As the saying goes, I have now heard everything, Mr George W. Bush tells the world that it is unacceptable for any power to invade another sovereign state.
My first concern is for the health and well-being of the person who dared to teach him that line. If he or she had dared to suggest such a thing in 2003, it would have brought immediate dismissal and possibly even incarceration in the Guantanamo Goulag or on Diego Garcia.
When did Mr Bush receive this dazzling and startling message which others had tried to get through to him over five years ago now? What has led him to this sudden conversion from his previous belief that might was right to ideas of legality and acceptable behaviour?
It apparently depends on who does the invading. This time (unlike the criminal invasion of 2003 which was ordered by a certain Mr George W. Bush), it was an invasion by the Russian Empire of dissident areas (cynically attached by the late unlamented Georgian tyrant of the Soviet Union, Josef Dzhugashvili, aka Stalin, to Georgia). His reasons were of the basest, since he wished above all to hold his Empire together, and he was a strong believer in the application of the principle of 'divide and rule'. In this present case concerning power games in the Caucasus, we must not forget that Mr Bush is unlikely to get round to criticising Georgia for its enthusiastic and substantial participation in Mr Bush's own 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Sadly, we cannot expect to hear and see Mr Bush wearing a hair-shirt and becoming a public penitent, but we are all left wondering just what he will do next. Even the now cloyingly sycophantic BBC, since its emasculation as a punishment for its revelations later covered up by the Hutton whitewash enquiry when it was placed under much stricter control by the United Kingdom government (as ordered by its CIA and Zionist masters), has noted the black humour arising from any criticism by Mr Bush of the Russians for copying his own actions. He should be told of the old saying that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, and thank Mr Putin and his new puppet for their most eloquent praise of his own behaviour. We are now waiting to hear similar remarks to those of Mr Bush from Mr J. Gordon Brown (or his side-kick David Miliband) and Mr Nicolas Sarkozy (or his side-kick Bernard Kouchner). They have no doubt been ordered to come forward in support of the Georgian president following his cry for help to his CIA and Zionist masters to protect his pro-NATO government from the big bad Russian Empire.
Let us be grateful that NATO had not already encapsulated Georgia since, thanks to Stalin's diabolic sub-division of the Caucasus, the territories involved would legally have formed part of a member state of that dubious 'Alliance'. I am not arguing in favour of letting the Russian Empire have everything that it wants, and, as I suggested in my previous article "Is there a "Good Guy"?", it appears that both parties are in the wrong, but I do not see either admitting it.
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N.B. Is anyone sure that Mr Bush has been told that Georgia is not the one of the USA?
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