Sarkozy and Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili.
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Diary shows Tojo resisted surrender till end
August 12, 2008
By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press Writer
TOKYO - Japanese World War II leader Hideki Tojo wanted to keep fighting even after U.S. atomic bombs destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki, accusing surrender proponents of being "frightened," a newly released diary reveals.
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Still, Tojo — who apparently wrote the diary for himself rather than as an argument to his contemporaries — said he would accept in silence the decision to surrender, which was made by government leaders in the presence of then-Emperor Hirohito.
"Now that the diplomatic steps have been taken after the emperor's judgment, I have decided to refrain from making any comments about it, though I have a separate view," Tojo wrote.
anothershamus wrote:
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COL. SAM GARDINER: Absolutely. Let me just say that if you were to rate how serious the strategic situations have been in the past few years, this would be above Iraq, this would be above Afghanistan, and this would be above Iran.
On little notice to Americans, the Russians learned at the end of the first Gulf War that they couldn’t—they didn’t think they could deal with the United States, given the value and the quality of American precision conventional weapons. The Russians put into their doctrine a statement, and have broadcast it very loudly, that if the United States were to use precision conventional weapons against Russian troops, the Russians would be forced to respond with tactical nuclear weapons.
John Stewart wrote:War: it's just God's way of teaching Americans geography.
Larry Chin wrote:Watch Bush/Cheney. They are not done.
Georgia rail bridge blown up; Russia rejects blame
16 August 2008
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KASPI, Georgia - Georgia accused Russian troops on Saturday of blowing up a railway bridge on the main line west of the capital Tbilisi, but Russia denied carrying out any such operation.
A Reuters cameraman near the town of Kaspi, 45 km (30 miles) west of Tbilisi, said one end of the bridge had collapsed on to the bank of the Mtkvari River in a tangled mess of metal and rubble.
Villagers said the bridge had been blown up on Saturday by men in uniform who arrived by military jeep, uncoiled wires and detonated explosives remotely.
They said the men responsible were Russians, but the Russian General Staff denied this.
Georgia has alleged that South Ossetian militias as well as irregular forces from over the border with Russia in the North Caucasus have pushed through behind advancing Russian forces, looting and burning Georgian villages.
"At 12:20 (0820 GMT) this afternoon, Russian forces blew up a major railroad bridge near Gori," Georgian Prime Minister Lado Gurgenidze told reporters in Tbilisi.
"That bridge being gone effectively results in the country losing east-west railway communications," he said. "For how long I do not know."
A Reuters correspondent witnessed Russian troops advancing to villages in the Kaspi region on Friday.
"We are in peacetime"
The railway line runs from Tbilisi, through the now Russian-occupied town of Gori, before splitting in three and running to the Black Sea ports of Poti and Batumi and southwest to just short of the Turkish border.
Russia's General Staff said Moscow was not in the business of blowing up bridges.
"We are in peacetime. Why should we be blowing up bridges when our job is to restore?" Colonel-General Anatoly Nogovitsyn, deputy chief of the General Staff, told a daily briefing.
"We are not conducting bombardments. I can say with full responsibility that this cannot be the case."
On Friday, a Russian military convoy advanced to the Kaspi region from Gori near breakaway South Ossetia, the deepest incursion into Georgia proper in the nine-day confrontation between Georgia and Russia over South Ossetia.
Russia drove Georgian forces from South Ossetia last week, in a massive counter-offensive after Tbilisi tried to retake the region from pro-Moscow separatists.
Since the Georgian pullout, Russian forces have set about securing or destroying Georgian military installations and abandoned arms dumps.
On Saturday, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev signed a ceasefire agreement ending hostilities. Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili signed the document on Friday and the United States called for the immediate withdrawal of Russian forces.
Pole Position: More U.S. Troops Sent to Russian Border
Chris Floyd, Empire Burlesque
August 15, 2008
First Georgia, now Poland. The Bush Administration announced Thursday that American soldiers will begin manning missile sites in Poland -- part of an agreement that surpasses even the NATO treaty in binding Washington to an armed response to any attack on Polish soil.
Spokesminions for President George Butt-Thumper said the installation of the missile base is designed to protect Poland from an intercontinental missile attack from Iran. (The perfidious Persians' long-standing plans to conquer Poland are well-known, of course.) The minions say that the missiles and troops are not at all intended as a threat to Russia, which is being slowly encircled by NATO bases and American missiles -- despite solemn promises from Washington to refrain from, er, encircling Russia with NATO bases and American missiles.
But while Butt-Thumper was playing coy about the latest interjection of American cannon fodder into the now-roiling region, the Poles were admirably frank: they wanted a signed, ironclad deal that would force Americans to fight for them -- unlike the hapless Georgian leader Mikhail Saakashvili, who depended on a nod and a wink from militarist factions along the Potomac (apparently John McCain and his neocon crowd) when launching his own sneak attack on South Ossetia. [Justin Raimondo has more on this.]
As we all know, Misha was left up Saakashvili Creek without a paddle when the U.S. cavalry failed to ride to his rescue as expected. (Can there be any other explanation as to why he would launch his tiny military on a reckless adventure that was certain to provoke a massive Russian response? Obviously he thought Uncle Butt-Thumper would back him up.)
