The Russian Bear Unleashed

The Bare Knuckled Pundit

Grand Inquisitor
Lost amidst the pageantry and spectacle of the opening of the Beijing Olympics and the media’s faux shock at the confirmation of John Edwards’ infidelity, Russian military forces invaded the separatist Georgian region of South Ossetia Friday.

After a weekend of punishing assaults on the Georgian military that resulted in it’s withdraw from the rebellious province; the injection of Russian forces into the separatist province of Abkhazia; the establishment of a Russian naval blockade of Georgia’s Black Sea coast; the initiation of a coordinated and comprehensive cyber offensive against Georgian government websites that resulted in the seizure and control of several of their servers; and Russia’s rejection of a Georgian ceasefire offer; Moscow appears intent on carving up, if not devouring its former republic in the heart of the Caucuses.

As the international community struggles to develop a consensus on the Russian aggression, its military struck a Georgian Special Forces battalion and air traffic control center near the capital of Tbilisi Monday. Hamstrung by the fact that Russia retains a veto in the United Nation’s Security Council, western options appear increasingly limited as the Russian offensive continues apace.

Launched in response to Russian claims of a Georgian massacre in the breakaway region, the invasion highlights a number of critical realities the United States and its western allies must contend with as well as menacing signals to other states in the region.

-Foremost, a resurgent Russia considers its former frontier republics in the “near abroad” its exclusive sphere of influence and will not lightly tolerate western involvement in the region.

-Further NATO expansion eastward into the Eurasian landmass and the doorstep of the Rodina is both unwelcome and intolerable. With the inclusion of many of its former Warsaw Pact allies in the western alliance, a sense of encirclement and aggressive containment already fills the halls of the Kremlin and feeds the paranoia of the senior military establishment.

Many analysts attribute this as the basis for Russia’s burgeoning alliance with China and the cultivation of what many believe to be an increasingly anti-western orientation in the Shanghi Cooperation Organization.

Accordingly, the invasion is a warning both to NATO and those currently being considered for future membership; such as Ukraine.

Were Georgia a member of NATO today, the Russian invasion would be considered an attack on all members of the alliance that necessitated a collective response. One must ask how much blood Washington, London, Paris, Rome, Berlin and Warsaw are willing to spill to defend Georgian territorial integrity and political independence.

-The invasion and the tentative response highlight the West’s lack of resolve and willpower to confront a resurgent Russia.
With the US preoccupied in Iraq; its European allies struggling to maintain the willpower to assist it in Afghanistan; the growing dependence of Europe on Russian energy exports and a Germany that appears to be drifting eastward politically; a unified and credible Western response seems farfetched at first glance.

This in turn creates doubts among those states geographically and politically caught in the middle of the divide between the Western alliance and the resurgent Bear. Can NATO and the US truly be relied upon to answer the call should the Bear threaten to maul others that have taken the risk of tacking westward?

-Squashing any doubts concerning his role and power after leaving the Russian presidency, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has boldly and brazenly displayed his control over the Russian state in the course of its invasion of its diminutive former republic.

Showing both his contempt for the West’s tepid response and his ultimate intentions for the Georgian government, Putin said, “"Of course, Saddam Hussein ought to have been hanged for destroying several Shiite villages. And the incumbent Georgian leaders who razed ten Ossetian villages at once, who ran elderly people and children with tanks, who burned civilian alive in their sheds — these leaders must be taken under protection."

“It is a shame that some of our partners are not helping us but, essentially, are hindering us,' Putin added. ’The very scale of this cynicism is astonishing.”

And thus, in the waning months of its term, the Bush administration finds both America’s and the West’s credibility and resolve tested in the face of wanton Russian aggression and contempt. As the clock appears to be winding down towards the fall of Tbilisi, what response can the lame duck muster to save its position on the world stage as well as the hopes and independence of millions of citizens of the former Soviet republics that now cower once again in Moscow’s growing shadow?

Clearly, the Bear is no longer content to rest peacefully in its cave, faithful readers. Stay tuned for further updates as events warrant and Mother Russia whips her upstart children back into line.
 
Tiny Georgia with an army of less than 18,000, having been roundly defeated in South Ossetia, cannot hope to withstand the mighty Russian army in Abkhazia.

Therefore, President Saakashvili, whose bid to join NATO and the European Union infuriated Moscow, will have to write off both breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia as lost to Russia.

This is Moscow's payback for the US-NATO action to detach Kosovo from Serbia and launch it on the way to independence. It is also a warning to former Soviet bloc nations, Ukraine, the Caucasian and Central Asian peoples against opting to join up with the United States and the NATO bloc in areas which Moscow deems part of its strategic sphere of influence

After severing South Ossetia and Abkhazia from Georgia, four follow-up Russian steps may be postulated:

1. The two separatist provinces will proclaim their independence, just like Kosovo.

2. Russia will continue to exercise its overwhelming military and air might to reduce the pro-American Saakashvili to capitulation.

