legs. Let's see
what you got?
Bush isn't going to send American troops in South Ossetia.
No way. This is a man who won't peep his head out of the
White House without 8,000 armed guards shadowing his every
move and a small squadron of Apache Helicopters flying
overhead. A guy like that isn't about to take on the Russian
army. Forget about it. Bush will do all his fighting from
the safety of the Executive Media Center where he can duck
behind the Presidential podium if a car backfires on
Pennsylvania Ave. That's his kind of fighting.
NOTES FROM LIBERATED SOUTH OSSETIA
Was the War in the Caucasus was the work of the Neocons?
Some people think so; and they could be right. Putin may
have just been playing a role that was written in
Washington. Does that sound crazy?
A few months ago, Putin rejected Bush's unilateral
declaration of Kosovo's independence. Serbia is a
traditional ally of Russia's and Putin has no intention of
allowing it to be split up by Washington. Bush's
proclamation was a violation of the UN Charter. No one has
the right to simply ignore national sovereignty and carve up
another country as they see fit. The UN never approved the
initiative, but Bush went ahead anyway to satisfy the global
ambitions of his neocon base.
So Putin did what any reasonable leader would do; he
convened a meeting of his foreign policy team--many of them
Soviet-era hardliners who warned him that the US could not
be trusted--and decided on a plan to annex South Ossetia.
(which he said he would do if Bush declared Kosovo
independent) As it turns out, Israeli advisers in Georgia,
wanted to strike a deal with Putin over the high-tech
weapons systems that Russia had been selling to Iran. So (I
believe) Putin made a deal with Israel to suspend arms-sales
to Iran if Israel would trick the dim-witted Saakashvili
into invading South Ossetia. That would set the stage for a
Russian counter-attack and de facto annexation. Good plan,
eh?
The question is; would friends of the neocons agree to
pull the wool over Saakashvili's eyes to stop Putin's
weapons shipments to Iran? No one knows for sure, but the
degree of Russian preparedness before the counter-attack
suggests that they had been tipped-off by people close to
Saakashvili. Who would that be? Maybe someone who had
something to gain, right?
Consider this excerpt from George Friedman's article for
Stratfor, "The Russo-Georgian War and the Balance of Power":
"The United States maintained about 130 military advisers
in Georgia, along with civilian advisers, contractors
involved in all aspects of the Georgian government and
people doing business in Georgia. It is inconceivable that
the Americans were unaware of Georgia’s mobilization and
intentions. It is also inconceivable that the Americans were
unaware that the Russians had deployed substantial forces on
the South Ossetian frontier. U.S. technical intelligence,
from satellite imagery and signals intelligence to unmanned
aerial vehicles, could not miss the fact that thousands of
Russian troops were moving to forward positions. The
Russians clearly knew the Georgians were ready to move. How
could the United States not be aware of the Russians?
Indeed, given the posture of Russian troops, how could
intelligence analysts have missed the possibility that the
Russians had laid a trap, hoping for a Georgian invasion to
justify its own counterattack?"
For the United States, the Middle East is far more important
than the Caucasus, and Iran is particularly important. The
United States wants the Russians to participate in sanctions
against Iran. Even more importantly, they do not want the
Russians to sell weapons to Iran, particularly the highly
effective S-300 air defense system. Georgia is a marginal
issue to the United States; Iran is a central issue. The
Russians are in a position to pose serious problems for the
United States not only in Iran, but also with weapons sales
to other countries, like Syria." (George Friedman, "The
Russo-Georgian War and the Balance of Power", Stratfor)
Friedman's summary makes the "neocon theory" seem all the
more plausible. A quid pro quo with Putin would have been
the only way to guarantee that Iran would not get its hands
on critical defensive weaponry. Certainly, the neocons must
have taken that into consideration. All they had to do was
hoodwink Saakashvili and Putin would do the rest. No
problemo. The outcome, however, has created a few unintended
consequences. The Bush administration's chances of securing
access to the oil-rich Caspian Basin or of gaining NATO
membership for Georgia are now nil. America's gambit in
Central Asia just made an unexpected crash landing.
Of course, there's no way to verify this theory without
someone stepping forward and corroborating the details. But
wherever there's trouble, there's bound to be a few neocon
fingerprints somewhere.
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