Georgia from Joseph Stalin to US Puppet Regime
2 October 2012, 18:48
The
loss of Mihail Saakashvili’s party in parliamentary elections in Georgia may
spell the end for his regime and a return to democracy in Georgia. It may
also spell the warming of relations, soured by Saakashvili, between Russia
and Georgia. For the West the elections may be the first step towards his
removal from power, the loss of a “Queen”, in their game of geopolitical
chess.
Suffering
an unexpected blow at the polls in the parliamentary elections, tie-eating
Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, in the middle of the night conceded
defeat, opening the trap-door beneath his own feet and paving the way for
real change and real democracy in Georgia, but pundits and experts are
already saying that he will undoubtedly find a reason to dissolve parliament
and call for new elections.
The blow
to the plutocratic despot is one that the West cannot allow to stand as they
have too much to lose and have invested far too much to quietly just go
away, lose their influence and simply mothball all of their plans for the
integration of Georgia into the Western Sphere.
It is no
secret that Saakashvili is the “West’s man in the Caucuses” the darling of
Hillary Clinton and Obama’s US State Department, NATO headquarters and the
Pentagon and the intelligence services of the UK and the US. He is yet
another despotic dictator that has murdered, oppressed, strangled, tortured
and subjugated his people with the support of the West in exchange for
advancing their geopolitical agenda in yet another region far removed from
their own borders yet where they want control.
The VOR’s Dmitry
Babich has
already gone into the hypocrisy of the West with regard to Saakashvili, so I
won’t go into that right now. Suffice it to say that the hypocrisy when it
comes to Saakashvili is total and all encompassing and characterizes the
total anti-Russia hysteria by the West, something they need to propagate to
continue to have support for their intrusions on the sovereignty of the
countries in the region and to justify their aggressive military build-up
and the expansion of NATO into the Caucuses.
What the
complete loss of power of the Saakashvili regime will mean for the West and
for Saakashvili himself is hard to predict exactly, the opposition has shown
leniency toward him, so it is possible he may remain in some sort of
position of power for the mid-term. However what few have focused on is that
his loss may open the door to prosecution and punishment for the crimes he
has committed against his own people and against innocent civilians.
These
crimes include the recent revelations that his “security” apparatus was
responsible for torturing and illegally detaining people opposed to his
regime and a plethora of charges that could be brought in relation to how
his regime has stifled dissent and cracked down on anyone opposed to his
regime. But that would only be the start, there are those who have accused
Saakashvili of crimes that could be tantamount to treason for selling out
his country to the interests of the West, although prosecution for such a
crime is unlikely, that would be one possibility which would end in his
execution.
The
biggest worry for Saakashvili and his Western paymasters right now should be
whether Saakashvili will end up having to face the War Crimes Tribunal in
The Hague. According to an article regarding a European
Union-Commissioned Report on the invasion of South Ossetia in 2008 by Russia
Today,
back in October of 2009, citing Interfax, Nestan Kirtadze, international
secretary of Georgia's Labor Party concluded that:
“The
commission accused Saakashvili of war crimes. Namely, of unleashing active
hostilities, of a massive, wide-scale military operation in the South
Ossetian capital Tskhinval and the use of prohibited types of weapons, of
shelling and destroying nonmilitary facilities, and of attacking military
personnel from the peacekeeping mission that was mandated by the United
Nations.”
As there
is no statute of limitations on war crimes Saakashvili has a lot to worry
about and had better stock up on ties.
The
winners of the parliamentary elections have said that they will normalize
relations with Russia, with the West screaming indignantly about “Russian
Influence” as they once again conveniently ignore their own attempts at
influencing the country.
As we
might recall Georgia shares almost half of her borders with Russia and has
classically fallen into Russia’s sphere of influence. We should also
remember that that until Saakashvili came to power Russia and Georgia shared
a rich and proud history and very close ties and good relations in trade,
economic and other cooperation, education and more. This was beneficial for
the peoples of both countries.
Saakashvili was one of the crowning jewels in NATO and the West’s
consolidation of power and control after the end of the Cold War and the
collapse of the Soviet Union. Who would have ever thought that the country
that gave the world and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Joseph
Stalin would become a pawn of Western expansionism?
The fall
of Saakashvili would mean many things for many people, for one, the tens of
thousands of refugees from Georgia that have fled to Europe and other
countries could finally return home. It would also mean the utter failure of
Hillary Clinton and the West’s plans at geopolitical domination in Russia’s
backyard, a nice retirement present and the crowning failure of her
diplomatic career.
Regardless of all my musings it is too early to count our chickens.
Saakashvili is still in power and will do everything possible, including
killing his own people, to stay in power. We will probably see attempts to
dissolve parliament, call for a recount of the vote, which he will win, and
a massive crack down on the Georgian opposition. Saakashvili has too much to
lose to quietly acquiesce and has shown he has no qualms about taking his
country down into the abyss with him.
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