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Attacking Ossetia Is Attacking Russia!

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  • Attacking Ossetia Is Attacking Russia!

    ATTACKING OSSETIA IS ATTACKING RUSSIA!
    Guriya Murklinskaya

    http://en.fondsk.ru/article.php?id=1 533
    09.08.2008

    Attacking South Ossetia is synonymous to attacking the entire
    republic of Ossetia (whatever any one could say, Ossetians in the
    north enjoy the sovereignty of the Russian Federation), is a tragic
    but not unexpected happening. Under the puppet regime of Saakashvili
    Georgia has no choice.

    There is another question that is much more important and
    complicated. The question is: does the Russian "elite" have its
    freedom of choice?

    What would be supreme for the working out of Moscow's line of conduct
    regarding the war on South Ossetia. Will that be the fear of Russian
    bureaucracy at all levels of losing what they have stolen and hidden
    in offshore companies (because the US State Department knows about
    "the stashes" of Russian ruling circles abroad, and it can at any
    one time freeze their bank accounts) or the continuity of defence of
    Russia's strategic national interests? The very first steps of top
    Russian leaders imbue hope that they would develop the second scenario.

    An unequivocal and responsible statement needs to be made to the effect
    that the attack on Ossetia was an attack on Russia! There are people
    who suggest that Ossetia should be helped by volunteers and arms,
    but that is what needed to be done earlier, in Yugoslavia. It was
    not done! And now we are asking th e US on our bended knees not to
    deploy their silo-hidden missiles too close to our borders. It was
    not accidental that they directed the ruler of Georgia to Ossetia,
    counting it as a weak link whose geography could provoke a blitzkrieg
    to snatch - first South Ossetia - in a matter of hours counting on
    Moscow's non-interference and ritual protests. But it did not turn out
    that way. As Dmitry Medvedev said, the people of the multinational
    North Caucasus support the Ossetian nation. These are exactly the
    conditions for the support of volunteers and arms, but the first thing
    that needs to be done is to declare Russia's military presence in
    the zone of this military conflict to be able to rebuff the aggressor.

    The Georgian attack on Ossetia was an attempt to use Georgian hands
    and knives to grab another piece of Russia's geopolitical space for
    the Yankees to swallow. The transformation of large geopolitical
    territories in the process of NATO's eastward "expansion" is
    painful. The tragedy of Ossetia is part of a story that a number of
    republics existing on the territory of the former USSR that are de
    facto independent but formally unacknowledged by the international
    community need to be protected both against ethnic violence in the
    interests of people living in these states and for the purpose of
    not making them tools of a large-scale geopolitical destabilization
    of the Russian Federation.

    Following the dismemberment of the USSR that crowned the four
    decades of the "cold war" virtually all the post-Soviet states,
    except Russia began to orient themselves at a rapid violent
    assimilation of small non-autochthonal ethnic groups and the
    building of mono-national and mono-confessional states. The issue
    of acknowledgment /non-acknowledgment of Abkhazia, South Ossetia
    and other de facto states on the territory of the former USSR is not
    an issue within the framework of the policies of unification of the
    global geopolitical space - these states will be recognized! The only
    question is who will recognize them first -Russia or the West?

    There is an almost open current threat of destabilisation of Russia's
    southern territories should it enter the "non-permitted" zone around
    the unrecognized post-Soviet republics. Western strategists agree to
    give Moscow the role of showing itself as a state that is incapable of
    protecting its citizens allowing Western states to have the final say
    about the fates of Abkhazians, Ossetians and other Russia's nations.

    Speaking purely in terms of state borders, many Caucasian peoples,
    including Armenians, Azeris, some ethnic groups in Dagestan were
    divided after the fall of the USSR There are also nations divided
    by the administrative borders of the "subjects" of the Russian
    Federation. Should Russia lose a war in the North Caucasus,20all the
    administrative borders would become null and void. After that NATO
    member-states would re-distribute limitrophe territories, and highly
    likely that the Caucasus would become a Turkish protectorate.

    Could Georgia profit from a war? Undoubtedly, no unless destruction in
    a war mincing-machine a sizeable number of unemployed young people and
    inadequately trained youths whom Saakashvili has sent to recruiting
    stations is the current Tbilisi regime's victory.

    No state that is currently responsible for the issue of the future
    of the failed Georgian state is currently interested to support it
    where retention of Georgia's "territorial integrity" and "national
    sovereignty" within the borders of the former Georgian Soviet Socialist
    Republic is concerned. Should there be a big scuffle, Georgia would be
    torn in pieces to become a formation of small mono-ethnic semi-states
    that would be grabbed by the victors.

    Time is probably ripe for the Georgians to realize for whom they
    fight their battles.
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