The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Putin accuses U.S. of orchestrating Georgian war
By Matthew Chance
CNN
© August 28, 2008
Story Highlights
- Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin accuses
U.S. of plotting conflict
- Putin says U.S. did it to help one of the
presidential candidates
- Russia fails to win support of Asian security
alliance over Georgia
- Russia had appealed to the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization for backing
SOCHI, Russia (CNN) -- Russian Prime Minister Vladimir
Putin has accused the United States of orchestrating
the conflict in Georgia to benefit one of its presidential
election candidates.
In an exclusive interview with CNN's Matthew Chance in
the Black Sea city of Sochi on Thursday, Putin said
the U.S. had encouraged Georgia to attack the autonomous
region of South Ossetia.
Putin said his defense officials had told him it was
done to benefit a presidential candidate -- Republican
John McCain and Democrat Barack Obama are competing to
succeed George W. Bush -- although he presented no
evidence to back it up.
"U.S. citizens were indeed in the area in conflict,"
Putin said. "They were acting in implementing those
orders doing as they were ordered, and the only one
who can give such orders is their leader."
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino blasted Putin's
statements, saying they were "patently false."
"To suggest that the United States orchestrated this
on behalf of a political candidate just sounds not
rational," she said.
U.S. State Department deputy spokesman Robert Wood
concurred and labeled Putin's statements "ludicrous."
"Russia is responsible for the crisis," Wood said in an
off-camera meeting with reporters in Washington on
Thursday. "For the Russians to say they are not
responsible for what happened in Georgia is ludicrous. ...
Russia is to blame for this crisis, and the world is
responding to what Russia has done."
When told that many diplomats in the United States and
Europe blame Russia for provoking the conflict and for
invading Georgia, Putin said Russia had no choice but
to invade Georgia after dozens of its peacekeepers in
South Ossetia were killed. He told Chance it was to avert
a human calamity.
The former Russian president, still considered the most
powerful man in the country, said he was disappointed
that the U.S. had not done more to stop Georgia's attack.
Putin recalled that he was watching the situation in
Georgia and South Ossetia unfold when he was at the opening
ceremony of the Beijing Olympic Games on August 8.
He said he spoke to U.S. President Bush, also attending,
who told the Russian prime minister he didn't want war,
but Putin spoke of his disappointment that the U.S.
administration didn't do more to stop Georgia early in
the conflict.
Also Thursday, Putin announced economic measures that he
said were unrelated to the fighting with Georgia. Nineteen
U.S. poultry meat companies would be banned from exporting
their products to Russia because they had failed health
and safety tests, and 29 other companies had been warned
to improve their standards or face the same ban, Putin
said.
Putin said Russia's health and agricultural ministries
had randomly tested the poultry products and found them
to be full of antibiotics and arsenic.
Putin repeated that the bans were not related to the
Georgian conflict, but they indicate the measures that
some Western countries -- particularly in Europe -- fear
if Russia goes on a diplomatic offensive.
Russia is trying to counterbalance mounting pressure from
the West over its military action in Georgia and its
recognition of the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and
South Ossetia.
But Russia's hopes of winning international support for
its actions in Georgia were dashed Thursday, when China
and other Asian nations expressed concern about tension
in the region.
The joint declaration from the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization, which includes China, Russia, Tajikistan,
Kyrgystan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, said the countries
hoped that any further conflict could be resolved peacefully.
"The presidents reaffirmed their commitment to the principles
of respect for historic and cultural traditions of every
country and efforts aimed at preserving the unity of a
state and its territorial integrity," the declaration said,
The Associated Press reported.
"Placing the emphasis exclusively on the use of force has no
prospects and hinders a comprehensive settlement of local
conflicts," AP quoted the group as saying.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had appealed to the group
at a summit in Tajikistan on Thursday to support its actions,
saying it would serve as a "serious signal for those who are
trying to justify the aggression."
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On Wednesday, a U.S. ship carrying aid docked in Georgia,
while Britain's Foreign Secretary David Miliband traveled
to the Ukraine, which is worried about Russia's intentions
in the region, to offer the UK's support.
Miliband equated Moscow's offensive in Georgia with the Soviet
tanks that invaded Czechoslovakia to crush the Prague Spring
democratic reforms in 1968, and demanded Russia "change course,"
AP reported.
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Last Modified:
September 22, 2008