Wednesday, August 20, 2008

America Must 'Stand and Deliever' Now in Georgia

Just where do we stop our back sliding on our responsibility to support freedom and Democracy around the world?

We say we will defend other nations that want to be free, but when 'push comes to shove' we take a step back. Just what is it that we are afraid of? Has it all come down to politics or are we just to satisfied with our own circumstance to care what happens to others?

Doesn't the American dream matter anymore? We always say America is the last best chance for others to see the light of freedom, all they have to do fight for freedom and we will come to their aid.

I guess that's just a saying to make us feel good about ourselves. We really don't mean it, as becoming involved in a conflict overseas might threaten us here at home with having to sacrifice some of our way of life, like not being able to board a plane without taking off our new shoes.

Horrors!! Unacceptable! After all we are Americans and we demand to have everything we want and we demand it at anytime we want it. It's our right. It's about me - to hell with others and their petty problems.

That's exactly correct - hundreds of thousands have died to make this possible - but we don't care about them - all we care about is our own little world of greed and possessions.

Maybe we are doing something about these Russian invaders that is below the radar - maybe -but our past record is not good when it comes to standing up to killers and tyrants of late. And you can believe, if the liberal socialists progressive Democrats gain power, these monsters will have free reign. Marxist socialists are all about having power over the individual.

Keep the faith - we can win this battle even though the ground is becoming uneven!

DEVIL SENT DOWN TO GEORGIA
By RALPH PETERS

OVER the weekend, photographic proof emerged that the Russians used mur derous Chechen mercenaries to do their dirtiest dirty work in Georgia: The ragtag unit in question is so vicious that, last April, Chechnya's Russian-installed "president" demanded it be disbanded.

War snaps taken by Russian photojournalist Arkady Babchenko have been circulating among intelligence personnel. The shots reveal far more to the West than Babchenko realized. Amid photos of the horrors of war, grateful South Ossetians and triumphant Russian troops, one series leapt out at me as a former intel officer: Bearded irregulars riding atop Russian-built armored vehicles (old BMPs, for the military-hardware buffs). The vehicles had been splashed with white lettering. What did the scrawls announce to the world? These thugs proudly proclaimed that they're Chechens serving in the Vostok ("East") Battalion commanded by Badrudin Yamadaev - who shares a reputation for gangland violence with his brother, Ruslan.

Last spring, mercenaries from the Vostok Battalion indulged in a bloody gangland shoot-'em-up in the city of Gudermes, near their home turf. The mafia-on-steroids brutality was too much even for the Chechens (which is quite a standard). The province's puppet president publicly begged the Kremlin and its generals to disband the unit. The generals refused.

At the time, their stubborn support for the outlaw Yamadaev Brothers seemed baffling - a quiet Chechnya was a longstanding Russian goal. But last week, it all made sense: Putin's military, which had been planning the invasion of Georgia for many months, intended to unleash the worst criminals in uniform it had on the Georgian people. Why?

Two reasons:

First, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin wants the Georgians to /suffer/ - to /really/ suffer. And Chechens are the world's subject-matter experts in atrocities.

Second, this gives the Russian army itself a veil of deniability: When Putin's spokesmen insist that the Russian military isn't involved in the worst savagery in Georgia, they're technically telling the truth (if we don't count air attacks and artillery bombardments), since the Chechen thugs on their payroll are on the job. But why would those Chechens paint up their armored vehicles to tell the world they'd arrived in Georgia?

First, they're /proud/ of their fearsome reputation. Second, they didn't want Russian regulars to mistake them for the enemy and pull the trigger. The result? Contrary to Russian claims that "volunteers" from the North Caucasus rushed in to aid their South Ossetian brethren, we now have /proof/ that the Kremlin sent in hired guns.

It's no accident that Putin's code-name for this operation is "Scorched Earth." And there's plenty else to be outraged about - not all of it Russia's fault. Images of dead and disfigured Georgian soldiers show them wearing US-surplus canteens, boots and helmets, or equipped with antique US anti-tank weapons. After the Georgians did all their tiny country could to support us in Iraq, all we gave them was cast-off junk - thanks to Congress and the State Department.

Our military was only allowed to train the Georgians for peacekeeping, anti-terrorism and small-unit tactics. The Georgians gave us all they had, and we gave them crap. The Bush administration should hang its wobbly head in shame.

Meanwhile, Chechen rapists and butchers are celebrating - and picking over the US gear the Russians captured and didn't even want.

Ralph Peters is a retired Army intelligence officer and the author of the new book "Looking for Trouble."

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