PDA

View Full Version : Bush announces $1 billion in aid for Georgia


canu
09-03-2008, 10:25 PM
Hey Jack send some my way....MF



Pushing back against an increasingly aggressive Moscow, President Bush said Wednesday the U.S. will send an extra $1 billion to Georgia to help the pro-Western former Soviet republic in the wake of Russia's invasion.

"Georgia has a strong economic foundation and leaders with an impressive record of reform," Bush said in a statement. "Our additional economic assistance will help the people of Georgia recover from the assault on their country, and continue to build a prosperous and competitive economy."

Vice President Dick Cheney, due in Georgia on Thursday, planned to make the massive aid package a major highlight of his discussions with Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili. Cheney is on a tour of three former Soviet republics that are wary of Russia's intentions in what Moscow likes to call its "near abroad" sphere of influence and what Cheney termed while in Azerbaijan on Wednesday "the shadow of the Russian invasion of Georgia."

"The free world cannot allow the destiny of a small independent country to be determined by the aggression of a larger neighbor," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told reporters at the State Department in a simultaneous announcement with Bush.

She mocked Russia for its recognition of the two separatist regions in Georgia that are at the heart of the conflict that broke out last month, and for its failure to garner international backing.

"Almost no one followed suit, I might note. It isn't really an impressive list to have Abkhazia and South Ossetia recognize each other," she said.

Also in tandem with Bush, the International Monetary Fund announced it has agreed to lend Georgia $750 million for economic recovery.

The administration is delaying an announcement on some sort of punishment of Russia for its actions against Georgia and its refusal thus far to comply with a French-brokered cease-fire. However, the decision to shower tiny Georgia with such substantial aid and have Cheney talk about it in Moscow's backyard will likely be seen by the Kremlin as highly provocative, if not a punitive measure in and of itself.

The dollar total is half the $2 billion a year the U.S. gives Israel, its largest aid recipient. But the sizable amount still shows the strategic importance the U.S. places on both supporting Saakashvili's Western-leaning government and countering the desire by a newly resurgent and energy-rich Moscow for greater regional influence.

Cheney made a point in Azerbaijan of saying that Washington has "a deep and abiding interest" in the region's stability.

That said, the U.S. has found during this conflict that it has little leverage with Russia. Moscow has drawn condemnations from the United States and Europe, but little else. Meanwhile on Wednesday, Russia closed its embassy in Georgia, following Georgia's severing of diplomatic ties with Moscow.

After years of tensions, the recent fighting began Aug. 7 when Georgian forces went into its breakaway province of South Ossetia in hopes of re-establishing control. Russian forces repelled the offensive and pushed deep into Georgia proper.

Both sides signed the cease-fire in mid-August, but Russia has ignored its requirement for all forces to return to prewar positions.

Bush said the money will meet humanitarian needs, such as helping to resettle families that were displaced. The U.S. already has provided $30 million in humanitarian relief since the conflict began.

The United States has sent two military ships bearing aid to Georgia, and the USS Mount Whitney — the flagship of the Navy's 6th Fleet — steamed through the Dardanelles early Wednesday and was expected to pass through the Bosporus later in the day. The two Turkish-controlled straits link the Mediterranean to the Black Sea.

The new funds are also aimed at helping impoverished Georgia, wedged between Russia and Turkey on the Black Sea, to rebuild infrastructure and boost an economy that has been growing but is nowhere near grown.

Georgia wants to rebuild and modernize its badly routed military. Though U.S. officials emphasized that none of the current package was for military aid, there was no effort to rule that out for the future. Russia has accused the United States of delivering arms on the U.S. warships that have docked in Georgian ports with humanitarian supplies.

Rice said that $570 million of the funds will be made available in the remaining months of the Bush administration, though Congress will have to approve $200 million of that. That also leaves a sizable portion — $430 million — up to the budgeting discretion of next year's Congress and the new president.

But Bush feels confident in that area, as both the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates, Barack Obama and John McCain, have expressed strong support for Georgia's embattled government and Bush's approach to Russia's invasion.

On trade, Bush said the United States would negotiate a deal to provide preferential access to Georgian exports. The president said his commerce secretary would dispatch a trade mission to Georgia in the coming weeks.

licupssy
09-04-2008, 12:00 PM
Well, that's about $3.20 per 310,000,000 Americans. I wold recommend keeping an eye on Georgia because it's basically what happen in post WWII in Hungary after the Hungarian revolt in 1956. With Russia's new found oil riches it's people are too tied up in their new found wealth to care what happens. The US failed to heed the warnings of General Patton on Russia in 1945 and as history shows it lead to Russia taking over much of Eastern Europe and throwing the world into a cold war. With Russia still holding it's seat and veto power in the UN security council, there is little hope that the UN will get involved in the matter. The situation could be worse. Instead of aid we could be sending armed troops into Georgia to help them push the Russians back across the border.

fmb
09-04-2008, 05:07 PM
I agree with Licu. There are some other spots to watch over the next few months/years: the Crimea in Ukraine and Estonia. Hopefully, the Ruskies will see this isn't helping with additional assimilation into the modern world and will forego armed conflict during political problems.

rjsincs
09-04-2008, 05:32 PM
arent we in a recession? couldnt we use the money here more?

licupssy
09-04-2008, 09:48 PM
arent we in a recession? couldnt we use the money here more?
It's humanitarian aid. It's just the excess cheese and stuff they have left over from the welfare hand outs. Just as long as it ain't the storage food from the military. When I was in, the potato chips were dated 1945. That's a sure way to lose an Allie.
They already use the 4 trillion excess from the SS and Medicare fund so if they sent them money it only be worth the paper it was printed on.

CD
09-04-2008, 10:07 PM
arent we in a recession? couldnt we use the money here more?
nonsense. cause sometimes if you throw money at the problem, it goes away.