Good vid. I never understood the push to extend NATO right up to the border of Russia. It seems to me a complete provocation, not that Russia is right in this latest incident. The question now is what will the NATO states do about the old, new Russia? I don't think much as we have lost most, if not all, moral standing in the world.
Are you implying that Russia was wrong in this situation with Georgia? Or do you mean that you don't want to be perceived as saying Russia was right because you have not yet reached a firm opinion?
As I understand it there is a providence in North Georgia that is more closely aligned w/Russia than Georgia. The squabble began there and Russia has now extended the fight (invasion) into Georgia, which is a sovereign nation. Behind it all is oil and what appears to be a more nationalistic Russia flexing it's muscle.
The Georgians are an embarrassment here. Either the Russian armed forces have gotten way better recently or the Chechens were some really world-class guerrilla fighters. It took Russia YEARS and TWO INVASIONS to finally quell that rebellion. That's why Putin became so popular. He finally "won" there. And I suppose it is why the so-called "West" (Illuminati, I call this concept) thought he would be more cooperative in its phony, false-flag-spurred "Global War on Terror."
The pathetic Georgian president who went to law school in the U.S. has single-handedly turned me against Georgia, not that I had much sympathy with them to begin with. He is a total joke. He almost makes the Chimp look good. If he wants to be part of "The West," he should have stayed in New York. Even George Soros has got to be $h!ttin' his britches over how awful this guy is.
As I understand it there is a providence in North Georgia that is more closely aligned w/Russia than Georgia. The squabble began there and Russia has now extended the fight (invasion) into Georgia, which is a sovereign nation. Behind it all is oil and what appears to be a more nationalistic Russia flexing it's muscle.
North Georgia or better known for the past 26 years as South Ossetia won de facto independence in a war against Georgia that ended in 1992 [ Wash Post]. South Ossetia strongly identifies with Russia - I mean that in a good way to Russia - the South Ossetians like and want Russia in their lives - its population speak Russian; South Ossetia uses Russian currency, and the people of South Ossetia have Russian passports issued to them for travel. Russia has had peacekeepers in the buffer zone between Georgia and South Ossetia for years.
But because of South Ossetia's emerging profile as related to positioning of oil pipelines and the desire of DC/Tel Aviv to re-route oil pipelines to bypass Russia via Turkey, together with Georgia's nationalistic desire to reclaim South Ossetia came to a head this week. Georgia attacked South Ossetia and killed 12 Russian peacekeepers along with South Ossetian personnel and civilians.
So you can see that Russia did not have much choice re: how it needed to respond to this incident. Twelve Russian peacekeepers were plugged by Georgia. Well, duh, what did the sock puppet President of Georgia think Medvedev would do in those circumstances? Hello!
That Russia is pushing Georgia back and crossing its borders with a massive show of force is justified, imo, because Georgia crossed the line big time not only in its aggression against an ally of Russia's and one that shares a border with Russia, as well as Georgia's willful murder of Russian peacekeeper-nationals, as well as Georgia's game playing with the DC/Tel Aviv/Turkey junta.
I think Russia may also want to send a message to the ZioNeo chickenhawks about their plans to attack Iran through the way it is handling Georgia now. The message is "Shove those plans where the sun don't shine." Iran does a lot of business with Russia and has become an ally of sorts in Russia's mind and Iran also shares a border with Russia. So now Russia wants to crush Georgia in a spectacular unforgiving fashion to tell the goon squad at DC/Tel Aviv - "don't bring war to my neighborhood and don't mess with my friends because I will not stand for it." The bear has been awakened from its sleep and now the bear is pis*ed, bigtime. We live in interesting times.
Postscript: I'm not pro-Russian per se. But in this dispute with Georgia that GEORGIA CAUSED, I think Russia has good reasons for reacting the way it is to the gauntlet that was thrown at its feet by The Usual Suspects and their sock puppet surrogate, the President of Georgia.