3. The Georgian president will not be able to face his own nation after losing two regions of his country and causing its humiliation. Moscow will then make Washington swallow a pro-Russian successor.

4. Moscow’s trampling of Georgia will serve as an object lesson for Russia’s own secessionist provinces, such as Chechnya, Dagestan and Ingushetia, and a warning not to risk defying Russian armed might.

4. Western plans to develop more oil and gas pipelines to bypass the Russian network to the West, in addition to the Caspian line which carries one million barrels a day from Baku through Georgia to Turkey and out to the West, will be held in abeyance pending an accommodation with the rulers of the Kremlin.
 
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geopolitical experts note that on the surface level, the Russians are backing the separatists of S. Ossetia and neighboring Abkhazia as payback for the strengthening of American influence in tiny Georgia and its 4.5 million inhabitants. However, more immediately, the conflict has been sparked by the race for control over the pipelines carrying oil and gas out of the Caspian region.

The Russians may just bear with the pro-US Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvili’s ambition to bring his country into NATO. But they draw a heavy line against his plans and those of Western oil companies, including Israeli firms, to route the oil routes from Azerbaijan and the gas lines from Turkmenistan, which transit Georgia, through Turkey instead of hooking them up to Russian pipelines.

Saakashvili need only back away from this plan for Moscow to ditch the two provinces’ revolt against Tbilisi. As long as he sticks to his guns, South Ossetia and Abkhazia will wage separatist wars.
 
My analysis is that this sucks.

Succinct and to the point as always, Water.

I might also add, though, that my guess is part of the line the Russians are pushing diplomatically back-channel is a rather brusque allusion to an after the fact quid pro quo linking the American toppling of Saddam with Russia's current invasion of Georgia.

If you follow Russian behavior under Putin, they have a tendency to push the boundries up to the tipping or flaring point and then backtrack about half, retaining a significant advantage or objective in the end. And lest anyone think otherwise, Putin is a master at identifying and taking full advantage of moments of critical opportunity.

Stalin and Andropov smile proudly from their spots in the Kremlin wall.

This, however, looks far more serious. Effectively crushing the Georgian military in short order, the Kremlin is looking at this as an exercise in regaining its' military credibility and respect. Remember, they're still smarting from Afghanistan and Chechnya.

Add to this the fact that many Russians feel the US and the West took advantage of her in the 90's and treated her like a drunken whore and you've got some powerful emotional and psychological forces at play here.

Even beyond the issue of respect, at the end of the day the Russians would rather be feared than anything else by their neighbors and the international community. Fear equals respect in the Russian strategic lexicon.

Might I also add that Putin has extreme disdain for what he believes to be Bush's naïveté after the whole "I looked into his soul" comment. Bush made the mistake of believing his personal relationship would lay the foundation for a pro-western resolution when conflicts arose between Russia and the West. Putin, on the other hand, views it all as just business, nothing personal.

Accordingly, if the West looks weak and ineffective while their former republics and neighbors in the near abroad start treading quietly around the Bear's den, then they win game, set and match.
 
Succinct and to the point as always, Water.

I might also add, though, that my guess is part of the line the Russians are pushing diplomatically back-channel is a rather brusque allusion to an after the fact quid pro quo linking the American toppling of Saddam with Russia's current invasion of Georgia.

If you follow Russian behavior under Putin, they have a tendency to push the boundries up to the tipping or flaring point and then backtrack about half, retaining a significant advantage or objective in the end. And lest anyone think otherwise, Putin is a master at identifying and taking full advantage of moments of critical opportunity.

Stalin and Andropov smile proudly from their spots in the Kremlin wall.

This, however, looks far more serious. Effectively crushing the Georgian military in short order, the Kremlin is looking at this as an exercise in regaining its' military credibility and respect. Remember, they're still smarting from Afghanistan and Chechnya.

Add to this the fact that many Russians feel the US and the West took advantage of her in the 90's and treated her like a drunken whore and you've got some powerful emotional and psychological forces at play here.

Even beyond the issue of respect, at the end of the day the Russians would rather be feared than anything else by their neighbors and the international community. Fear equals respect in the Russian strategic lexicon.

Might I also add that Putin has extreme disdain for what he believes to be Bush's naïveté after the whole "I looked into his soul" comment. Bush made the mistake of believing his personal relationship would lay the foundation for a pro-western resolution when conflicts arose between Russia and the West. Putin, on the other hand, views it all as just business, nothing personal.

Accordingly, if the West looks weak and ineffective while their former republics and neighbors in the near abroad start treading quietly around the Bear's den, then they win game, set and match.

They know they can whip Georgia, and they know the rest of the world isn't going to risk a world war to stop them. These are stupid men wasting good peoples lives in an ultimately useless testosterone match, much like the rest of human history.

Who will lead us through these most trying times? George Bush, of course. TY Damo.
 
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We invaded Iraq so we've lost any international credibility that would normally allow us the right to criticize these sorts of unilateral invasions.

George Bush's occupation of Iraq has destabilized the world more than that small mind can ever comprehend.
 
