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A close-up view of the tragedy befalling the people of Georgia

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  • A close-up view of the tragedy befalling the people of Georgia

    In-Forum, ND

    A close-up view of the tragedy befalling the people of Georgia
    Jane Ahlin,

    Published Sunday, August 17, 2008

    Jane Ahlin teaches English as an adjunct faculty member at MSUM. A
    former commentator for KDSU (ND Public Radio), she has written for The
    Forum opinion pages since 1989. Her column appears Sundays in The
    Forum.

    Wednesday's e-mail from my friend in Georgia is lighthearted. The war
    `seems to be over.' She is `in a small village way East' and, with
    Georgian friends, has `bought fresh pork butt just slaughtered one
    hour ago and then fresh trout ¦ to have a barbeque.' In an aside to
    her mother she says, `Mom, I told everyone that you would worry more
    about the pork in the hot trunk than the Russians.'

    Starkly different in tone from the frenetic e-mails since the onset of
    war between Georgia and Russia when she still was in Tblisi, her words
    convey a return to equilibrium. She is with friends, eating and
    drinking, enjoying a pleasant moment after a long frightening weekend
    of tragic loss. If not ongoing, the momentary relief had to have been
    welcome

    During the short war, however, there was no calm. Almost immediately,
    my friend took in a young couple with a newborn baby because they
    could not return to Gori where their neighborhood had been
    bombed. (Note: even in Georgia, where people barely eke out a living,
    war is televised. The young couple watched the bombing of their own
    neighborhood on TV, not knowing whether other family members got out
    safely.) After a few days, the couple with their newborn went on to
    Armenia.

    About the same time, my friend found out she had another family to
    worry about, a family she had lived with briefly after arriving in
    Georgia. Their entire village of 7,000 was evacuated, then bombed, and
    the family who had been kind to her had to flee with nothing.

    Understandably, my friend was upset by the initial American response
    to Russia's brutality; however, she was not as shocked as her Georgian
    friends who remembered President Bush's 2005 visit to their country, a
    visit in which he was greeted like a rock star. In a country with
    fewer than 5 million people, 150,000 turned out to hear him
    speak. They cheered when he said, `The path of freedom you have chosen
    is not easy, but you will not travel it alone ¦ as you build a free
    and democratic Georgia, the American people will stand with you.'
    Georgians loved him so much, they named a street after him.

    But that was 2005. Here are Mr. Bush's words at the onset of the war:
    `I was very firm with Vladimir Putin ` he and I have got a good
    relationship ` just like I was firm with the Russian president. And
    hopefully this will get resolved peacefully. There needs to be an
    international mediation there for the South Ossetia issue.'

    Later, expressing disappointment over Bush's lukewarm reaction,
    Georgian President Saakashvili said, `Frankly, some of the first
    statements [by Bush] were seen as a green light for Russia.'

    The irony that French President Sarkozy as head of the European Union
    was carrying the message for the West also was hard to escape
    (remember freedom fries?). Even some of Bush's most ardent supporters
    wondered what was going on. (Was the president duped by the
    reassurances of his friend, `Vlad,' while they were in Beijing?) As
    conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer wrote in the Washington
    Post, Bush `needs to make up for his mini-Katrina moment when he
    lingered in Beijing yukking it up with our beach volleyball team while
    Putin flew to North Ossetia to direct the invasion of a neighboring
    country.'

    More importantly, the concern of other former Soviet bloc countries
    underscored the sobering situation. Standing with Saakashvili and
    fellow leaders of Poland, Estonia and Latvia, Lithuanian President
    Adamkus said, `Let the world finally wake up and take the action and
    provide the real security for the region.' By then, the United States
    had gotten tough: Humanitarian aid was sent to Georgia via military
    transport and Condoleezza Rice was sent to France and on to Georgia.

    As for my friend, she's back in Tblisi, frustrated by international
    political games being played at Georgia's expense, wondering what will
    happen next, and spending her days trying to get aid for the displaced
    family from the village.


    Ahlin, Fargo, is a regular contributor to The Forum's commentary
    pages. E-mail [email protected]
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