The West Warns Russia To "Change Course"
G-7 Countries Condemn Russia's Actions In Georgia; Putin Slams U.S. For Using Military Ships
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Girls ride on a car while holding Russian, left, and South Ossetian separatists' flags in Tskhinvali, the capital of Georgia's separatist-controlled territory of South Ossetia, Aug. 25, 2008. (AP Photo/Mikhail Metzel)
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Storekeeper 1st Class Jeff Weaver and Ship's Serviceman 2nd Class Gary Smith prepare humanitarian aid supplies to be loaded aboard the guided-missile destroyer USS McFaul earlier this week, in preparation for delivery to conflict-ridden Georgia. (US NAVY)
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Russian President Dmitry Medvedev records an interview with to the BBC at the Presidential residence in Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi, Aug. 26, 2008. (AP Photo/U.S. Navy)
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Col. Gen. Anatoly Nogovitsyn, the deputy head of the Russian military's general staff speaks at a news conference in Moscow, Aug. 26. 2008. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
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Russian President Dmitry Medvedev records an interview with to the BBC at the Presidential residence in Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi, Aug. 26, 2008. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti)
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Play CBS Video Video Eye To Eye: Condoleezza Rice In an exclusive interview with CBS News chief foreign affairs correspondent Lara Logan, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice condemns the continued presence of Russian military forces in Georgia.
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Video Obama On Georgia Conflict "CBS News RAW:" Speaking before a group of veterans, Barack Obama condemned Russia's military presence in Georgia. Obama also mentioned potential V.P. running mate Joe Bidden in his speech.
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Video Russian Missiles Installed In Moscow The conflict between Russia and Georgia rages on. CBS News Military Analyst Jeff McCausland weighs in.
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Who's Who Russia And Georgia At Odds Some of the faces and places involved in the tense dispute.
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Photo Essay A Shaky Cease-Fire Russian soldiers take Georgian troops prisoner, remain in key Black Sea port.
Moscow said it was NATO expansion and Western support for Georgia that was causing the new East-West divisions, and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin lashed out at the United States for using military ships to deliver humanitarian aid to Georgia.
Meanwhile, Georgia slashed its embassy staff in Moscow to protest Russia's recognition of the two separatist enclaves that were the flashpoint for the five-day war between the two nations earlier this month.
The tensions have spread to the Black Sea, which Russia shares unhappily with three nations that belong to NATO and two others that desperately want to, Ukraine and Georgia. Some Ukrainians fear Moscow might set its sights on their nation next.
In moves evocative of Cold War cat-and-mouse games, a U.S. military ship carrying humanitarian aid docked at a southern Georgian port, and Russia sent a missile cruiser and two other ships to a port farther north in a show of force.
The maneuvering came a day after Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had said his nation was "not afraid of anything, including the prospect of a Cold War." For the two superpowers of the first Cold War, the United States and Russia, repercussions from this new conflict could be widespread.
Russia's agriculture minister said Moscow could cut poultry and pork import quotas by hundreds of thousands of tons, hitting American producers hard and thereby raising prices for American shoppers. Russia is the largest market for American poultry exports.
Russians sometimes refer to American poultry imports as "Bush's legs," a reference to the frozen chicken shipped to Russia amid economic troubles following the 1991 Soviet collapse, during George H.W. Bush's presidency.
And a key civil nuclear agreement between Moscow and Washington appears likely to be shelved until next year at the earliest.
On the diplomatic front, the West's denunciations of Russia grew louder.
Britain's top diplomat equated Moscow's offensive in Georgia with the Soviet tanks that invaded Czechoslovakia to crush the Prague Spring democratic reforms in 1968, and demanded Russia "change course."
"The sight of Russian tanks in a neighboring country on the 40th anniversary of the crushing of the Prague Spring has shown that the temptations of power politics remain," Foreign Secretary David Miliband said.
Western leaders have accused Russia of using inappropriate force when it sent tanks and troops into Georgia earlier this month. The Russian move followed a Georgian crackdown on the pro-Russian South Ossetia.
Many of the Russian forces that drove deep into Georgia after fighting broke out Aug. 7 have pulled back, but hundreds are estimated to still be manning checkpoints that Russia calls "security zones" inside Georgia proper.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel pressed Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in a phone call to immediately fulfill the EU-brokered cease-fire by pulling all troops out of Georgia.
The Kremlin rejected Western criticism, and Tuesday even suggested the conflict could spread. It starkly warned another former Soviet republic, tiny Moldova, that aggression against a breakaway region there could provoke a military response.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy accused Russia of trying to redraw the borders of Georgia. His foreign minister went further, suggesting Russia had engaged in "ethnic cleansing" in South Ossetia, one of the two Georgian rebel territories.
And the seven nations that along with Russia make up the G-8 issued a statement that underlined Russia's growing estrangement from the West.
The seven - United States, Britain, France, Canada, Germany, Japan and Italy - said Russia's decision to recognize South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent countries violated the Georgia's territorial integrity.
Two weeks ago, officials had told The Associated Press that the G-7 were weighing whether to effectively disband what is known as the G-8 by throwing Moscow out.
Georgia's prime minister put damage from the Russian war at about $1 billion but said it did not fundamentally undermine the Georgian economy. Georgia, which has a national budget of about $3 billion, hopes for substantial Western aid to recover.
The United Nations has estimated nearly 160,000 people had to flee their homes, but hundreds have returned to Georgian cities like Gori in the past week.
In the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, boxes of aid were sorted, stacked and loaded onto trucks Wednesday for some of the tens of thousands of people still displaced by the fighting. Some boxes were stamped "USAID - from the American People."
