| Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili planned to leave the country |
| Friday, 22 August 2008 | |
|
All Russian sites and "enemy TV" have been blocked. However, the
government's official propaganda was dealt a serious blow yesterday
when the country's only Russian-language newspaper Vecherniy Tbilisi
published an interview with renowned political scientist Ramaz
Klimiashvili. When the news began to spread, Klimiashvili writes, the opposition started to panic. Despite their many differences, Saakashvili was maintaining control over the situation and "without him at the helm the country would sink into chaos." The political scientist says Saakashvili wouldn't have launched a full-scale military operation without U.S. consent. "Was the U.S. really unaware that Russia would respond just like they did years back in Kosovo?" he asks. "I don't exclude the possibility that to a large extent Bush was interested in seeing Russia's reaction — whether the country was ready to utilize the Kosovo option. Russia was forced to act decisively to avoid looking helpless in the eyes of the Caucasus people." Klimiashvili believes that little good will come of the South Ossetian war. "I don't doubt the August affairs may one day be seen as more of a catastrophe than Georgia's loss of Abkhazia in 1993," he said. "We don't yet know what is really going on… If the U.S. is involved here, then the guilt should be on their conscience." |