What can the US and it’s Allies do for Georgia?
For one, the US needs to show in actions that they have Georgia’s ‘back’. All of this cowering in the face of the Russian bear not only emboldens Russia but also emboldens China! What happens if or when China invades Taiwan? Is the West going to spend a week on words? That will certainly calm these beasts down.
How the West Can Stand Up to Russia
By GARY SCHMITT and MAURO DE LORENZO
August 12, 2008; Page A21 (WSJ Online)
What can the West do? The first step is for the U.S. and its allies to rush military and medical supplies to Tbilisi. If we want democracy to survive there, Georgians have to believe that we have their backs. At the moment, the tepidness of the Western response has given them serious cause for doubt. In addition, Washington should lead the effort to devise a list of economic and diplomatic sanctions toward Russia that impose real costs for what Moscow has done. Russia should know that the West has a greater capacity to sustain a new Cold War than Russia, with its petroleum-dependent economy, does.
Next, the West should make use of Russia’s claim that its role in South Ossetia and Abkhazia is driven by the need to protect the populations there. If so, Moscow should have no objections to U.N.-sanctioned peacekeepers and observers moving into those two regions to replace the jerry-rigged system of “peacekeepers” that, until the war broke out, consisted of Russian troops, local separatist militaries and Georgian forces. If nothing else, the goal should be to put Mr. Putin and Dmitry Medvedev, the new Russian president, on their back foot diplomatically.
Over the longer term, it is essential that Russia’s stranglehold on Europe’s energy supplies be broken. The EU’s failure to get its house in order by diversifying energy supplies and insisting that Russia, in turn, open up its own market, has created a situation in which Moscow rightly believes it has significant leverage over the policy positions of key countries such as Germany.
It was Germany that led the opposition at the most recent NATO summit in April against a Membership Action Plan for Georgia, emphasizing that a country that has unresolved conflicts should not be allowed to enter NATO. We presumably won’t know for some time what the precise calculations were inside the Kremlin when it came to the decision to send troops into Georgia, but one can surely assume that the German position did nothing to discourage Russia’s plans.
The real payback for Moscow’s decision to invade Georgia should be the sweet revenge of a strong, prosperous and fully independent Georgia. Building on the strides Georgia has already made, Brussels and Washington should give Tbilisi a clear road to NATO and EU membership.





2996
CentComOnline
Lest They Be Forgotten
Patriot Guard Riders
United Warrior Survivor Foundation
Gold Falcon
Michael Yon







Remember the “Monroe Doctrine”? I suspect we are seeing the realization of a “Putin Doctrine” that essentially intends to create a geopolitical buffer around Mother Russia.
Our involvement needs to judged carefully. Is it REALLY in our national interest should Georgia get squashed? Remember we didnt’ get real upset when India invaded and seized Goa.
The UN will remain stymied since the Russian veto on the Security Council will stop any action they contemplate that Russia judges is not in their interest.