Photos of the Russian Front in Georgia
Defense Official: Russia Has Short Range Missiles in South Ossetia FOX News
Scenes from
Georgia (go here for more pics) - the aggression continues
BREAKING NEWS
Report from the Georgian FrontBy Ilana Freedman
As we continue to follow the war in Georgia, and make no mistake, the war is still on; our exclusive sources on the ground have been filling in some of the gaps. A team went out on reconnaissance last night to assess the damage and came back with stories you won't see on the news. Their trip took them well into the next day, and they returned with much to tell about what they had seen.
The first thing our source told me was that in spite of all the stories of Russians continuing to move throughout Georgia, the team saw few signs of movement. The Russians seem to be staying in place for the moment. But the team met a group of Russian soldiers, with whom they stopped to talk. The soldiers were angry and bitter because they had clearly outrun their supply chain and were forced to forage for food and clothing.
"This is not right," one said, "The Georgians live like kings, while we are forced to live like beggars."
Another soldier was particularly angry. "I was told we were going on a training mission, but here I am in Georgia, fighting my brothers!" he told our source.
[Editor's comment: These soldiers were duped by their own leaders. They forgot, perhaps, (or maybe he never knew) that Georgia had been a thriving capitalist society for some time (until the Russian Bear descended in all its fury last week), and the fruits of democracy have been reflected in a higher standard of living than he has probably ever seen.
Considering that it was these very soldiers who overran this country with such massive and brutal force, a warm welcome should not have been expected. It seems that the Russian government has left its own soldiers to fend for themselves, most probably in order to create as much chaos and destruction as possible.]
Our source said that along on their way, his group also met a Georgian grandmother, weeping over the deaths of her two grandchildren, 12 and 14 years old. She told them that the children had gone out to fetch water, but were stopped by Russian soldiers who shot and killed them both.Our source also reported that on Saturday, the Russians set fire to one of Georgia's national forests at the Borjomi Gorge, a scenic canyon located in central Georgia's Borjomi-Kharagauli National Park. According to other corroborating reports, the Russians started the fires by dropping incendiary devices from military helicopters. The park is one of Europe's largest, and the springs that produce Georgia's popular mineral water are located there.
Russian military helicopters were reported to have bombed the nearby city of Borjomi and settlement of Tsemi, using the same method. The Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has asked Turkey for assistance to combat the fires, but reported that Russian air patrols refused to allow the firefighters access to the park. The only reason for such actions would be to ensure that as much damage is inflicted on Georgia as possible.
The Russian helicopters were also reported to have destroyed a key railway bridge, a major link between Tbilisi and Georgian port of Poti, which the Russians have also largely destroyed.The destruction of the bridge essentially broke the railway links between the eastern and western parts of the country, and also severed one of the escape routes being used by Georgian refugees fleeing from the Russian-occupied territories to safer places.
Georgia's Interior Ministry has also accused the Russian-backed militia members of seizing thirteen Georgian villages and a power plant. Our source told us that these irregulars are not local, but came through the Roki Tunnel from Russia with the Russian troops. The tunnel runs under the Caucasus Mountains, between Russia and Georgia, and provided the open access that Russia needed to send her forces into Georgia so efficiently.
These irregulars have been accused of ferocious acts of looting and of committing atrocities on the local population wherever they have gone. Their job, it seems, is to run amok in the wake of the Russian troops, do their worst, but give deniability to the official Russian military. All these activities are in violation of a new cease-fire agreement that Russia and Georgia signed on Friday.While the agreement called for the immediate withdrawal of Russian troops, the Russians refused to set a date and withdrawal seems unlikely in the foreseeable future. When US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice was asked about these reports on Saturday, she responded limply, "The Russians perhaps are already not honoring their word."
While Russia's Vladimir Putin claims that 'only' dozens have been killed in the fighting, some reports from Georgia put the death toll as high as 2,000. Considering the magnitude and ferociousness of the Russian onslaught, the higher number seems far more likely. To put it in perspective for a Western reader, that death toll in a week's time is equivalent to half the American death toll in Iraq over a five year period.
Putin has called Georgia's aggression in South Ossetia as "complete genocide". Putin, a graduate of the KGB, and now de facto ruler of 21st century Russia, is wrong. The damage from Georgia's attack on South Ossetia pales in comparison to the utter devastation of the entire country of Georgia by Putin's army.
[Editor's comment: Why is Russia inflicting so much destruction on Georgia? All that was needed to stop Georgia's attack on South Ossetia was a small response. Yet Russia put the full might of its military into this war and moved its forces from one end of Georgia to the other, on the ground, in the air, and from the sea.I have been told that Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who served for over fifteen years in the KGB, never forgets a slight. It has also been reported in the international press that Georgia's president, Mikheil Saakashvili, who is known for his flamboyant and often impulsive rhetoric, once called the Russian "Lilli-Putin", an insult that Putin has placed on file for retribution.
