America, Murder, and Assassination in the Georgia Republic

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 Pattern of Blatant Murder and Torture in Georgia Exposed

… by  Henry Kamens,  with New Eastern Outlook,  Moscow

St. Petersbury - at dusk - Count the golden domes.
St. Petersbury – at dusk – Count the golden domes.
[ Editors note:  American foreign intrigue in Georgia, a flanking move into the former Soviet satellite states, was all part of the New Cold War being advocated by the Bush (43) hoodlums, the turncoat NeoConservatives, and their Israeli Intel and  Jewish Lobby friends here.
It was a disaster, like everything else they touched and destroyed, which included a generation of American wealth that went up in smoke.
Not a one of them have been prosecuted, or even brought in for questioning. Politics has become the Olympics for the elite criminal crowd. They love that immunity.

VT has published the plans to establish bases there which would have faciliated the desired and anticipated attack on Iran which the Bush crowd was determined to accomplish prior to his leaving office.
The Georgian people have thrown off America’s puppet regime and begun prosecuting the gangsters that tortured, murdered and raped their country under the tutelage of our own American Ambassador (and others), as Henry describes below.
But the big time gangsters take care of their own. Those whom Mikheil Saakashvili left behind now find themselves facing well deserved charges of murder and mayhem, Mr. Saak got a soft landing at Tufts University where an attempt will be made to bleach the blood from his hands and whitewash his crimes in Georgia.
We would not know nearly as much about this if it were not for one man, Henry Kamens, who has been doing fabulous investigative journalism work there through his NEO articles, which we are happy to republish on VT. There used to be a lot of people in the business doing work like this. Now they are a rare breed.
All of the Bush (43) crowd involved in the Georgian misadventure are indictable on the Nuremberg precedent of ‘waging an offensive war’. Immunity was not given to the Germans there, but a victorious army saw to it that only one side had convictions for war crimes, when they all had their hands dirty.

I am not holding my breath to see war crimes prosecutions any time soon in the US, but the international community owes all the help it can give to the new Georgia government to see justice done for its people. And we are looking forward to learning more about American individuals involved in crimes against humanity to the Georgian people… Jim W. Dean ]

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