Marco
Rubio vs. Rand Paul
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Did
FDR Provoke Pearl Harbor?
In August 2008,
as the world's leaders gathered in Beijing for the Olympic games,
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, hot-headed and erratic,
made his gamble for greatness.
It began with
a stunning artillery barrage on Tskhinvali, capital of tiny South
Ossetia, a province that had broken free of Tbilisi when Tbilisi
broke free of Russia. As Ossetians and Russian peacekeepers fell
under the Georgian guns, terrified Ossetians fled into Russia.
Saakashvili's
blitzkrieg appeared to have triumphed.
Until, that
is, Russian armor, on Vladimir Putin's orders, came thundering down
the Roki Tunnel into Ossetia, sending Saakashvili's army reeling.
The Georgians were driven out of Ossetia and expelled from a second
province that had broken free of Tbilisi: Abkhazia.
The Russians
then proceeded to bomb Tbilisi, capture Gori, birthplace of Joseph
Stalin, and bomb Georgian airfields rumored to be the forward bases
for the Israelis in any pre-emptive strike on Iran.
The humiliation
of Saakashvili was total, and brought an enraged and frustrated
John McCain running to the microphones.
"Today, we're
all Georgians," bawled McCain.
Well, not exactly.
President Bush
called Putin's response "disproportionate" and "brutal," but did
nothing. Small nations that sucker-punch big powers do not get to
dictate when the fisticuffs stop.
What made this
war of interest to Americans, however, was that Bush had long sought
to bring Georgia into NATO. Only the resistance of Old Europe had
prevented it.
And had Georgia
been a member of NATO when Saakashvili began his war, U.S. Marines
and Special Forces might have been on the way to the Caucasus to
confront Russian troops in a part of the world where there is no
vital U.S. interest and never has been any U.S. strategic interest
whatsoever.
A U.S war with
Russia – over Georgia, Abkhazia and South Ossetia – would have been
an act of national criminal insanity.
Days later,
there came another startling discovery.
McCain foreign
policy adviser Randy Scheunemann had been paid $290,000 by the Saakashvili
regime, from January 2007 to March 2008, to get Georgia into NATO,
and thus acquire a priceless U.S. war guarantee to fight on Georgia's
side in any clash with Russia.
What makes
this history relevant today?
Last week,
Sen. Marco Rubio, rising star of the Republican right, on everyone's
short list for VP, called for a unanimous vote, without debate,
on a resolution directing President Obama to accept Georgia's plan
for membership in NATO at the upcoming NATO summit in Chicago.
Rubio was pushing
to have the U.S. Senate pressure Obama into fast-tracking Georgia
into NATO, making Tbilisi an ally the United States would be obligated
by treaty to go to war to defend.
Now it is impossible
to believe a senator, not a year in office, dreamed this up himself.
Some foreign agent of Scheunemann's ilk had to have had a role in
drafting it.
And for whose
benefit is Rubio pushing to have his own countrymen committed to
fight for a Georgia that, three years ago, started an unprovoked
war with Russia? Who cooked up this scheme to involve Americans
in future wars in the Caucasus that are none of our business?
The answer
is unknown. What is known is the name of the senator who blocked
it – Rand Paul, son of Ron Paul, who alone stepped in and objected,
defeating Rubio's effort to get a unanimous vote.
The resolution
was pulled. But these people will be back. They are indefatigable
when it comes to finding ways to commit the blood of U.S. soldiers
to their client regimes and ideological bedfellows.
Back in 2008,
however, as Bush was confining himself to protesting the excesses
of Russia's response, his ex-U.N. ambassador was full of righteous
rage and ready for military action.
In the London
Telegraph, Aug. 15, 2008, John Bolton declared that Russia
had conducted an "invasion," that Georgia had been a "victim of
aggression," that America had "fiddled while Georgia burned," that
we had played the "paper tiger"when faced by the snarling Russian
Bear.
As for the
European Union, in bringing about a ceasefire, it had achieved results
"approaching Neville Chamberlain's moment in the spotlight at Munich."
But did not
Georgia launch the attack that started the war?
"This confrontation
is not about who violated the Marquis of Queensbury's rule in South
Ossetia," scoffed Bolton. Russia planned this "rape" because brave
little Georgia refused to be "Finlandized."
Restoring
America's credibility, said Bolton, now requires "drawing a clear
line for Russia" in the Caucasus and elsewhere.
And who is
John Bolton?
Newt Gingrich
told two groups Wednesday he intends to name Bolton secretary of
state.
With Newt appointing
as America's first diplomat an uber-hawk who makes Dick Cheney look
like Gandhi, and Mitt Romney's foreign policy team crawling with
neocons primed for war with Iran, a vote for the GOP in 2012 looks
more and more like a vote for war.
Like the Bourbons
of old, the Republican Party seems to have learned nothing and forgotten
nothing.
December
10, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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