Is this devastating destruction of Saakashvili's country payback for the insult? (I am told that this is altogether possible. In Moscow, Putin has called Saakashvili a lunatic and a pariah, and Putin is known as a dangerous opponent.) Is it part of a larger plan for a greater Russia? Is it a bold statement to the Western world that Russia is now prepared to be a major force in the global arena and will use whatever force is necessary to make its point?
Quite possibly it is all of these and more. No simple answers will suffice in this very public show of force. But force against democratic society requires a forceful response, one which we have not given. Just as Georgians stood beside America in Iraq, we must now stand beside them in this grave hour of their imminent demise. Weak statements of support no longer suffice. They will make us all vulnerable in the face of power-hungry opponents, which Putin has now declared Russia to be.]
UPDATE: Georgia: Terror fears over whereabouts of region's nuclear material (Daily Telegraph - London)
When the breakaway region of Abkhazia split from Georgia in 1993, the world's only known case of enriched uranium going missing was reported after up to 2kg of the potentially devastating material was stolen from a laboratory. There are now fears that the organised criminal gangs that are rife in the region could exploit the confusion of the current conflict to loot other stocks. Security services are worried that terrorist organisations such as al-Qa'eda could purchase weapons grade uranium and mix it with a detonator as basic as fertiliser to make a deadly device.

Our source also reported
that on Saturday, the Russians set fire to one of Georgia's national forests at
the Borjomi Gorge, a scenic canyon located in central Georgia's
Borjomi-Kharagauli National Park. According to other corroborating reports, the
Russians started the fires by dropping incendiary devices from military
helicopters. The park is one of Europe's largest, and the springs that produce
Georgia's popular mineral water are located there.
The destruction of the bridge
essentially broke the railway links between the eastern and western parts of the
country, and also severed one of the escape routes being used by Georgian
refugees fleeing from the Russian-occupied territories to safer places.
While the agreement called
for the immediate withdrawal of Russian troops, the Russians refused to set a
date and withdrawal seems unlikely in the foreseeable future. When US Secretary
of State Condoleeza Rice was asked about these reports on Saturday, she
responded limply, "The Russians perhaps are already not honoring their
word."
I have been told that Russia's Prime
Minister Vladimir Putin, who served for over fifteen years in the KGB, never
forgets a slight. It has also been reported in the international press that
Georgia's president, Mikheil Saakashvili, who is known for his flamboyant and
often impulsive rhetoric, once called the Russian "Lilli-Putin", an insult that
Putin has placed on file for retribution. 









Since this conflict has evolved this far. Just a thought or two. It looks like a great place to test IEDs on Russian armor. If nothing else, it would level the playing field!
Posted by: Jackson Pearson | Monday, August 18, 2008 at 10:58 PM
It is very important that the world community boycott Russian petroleum, possibly permanently. Canada has major proven reserves of oil and natural gas (approaching in size those of Russia's). Canada should thus be the next new source of Europe's (and hopefully India's, Japan's and China's) petroleum and natural gas supplies.
That'll fix Putin's Tsarist wagon.
Posted by: pythagoras | Monday, August 18, 2008 at 11:05 PM
Evil sonsobitches. We need Harry Truman
Posted by: RISE_UP | Monday, August 18, 2008 at 11:11 PM
Again, someone please tell me which countries around Georgia would allow OUR supply trains and which ones would allow OUR military combat aircraft over-flights? Yes, Russians are evil pigs, but Truman would drop an atomic bomb on where exactly? Should nuclear powers ever meet face to face on the battlefield? Not an easy question to answer.
Posted by: neverforget | Monday, August 18, 2008 at 11:57 PM
How come I don't see groups of students screaming in the street against Russia the way that they did in 2006 when they marched in the street for Hizbollah? Maybe Georgia isn't important enough for the leftists any way. There are only 4 million people and very few Muslims.
Posted by: Mystical Time Traveler | Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 12:24 AM
When I speak of Harry Truman..I am not speaking of all of the Politically correct wars we have been fighting. There is going to come a time and it should have already come, that we must do the unthinkable in order to save our own people and by that I mean...drop the bomb on the head of the beast..where they live...that's where...We have been struggling and losing lives that should not have been lost in Iraq because we are too GD politically correct. But we will NEVER win against Russia that way. They are not politically correct and you can see that with your own eyes.
Posted by: RISE_UP | Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 08:03 AM
"I was told we were going on a training mission, but here I am in Georgia, fighting my brothers!" he told our source.
According to these pics they sure have no shame in fighting their "brothers" I would hate to see the pics if they where fighting enemy's
Posted by: FredM | Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 10:57 AM
Neverforget, consult a map of the Black Sea.
Those countries would be: Romania (NATO, EU member), Bulgaria (NATO, EU member), Ukraine (NATO, EU wannabe), Turkey (NATO, EU accession process).
Posted by: Indigo Red | Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 09:50 PM