In the Black Sea, the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Dallas, carrying 34 tons of humanitarian aid, docked in Batumi. The missile destroyer USS McFaul was there earlier this week delivering aid, and the U.S. planned to leave it in the Black Sea for now.
A spokesman for Putin, quoted by Interfax news agency, observed: "Military ships are hardly a common way to deliver such aid."
The U.S. has used military ships to deliver humanitarian aid before, including in the aftermath of the 2004 Asian tsunami.
The U.S. Embassy in Georgia had earlier said the Dallas was headed to the port city of Poti but then retracted the statement. A Georgian official said the port in Poti could have been mined by Russian forces.
Poti's port reportedly suffered heavy damage from the Russian military. In addition, Russian troops have established checkpoints on the northern approach to the city, and a U.S. ship docking there could have been seen as a direct challenge.
Meanwhile, the Russian missile cruiser Moskva and two smaller missile boats anchored at the port in Sukhumi, the capital of Abkhazia, some 180 miles north of Batumi. The Russian Navy says the ships will be involved in peacekeeping operations.
Russian Col. Gen. Anatoly Nogovitsyn warned that NATO has already exhausted the number of forces it can have in the Black Sea, according to international agreements, and warned Western nations against sending more ships.
"Can NATO - which is not a state located in the Black Sea - continuously increase its group of forces and systems there? It turns out that it cannot," Nogovitsyn was quoted as saying Wednesday by Interfax.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 169 CommentsShareholders in the BTC pipeline are: British Petroleum, AzBTC, Chevron, Statoil, TPAO, ENI, Total, Itochu, INPEX, ConocoPhillips & Amerada Hess.
Russia is the second largest supplier of oil & gas on the planet.
After loosing Iraqi oil to Operation Iraqi Freedom, they negotiated supplies with Iran. The Russians were not happy with Cheneys BTC pipeline or the Caspian Sea Pipelines project going through Afghanistan. This threatens their economy based on oil & gas.
Again it''s the Bush administrations lust for money in World markets for their BIG OIL buddies
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Posted by rave_on3
If you truly believe that then we are far from seeing eye to eye. This was a US govt/corporate media sponsored schematic to demonise Russia, probably to keep them out of the EU. The claim that far less civillians were massacred in SOuth Ossetai originated from Georgia, and unfortunatelty one or two organisations (and idiots) ran with it.
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Posted by rhooten128
Not that you realise it, but you (synically) just suggested something that would actually help immensely.
Posted by De_Adarius at 12:58 PM : Aug 28, 2008
I haven''t seen anything in the way of your claim that mass media claims Russia attacked Georgia. True, Georgia did fire the first shots. However, the initial claims by the Russians that thousands of people were killed by Georgian missiles has been debunked. Not by a news source but by Amnesty International which claims both sides have behaved badly. Also, they contend Russia was overly aggressive and promoted ethnic cleansing in S. Ossetia and Abkhazia.
The truth is, Russia has been goading and provoking Georgia for some time now in order to to look for an excuse to invade.
Contrary to what many armchair pundits surmise, the west, and to a stronger degree, the Europeans warned against reacting to the provocations of the Russians. Unfortanately, Saakashvili''s brash decision to engage the Russians was an extremely poor one.
About European countries and other USA''s toadyes I don''t want to say anything. Everybody cowers in fear and doesn''t have any own opinion.
PS: It was in 1945 and it will be again. Russia will kick *** of bad men:)
PSS: I believe, that somedays, russians, americans and others will be one big country named Earth. And G. Buch, C. Rise, Saakashvili and other criminals will be in jail.
PSSS: Sorry for my English.
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Posted by dimhumb at 08:08 AM : Aug 28, 2008
I never claimed that Russia is or claims to be communist. Maybe socialist but to a lesser degree than even some western European countries. There''s a huge difference between the two. Russia came to it''s senses and realized communism simply doesn''t work. The Chinese have come to that same realization.
The minor point I was trying to make is that there is no room for dissent in Russian politics and even percieved threats are quashed. At least in America we are afforded the opportunity to openly disagree with our leadership and change course if warranted. In Russia, there is no room for political opposition to the ruling party...at least to the degree that''s apparant in multi-party systems.
Russian transgressions (and I believe that word to be apt) are a related topic we could delve into also.
Dmitry
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008
"only 133 people died"? shesssh
But the west, ignoring the delicacy of the situation, unwittingly (or wittingly) fed the hopes of the South Ossetians and Abkhazians for freedom. They clasped to their bosom a Georgian president, Mikheil Saakashvili, whose first move was to crush the autonomy of another region, Adjaria, and made no secret of his intention to squash the Ossetians and Abkhazians.
Posted by rhooten128 at 08:16 AM : Aug 28, 2008
But now all the world should, it seems, to kiss America''s. Some think they kiss it properly but I doubt their method lives up to the standard. Those who may do whatever they want are apt to be extremely fancy on that. Gosh, I started taking it all seriously. Guys I meant your government, of course.
This summoned memories of the first confrontation of the Cold War when the USS Missouri was deployed in the Black Sea in 1946 to deter Russian threats against Turkey.
America should pay about as much attention to the Russian blowhards as the dog pays to the protests of a fire hydrant.
Posted by rave_on3 at 07:24 AM : Aug 28, 2008
I am not going to revive the case of Indeans or call Germans fascists because that''s all just far memory and nothing more, is it not? Why should I be called communist if I am of Cossack''s descent personally. Cossacks have been through so much oppression from Soviet Regime, but when will it happen that you understand that Russia is not communist.
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