Tag Archives: Georgia

The Benning School for Boys

Seems like only yesterday…

Actually it was at noon on June 3, 1968, which is roughly 15,147 yesterdays. The magic day and time I graduated from the Benning School for Boys.

Sounds like a reform school for “troubled” youth. In a way, it was. Considering that it was a one-way track that led straight to the infantry in Viet Nam.

UPDATE:  Whoa. The school is on Facebook. Who knew? Even the 101st ABD claims it. Apparently the name was first given in World War II and applied to all combat training at Benning, not just OCS. News to me.

Why Russia invaded Georgia

It’s not what you think, what you’ve read or heard thus far from the MSM. Independent journalist ace Michael Totten calls it the truth. As with most truths, it’s long and complicated, but it’s worth the read and consideration. Truth or not, the Russians don’t seem to like it one bit, because Michael’s site seems to be under cyber-attack. I’m categorizing this under The War, as I have all my posts about the Russian invasion of Georgia, because Russia supports the Syrians and Iranians, two countries who support the terrorists we are fighting.

MORE:  One Georgian woman’s tale, from BlackFive, which will update Michael’s link if it changes.

Georgian sealift

U.S. Navy destroyer McFaul has arrived at the Georgian port of Batumi, well south of the port at Poti where Russian troops remain, eliminating any possible confrontation. The AP, which has a reporter on board, says the McFaul unloaded fifty-five tons of humanitarian aid such as blankets and food, which were ferried ashore for the Georgian refugees the Russian invasion created. The Georgian news media confirms the arrival, but says seventy tons went ashore. AP says the McFaul is the first of five ships to come.

On The Other Hand

There is always and forever the cynical Spengler view of interests, i.e. reality versus idealism:

"Forget the Kosovo Albanians, the South Ossetians, the Abkhazians, Saakashvili and the Dalai Lama. These are relics of an older world that might deserve their own theme park, but not their own state…"

Georgia Still On My Mind

I spent much of the beach trip this week using a laptop to keep up with the Georgian situation, via the few new media reporters and many bloggers on or near the scene (most of their links available here at Black Five, scroll down), and came to a few unhappy conclusions. It seems obvious the Russians are there to stay. At the very least they will keep on burning, raping, killing and looting as it suits them and their mercenary pals. At the worst they may decide to used massed artillery/rockets to reduce Tbilisi to rubble.

Militarily, there is next to nothing we can do, unless we want to risk nuclear war. Bush’s and McCain’s continued demands for withdrawal only serve to make us look impotent. We really aren’t, not totally. But anything we do will be risky–including the dispatch of three U.S. Navy vessels with humanitarian aid, due to arrive next week. Signing up Poland for anti-missile interceptors (thankfully not to be installed for two more years, providing a breather there) seems to have gotten the Russians to consider arming Syria with more potent missiles against Israel, and may yet provoke them to openly aid Iran in its pursuit of nukes.

One good thing is that Russians really aren’t as powerful as they seem. Their arsenal is old, and poorly maintained, although they seem to have many more tactical nukes than we do, making conventional warfare with them even more risky. But theirs is no longer a command economy. It is a market one. If customers for the oil and gas on which their economy almost entirely depends, find new suppliers, they will be very weak, indeed. Yet, still, they will have those nukes.

Scorched forests

The Russian Bear, ever diligent in its campaign to destroy little Georgia despite various ceasefire agreements, prefers to start forest fires, with incendiaries dropped from helicopters, in the southern part of the country. Smokey would be appalled, as we all are. In Afghanistan they left brightly colored mines behind to attract and punish children. Brave Russians. So manly. At least they haven’t been reported to be doing that again. Yet.

UPDATE:  Bad enough that they set the fires. Now they’re refusing to allow putting them out. The Soviet Union Russians, of course, claim innocence, all around. But don’t they always?

The shame ameliorates

Somewhat, anyhow. We couldn’t go to the nuclear mattresses with Russia over its rape of Georgia, so we did the next best things.