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The media got it wrong: Russia did not invade Georgia; other way

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  • The media got it wrong: Russia did not invade Georgia; other way

    Schenectady Gazette, NY
    Aug 24 2008



    Op-ed column: The media got it wrong: Russia did not invade Georgia,
    it's the other way around


    Sunday, August 24, 2008
    Edwin D. Reilly Jr.


    Being on vacation, I had told my editor that I wouldn't have a new
    piece for this Sunday, but something happened that changed my
    mind. Whether home or away, libraries are my favorite haunt, so, while
    waiting for a table at the nearby Captain's Table, Jean and I sat on a
    bench in front of the Chatham library on Cape Cod.

    Sitting near us a woman on another bench and a young man on the
    library steps were each typing furiously on their laptops. Could they
    be within range of Wi-Fi, I wondered? So I asked the young man if he
    was picking up a signal from the (closed!) library. `Why, yes,' he
    said, `this is the best time to do so, given that there is no one
    inside with whom I have to share bandwidth and thus reduce response
    time.'

    I became conscience-stricken by such rampant assiduousness, and since
    our rented cottage was a hot spot, I went back to my own laptop after
    dinner, determined to tell you how the mainstream press has, by and
    large, gotten the Russian battle with South Ossetia all wrong.

    The impression that most Associated Press stories conveyed, and some
    even in The New York Times, has been that Russia invaded part of
    Georgia. But it is closer to the truth that the opposite is true. This
    finally sank into my cranium when I read a column in, of all places,
    the Cape Cod Times of Aug. 18, the day of this epiphany. The author,
    Gwynne Dyer, an international columnist from London, wrote: `Russia
    didn't threaten Georgia; it responded to a surprise attack on South
    Ossetia, a territory where there were Russian [and Georgian]
    peacekeeping troops by international agreement. It has not occupied
    Georgia's capital, nor has it overthrown the government (though the
    Georgians may do that themselves when they realize what a fool [their
    President, Mikhail] Saakashvili has been).'

    Yes, the Russians overreacted, drove deep into Georgian territory well
    beyond South Ossetia, killed many people, and have started to withdraw
    back into South Ossetia. But that's as far as they will go. Fully 70
    percent of the greatly depleted population of that `province,' or
    whatever it is, hold Russian citizenship and very much want to become,
    like North Ossetia (to its north, obviously) one of the units of the
    Russian Federation.

    Now, with our forces so bogged down in Iraq and Afghanistan, there is
    nothing that the United States can do about this. It is certainly not
    going to start a third world war, hot or cold, over it. President Bush
    may or may not realize this, but surely both presidential candidates
    do. But they have no recourse except to posture, saying of the
    Russians, in effect, `There they go again.'

    Sen. Obama suggests that the matter be referred to the U.N. Security
    Council, forgetting (?) that in that venue, Russia has veto
    power. Even worse, Sen. McCain, whose documented forgetfulness is that
    Afghanistan lies between Iraq and Pakistan and hence the latter two
    have no common border, blusters like the Great Oz behind a
    curtain. And the voters are sure to look behind it.

    As of 20 years ago, South Ossetia had 65,000 native Ossetians, 29,000
    people who considered themselves Georgians, and practically no
    `Russians.' By now, many of each have fled the area, and most of those
    left consider themselves Russian. Despite this fact, and despite the
    fact that his army has been obliterated, President Mikhail Saakashvili
    has vowed that `Georgia will never give up a square kilometer of its
    territory.' Essentially, it already has.

    Geographic locale
    But before we venture further, just what and where is this foreign
    Georgia and the rebellious South Ossetia contained therein? Wikipedia
    to the rescue.

    The country of Georgia lies to the south of the Russian Federation
    (Russia), from which it is separated by a natural boundary formed by
    the Caucasus mountain range. It is a transcontinental country,
    partially in Eastern Europe and partially in Southwest Asia. It is
    bordered to the east by Azerbaijan, to the west by the Black Sea, to
    the south by Armenia, and to the southwest by Turkey. Georgia's area,
    about 27,000 square miles, lies between that of our states of South
    Carolina and West Virginia, both breakaway federal entities of our
    own, the latter because it took the Union side in our Civil
    War. Georgia's population of 4.6 million is comparable to that of our
    Alabama and is about half of our own Georgia.

    After the Russian Revolution of 1917, Georgia had a brief period of
    independence as a Democratic Republic from 1918 until the Red Army's
    invasion of 1921. Georgia became part of the USSR in 1922 and did not
    regain its independence until 1991, when the Soviet Union
    dissolved. Georgia is currently a representative democracy and is a
    member of the United Nations, the Council of Europe, and the World
    Trade Organization. To the consternation of Russia, the country seeks
    to join NATO and, in the longer term, admission to the European Union.

    The map of the country of Georgia looks much like a crocodile, but its
    tail to the northwest and its right hind leg are, respectively, the
    self-proclaimed independent republics of Abkhazia and Adjara, but no
    other country other than Georgia ' certainly not Russia, which has
    designs on the former ' has recognized them. Historically, there have
    been dust-ups over the status of both, but they were nothing compared
    to the currently raging battle over the status of South Ossetia.

    South Ossetia is a region in the extreme north of Georgia, just over
    the border from the Russian federal republic (oblast) of North
    Ossetia. It declared itself to be the independent `Republic of South
    Ossetia' early in the 1990s. The capital of South Ossetia is
    Tskhinvali, even though South Ossetia lies within the Georgian region
    called Shida Kartli, whose capital is Gori.

    Not recognized
    The claimed independence has not been diplomatically recognized by any
    member of the United Nations, which continues to regard South Ossetia
    as part of Georgia. Until the armed conflict of this month, Georgia
    had retained control over parts of the region's eastern and southern
    districts where it created, in April 2007, the Provisional
    Administrative Entity of South Ossetia.

    Barack Obama has promised me (and at least a million others) that he
    will send us e-mail (or one of those hated text messages) that tell us
    of his vice presidential choice. You may know who that is by the time
    you read this. For his sake, I hope it is Sen. Joe Biden, the only
    politician left in Washington who makes sense when he speaks of
    foreign affairs. As to domestic affairs, we've had our fill of those.

    Edwin D. Reilly Jr. lives in Niskayuna and is a regular contributor to
    the Sunday Opinion section.

    http://www.dailygazette.com/news/2008/au g/24/0824_reillyjr/
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