Both Senators John McCain and Barack Obama unreservedly supported
the country of Georgia last fall in its war against Russia.
Now a European commission is preparing to place most of the blame
for starting the war on Georgia and its impulsive, authoritarian
president, Mikhail Saakashvili.
Reports Der Spiegel online:
The confidential investigative commission documents, which
SPIEGEL has obtained, show that the task of assigning blame for
the conflict has been as much of a challenge for the commission
members as it has for the international community. However, a
majority of members tend to arrive at the assessment that
Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili started the war by
attacking South Ossetia on August 7, 2008. The facts assembled
on Tagliavini's desk refute Saakashvili's claim that his
country became the innocent victim of "Russian aggression" on
that day.
In summarizing the military fiasco, commission member
Christopher Langton, a retired British Army colonel, claims:
"Georgia's dream is shattered, but the country can only blame
itself for that."
Another commission member, Bruno Coppieter, a political
scientist from Brussels, even speculates whether the Georgian
government may have had outside help in its endeavor. "The
support of Saakashvili by the West, especially military
support," Coppieter writes, "inadvertently promoted Georgia's
collision course."
Letting Georgia into NATO would reduce U.S. security by
effectively turning American decisions involving war
and peace over to a small, irresponsible country half a world
away. Not a good idea.