Succinct and to the point as always, Water.

I might also add, though, that my guess is part of the line the Russians are pushing diplomatically back-channel is a rather brusque allusion to an after the fact quid pro quo linking the American toppling of Saddam with Russia's current invasion of Georgia.

If you follow Russian behavior under Putin, they have a tendency to push the boundries up to the tipping or flaring point and then backtrack about half, retaining a significant advantage or objective in the end. And lest anyone think otherwise, Putin is a master at identifying and taking full advantage of moments of critical opportunity.

Stalin and Andropov smile proudly from their spots in the Kremlin wall.

This, however, looks far more serious. Effectively crushing the Georgian military in short order, the Kremlin is looking at this as an exercise in regaining its' military credibility and respect. Remember, they're still smarting from Afghanistan and Chechnya.

Add to this the fact that many Russians feel the US and the West took advantage of her in the 90's and treated her like a drunken whore and you've got some powerful emotional and psychological forces at play here.

Even beyond the issue of respect, at the end of the day the Russians would rather be feared than anything else by their neighbors and the international community. Fear equals respect in the Russian strategic lexicon.

Might I also add that Putin has extreme disdain for what he believes to be Bush's naïveté after the whole "I looked into his soul" comment. Bush made the mistake of believing his personal relationship would lay the foundation for a pro-western resolution when conflicts arose between Russia and the West. Putin, on the other hand, views it all as just business, nothing personal.

Accordingly, if the West looks weak and ineffective while their former republics and neighbors in the near abroad start treading quietly around the Bear's den, then they win game, set and match.


They've said as much through the media front-channels, no need to press the Iraq analogy through diplomatic back-channels.

The bottom line in this whole scenario is that the president of Georgia seriously miscalculated both the Russian response to the bombing in S. Ossetia and the support he would have from the United States. In the end, he'll come to accept that pro-democracy rhetoric and bluster about support for emerging democracies is exactly that, rhetoric and bluster. Which is, again, very unfortunate for people on the ground,
 
I think that Georgia's handling of the whole South Ossetia affair has been atrocious and is worthy of critiscism. But going in and wiping a nation off the map over it? Shit like this hasn't been done since WWII.
 
The Russians have a point.

The US would not tolerate Russian ABM"s in Cuba or Venezulea and not only Russia, but also China and the SCO will not tolerate US ABM's on their front door.

The question is .. will Obama follow the Bush policy of putting ABM's in the region?
 
In light of Medvedev's order to halt combat operations and Russia's immasculation of the Georgian military, look for Russian forces to retrench in the seperatist regions and consolidate their territorial gains. They have defacto successfully dismembered Georgia and demonstrated their willingness to use force to whip their former republics back into line.

In the aftermath, they will retain significant forces in the separatist regions as "peacekeepers" to insure the protection of the locals from Georgian retribution. Don't look for them to withdraw or give up territory any time soon; if ever. In the process, Georgia will effectively loose control over a fifth to a fourth of its territory.
 
In light of Medvedev's order to halt combat operations and Russia's immasculation of the Georgian military, look for Russian forces to retrench in the seperatist regions and consolidate their territorial gains. They have defacto successfully dismembered Georgia and demonstrated their willingness to use force to whip their former republics back into line.

In the aftermath, they will retain significant forces in the separatist regions as "peacekeepers" to insure the protection of the locals from Georgian retribution. Don't look for them to withdraw or give up territory any time soon; if ever. In the process, Georgia will effectively loose control over a fifth to a fourth of its territory.


Actually, this is a return to the statue quo ante from a territorial perspective. Russia gained nothing and Georgia lost nothing. And Russian peacekeepers were present in the separatist states before this conflict.
 
Actually, this is a return to the statue quo ante from a territorial perspective. Russia gained nothing and Georgia lost nothing. And Russian peacekeepers were present in the separatist states before this conflict.

Well, Russia did gain defacto control of South Ossetia and Georgia lost a good portion of its military, so I'd say it wasn't exactly nothing.
 
Well, Russia did gain defacto control of South Ossetia and Georgia lost a good portion of its military, so I'd say it wasn't exactly nothing.

And let's not forget the Russian troops now occupying Abkhazia; which Georgia has also lost defacto control over.

One can hardly say that the end result is nothing more than a revision to the pre-invasion status quo. Georgian villages have been ravaged and burnt, the military mauled and its capital and major airport bombed.

Furthermore, where there was once concern and unease about the intentions and willingness of the Bear to exercise force among its former republics, there is now very real and justified fear.
 
And let's not forget the Russian troops now occupying Abkhazia; which Georgia has also lost defacto control over.

One can hardly say that the end result is nothing more than a revision to the pre-invasion status quo. Georgian villages have been ravaged and burnt, the military mauled and its capital and major airport bombed.

Furthermore, where there was once concern and unease about the intentions and willingness of the Bear to exercise force among its former republics, there is now very real and justified fear.

this is the no spin zone you can't distort things that are lies to make them seem true.
 
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