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Thread: Georgian/Russian War

  1. #13
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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War

    Whatever the reason, the facts are this:

    1. We really can't do much to help at the point, as all our forces are currently "busy" at the moment.

    2. Patriot Batteries? Sorry- they are also all deployed- not only to Iraq, but also to Israel. We used to have a couple more of them, but they have been "downsized" and "BRAC'ed" out of existance. The lead time to build more is now on the order of three to four years.

    3. Warthogs? Small problem there. Georgia doesn't own the skies at the moment. Without air superiority, A-10's would be sitting ducks to Russian SAMs and MIG's.

    4. Our Air Force is not really in a position to assit. We'd have to fly out of Romania and/or Turkey to be within range with F-16s, and we'd have to get both those countries to agree to basing. At the moment I think that would be a long-shot. Neither really wants to get into the middle of things with Russia. Can you imagine if we tried to take Russia on head-to-head so close to their own turf? Ouch. Not a pretty sight.

    5. We have no binding treaties with Georgia, they are not a member of NATO, and it is unlikely anyone else can come to their aid at the moment.

    IN short- it is NOT a good picture for democracy in Georgia.

    P.S- I'm still waiting to hear the redneck jokes about the Russians invading Georgia. It's only a matter of time......

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  3. #14
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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War

    NATO can cause some headaches for Russia when you consider all the ex-satellites that are now part of NATO: Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Turkey, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, - there is a lot that can be done and I surmise this overt aggression will not go unanswered. There is a free nation at stake here and the free world will stand in between the Russians and their trophy. We don't need the Air Force capabilities that are now in Iraq and could shift them to Turkey where we have bases. The Navy is already pretty much in position with plenty of aircraft - the logistics are actually in our favor. The only question is will we act and I think we will. I bet there is troop movement going on right now - let's use some of those captured IEDs from Iran and take down some Russian heavy armor. A few dog fights in the sky would send a clear message to the possum butts.

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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War



    Warning Kids-there is bad language and violence in This Apocalypse Now clip.
    Last edited by Tempest; 08-12-2008 at 05:58 AM.

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  7. #16
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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War

    Sheen as far back as I can remember has always been just this side of worthless - he was worthless then and he's worthless now. By the way, I still have my original zippo from 1966.

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  9. #17
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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War

    Quote Originally Posted by Silverbird View Post
    The people in North and South Ossetia are primarily of an ethnic minority that is neither Russian nor Georgian. The area was split in two when the border was drawn between Russia and Georgia. The Southern Ossetians voted to secede to Russia recently, in order to join North and South again, and the Georgian reaction was unfavorable (the scope of the reaction is in dispute).
    Silverbird,
    This is the kind of information I like to know, and from here I can do research on The Northern and Southern Ossetians. Only as we discover the people and their hertitage - their culture and way of life can we have an appreciation who they are and what they're going through. So now we realize the population has a uniqueness that does not fit with either Russia or Geogia. And that they are widely devided in seceding to Russia.

    The fact that such a vote took place makes me believe the equivelent of the Russian CIA was behind everything leading up to that vote.

    Anyway thanks, very informative.
    Last edited by Steadygain; 08-12-2008 at 08:34 PM.

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  11. #18
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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War

    Ok, sorry Steady it's not so simple as I thought. There are enclaves of Ossetians and Georgians in Southern Ossetia. And they don't like one another!

    "South Ossetia has been ripped apart in the latest fighting. In this region of 75,000 people, ethnic Georgian and ethnic Ossetian villages exist side by side in a chequerboard-like pattern. After an earlier Georgian military adventure in 2004, and with the peace process stalled, the communities grew so deeply apart that they now have separate gas and electricity networks." - BBC article

    Background on Ossetia, and Abkhazia (major Soviet area vacation spot, strategic location on Black Sea) Good article!
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7558000.stm
    "All the prophets of Doom, Can always find room, In a world full of worry and fear..." - Protest Song, Monty Python


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  13. #19
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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War

    Quote Originally Posted by Silverbird View Post
    There are enclaves of Ossetians and Georgians in Southern Ossetia. And they don't like one another!

    "South Ossetia has been ripped apart in the latest fighting. In this region of 75,000 people, ethnic Georgian and ethnic Ossetian villages exist side by side but the communities grew so deeply apart that they now have separate gas and electricity networks." - BBC article

    Background on Ossetia, and Abkhazia (major Soviet area vacation spot, strategic location on Black Sea) Good article!
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7558000.stm
    I seriously doubt this type of thing can ever end; not without some huge devine intervention. Look at the Native Americans and what they went through. Look at the Blacks and everything they went though even during my lifetime - with seperate water fountains, bathrooms....Women weren't much better since they were boxed in to teachers,nurses, housewifes, flight attendents.

    So what you're describing is simply a reflection of our society and the intollerance, distrust, and animosity towards someone that reflects something different from ourselves. Usually these are fueds that started way in the distant pass and the people never learned to put it aside, move beyond it, and live in harmony.

    As terrible as this sounds - if it brought about the change I hope it would - I'd love to see a Solar Flare wipe out everything and force everyone into a commonality. Without electricity we'd be forced to a common state of humanity and the barriers would disappear.

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  15. #20
    Scout333 is online now Team TSP
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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War

    Steady, May not be something to wish for. Have you been through a natural disaster, hurricane, flood, earthquake, etc. with major and extended loss of electrical power? Humanity declines rapidly with fighting over food, ice, water, etc. Saw some "civilized ?" folks lose that veneer fairly quickly in the turmoil after natural disasters. New Orleans as a prime example. Just a thought? Now to more pleasant things. Market corrections, bear market slides, and more fun things!

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  17. #21
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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War

    Quote Originally Posted by Scout333 View Post
    Steady, May not be something to wish for. Have you been through a natural disaster, hurricane, flood, earthquake, etc. with major and extended loss of electrical power? Humanity declines rapidly with fighting over food, ice, water, etc. Saw some "civilized ?" folks lose that veneer fairly quickly in the turmoil after natural disasters. New Orleans as a prime example. Just a thought? Now to more pleasant things. Market corrections, bear market slides, and more fun things!
    Hum..I'd say your right - a global natural disaster on the scale I was thinking would probably make humans much more "animal" than people.

    I stand corrected. Apart from Global Devine Intervention - which thoroughly blinds us to the differences; instills a dominate loving and sacrificial attitude towards one another; and wipes out the long existing negative - prejudical - racist ... thoughts * then wiping out populations in Georgia; Iraq; Cambodia; Africa is an unavoidable consequence of the overall human condition.

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  19. #22
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    Default Re: Georgian/Russian War

    luv2read,

    My reaction was along your lines when I read the papers and heard the news. They all have the same cry, "America, do something about this." I didn't hear once or read once about how it might look like a double standard.

    Even when you ignore oil, it still sounds messed up. Here is the superpower of the world. It just destroyed two other nations' governments and is trying to set ones up like it's own. When another nation does something on a smaller scale than this, the superpower (still killing people in at least two countries) announces to the world how bad Russia is behaving.

    The media's emphasis is on infrastructures, government philosophy, tanks, guns, buildings. Where are the dead humans? Our shock and awe killed thousands. Where's their freedom? "They were shooting at us, so they have no freedom." Well, most of them were defending themselves.

    Freedom is not something someone can give you. You need to fight for it yourself. Who are we to tell people that we are giving them freedom? Doesn't that imply that we can take it away? Every institution is flawed. Maybe we should spend some more time correcting ours instead of bouncing around and crushing others.

    Of course, I'd rather there be no institution, but that's a completely other discussion.

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