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Russia moves into Georgia to protect civilians and peacekeepers PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 14 August 2008
Georgian refugees from villages near Tskhinvali block a road outside the Georgian parliament in Tbilisi (10 August 2008)
Thousands of people have fled into neighbouring parts Georgia and Russia. The conflict must not escalate.

Russia was correct to move troops into Georgia to protect civilians and its peacekeepers. Georgian troops were clearly the aggressors who attacked Russian peacekeepers and civilians in an unprovoked attack. Now they are retreating and it is time to end hostilities.

In the Putin era, this was a big mistake. Russia will not tolerate such blatant aggression in its own backyard.

The west must recognize this area is part of Russia's sphere of influence and must back off in its support of Georgia, a small country which was part of Russia for 200 years. Stalin was born in Georgia and became the leader of Russia/Soviet Union which joined the allies to defeat Nazi Germany in WWII. The West needs good relations with Russia and co-operation between these two countries against a common enemy (international terrorists) is a necessity.Presidents Bush and Putin at the 33rd G8 summit, June 2007.

Georgian troops retreated from the breakaway province of South Ossetia on Sunday, overwhelmed by Russian firepower and the Gergian government requested a truce.

Presidents Bush and Putin at the 33rd G8 summit.
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