But there was none of that boneheaded shilly-shally for the Poles. They took advantage of the Bush Regime's panicky anxiety to look big and tough in front of the Russians and quickly sealed the missile base deal, wringing concessions that Washington had been resisting for 18 months.
The Polish Prime Minister, Donald Tusk, put plainly what his country wanted out of the agreement: "Poland and the Poles do not want to be in alliances in which assistance comes at some point later — it is no good when assistance comes to dead people. Poland wants to be in alliances where assistance comes in the very first hours of — knock on wood — any possible conflict."
Poland has an understandable fear of Russia, which has invaded and occupied its territory several times -- most recently, of course, in collaboration with the Bush Family's old business partners, Nazi Germany. Then again, Poland invaded and occupied Russia a few times too, back when it was a major power. Major powers tend to do that kind of thing. Which is why, as I noted in a recent comment exchange, one should be eternally suspicious of any person or group who takes control of massive, inhuman structures like states, because of our common human propensity to abuse power -- and to justify those abuses by claiming they are done in the name of some higher ideal. This applies no matter what system a particular state is based upon: capitalism, communism, theocracy -- or the grotesque chimera that now holds sway in both the United States and Russia: lawless, militarist authoritarian corporate-cronyism.
An American military move into Poland is the height of folly -- then again, we have been living on those dizzy heights for a number of years now, so there's nothing new in that.
But speaking of business partners, so much of the current unpleasantness would never have arisen if the dastard Putin had not begun hoarding Russia's natural resources for his cronies instead of giving it away to Butt-Thumper's buds. One recalls those halcyon days of yore when BP and Shell were striking fat oil and gas deals with Russian partners. Back then, Putin was Butt-Thumper's "soulmate," invited down for barbecues in Crawford. Back then, Putin was praised in the American media as the strong, steady hand that Russia needed, "a man we can do business with." Back then, Putin's astonishingly savage rampage through Chechnya and his installation of a regime of brutal thugs to preside over its remains were lauded as part of the war against Islamofascist terror.
But that was then and this is now. In the past few years, as the Kremlin has tightened its grip on Russia's oil and gas reserves and its indispensable pipelines to Europe, as it has grown rich from the spike in oil prices sparked by Bush's wars and threats of war, as its has rolled back Big Oil's presence in Russia -- often in harsh and humiliating ways -- Putin has steadily emerged in Western eyes as a tyrant, a bully, an ogre who threatens the stability of the entire world. (How long will it be before he is dubbed "the New Hitler"?)
The actual nature of Putin's regime has never mattered to our freedom-loving elites. The only "foreign policy" question they have is this: "Will they play ball? Will they fork over?" If Putin had only let the Western elite have a nice juicy slice of the Russian pie -- and maybe joined in one or two of Butt-Thumper's wars -- why, he could have romped and scampered around the region all he liked. But he didn't, and so now we have a "new Cold War," with Washington pouring oil on the fires in the Caucus and stirring the embers of fear and suspicion on the Russian-Polish frontier.
What next? Landing an expeditionary force in Vladivostok?
geogeo wrote: I followed Chechnya in the early 2000s but not in the 1990s, and I remember that its fundamentalists Muslim leaders at one point were the only remaining 'state' with diplomatic relationships with Afghanistan. What's more, the Chechnyan fundies were bankrolled by Middle Eastern countries, and there was a website, kavkaz, that was I believe based in the US. I believe at the time I sort of bought it, a bit in awe of the jihadists shooting down Russian helicopters and posting the videos, but I wonder now whether the Russians were basically lured into Chechnya in the first war the same way they were lured into Afghanistan and now into South Ossetia.
It seems like a pattern. We use Russia's well-known mission to protected the Slavs (as in the Balkans) to move the chesspieces into a check situation, and then make geopolitical hay. This would be the Brzezinskians, I suppose.
I also remember the horrible school massacre a couple years ago--and dark allegations that 'outside countries' were involved; as well as the theater take-over in Moscow, with similar comments being made (by the same sorts of Russians who made some intriguing comments about 9-11). Then there was a shootdown of plane full of Israelis, and at the very beginning some apartments being blown up in Moscow. Most of this dark stuff was pushed on the Russians themselves, particularly the apartments, but it has always seemed to me that there is a certain pattern of MI6-type provocation, or whatever.
geogeo wrote: What's more, the Chechnyan fundies were bankrolled by Middle Eastern countries, and there was a website, kavkaz, that was I believe based in the US.
Precisely. Remember, The Muslim Terrorist Apparatus was Created by US Intelligence as a Geopolitical Weapon
Russia is considering arming its Baltic fleet with nuclear warheads for the first time since the cold war, senior military sources warned last night.
The move, in response to American plans for a missile defence shield in Europe, would heighten tensions raised by the advance of Russian forces to within 20 miles of Tbilisi, the Georgian capital, yesterday.
Under the Russian plans, nuclear warheads could be supplied to submarines, cruisers and fighter bombers of the Baltic fleet based in Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave between the European Union countries of Poland and Lithuania. A senior military source in Moscow said the fleet had suffered from underfunding since the collapse of communism. “That will change now,” said the source
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