There’s A Bear In The Woods!

THERE’S A BEAR IN THE WOODS!
By Scott Lilly

Center For American Progress
August 12, 2008
DC

A Russian officer walks past a destroyed building in Tskhinvali,
the capital of the Georgian breakaway enclave of South Ossetia.

Since the Vietnam War, conservatives in the United States have pummeled
moderates and progressives on the issue of national security. In
one dispute after another, they have fashioned themselves as Winston
Churchills while their opponents were naïve and incompetent Neville
Chamberlains. Repeatedly they have driven home the message that their
opponents were clueless as to the dangerous nature of the world we
live in, and unwilling to use the force that might be necessary to
cope with that danger.

That is why it is the ultimate irony that it was President George
W. Bush and his hard-line foreign policy team who were asleep
at the switch when the Russian Bear awoke from its slumber and
resumed its preoccupation with empire. It is hard to say whether
this administration’s flatfooted response would be more contemptible
if it were attributed to the administration’s failure to anticipate
Russia’s actions or if U.S. officials knew in advance of Russia’s
preparations but could concoct no response more effective than the
one we have witnessed.

What is certain is that while Bush’s old friend, Vladimir Putin, rushed
home from the Beijing Olympic games to manage the unfolding of events
which he had quite clearly been planning for months if not years,
while "the sports-loving Bush," according to the Associated Press,
"refused to let the fighting completely ruin his trip as the first
sitting American president to attend an Olympics on foreign soil."

What is also certain is that the guns of August 2008 have in a matter
of a few days significantly changed the world we live in. It is now
clear to almost everyone that Russian objectives go well beyond the
issue of the ethnically Russian citizens of South Ossetia. Moscow’s
swift military gambit clearly includes "regime change" for the entire
nation of Georgia.

That is important not simply because Georgia’s democratically elected
president, Mikhail Saakashvili, is far more pro-western than his
eventual Russian-picked successor will be, but also because it sends
a clear message throughout the region that Russia can do what it
pleases–and that the United States is too weak, too overstretched,
too unpopular, and too weary from years of failed international
exploits to act.

That is a message that will be heard first in Azerbaijan, Armenia,
and the Ukraine. Leaders such as Azeri Prime Minister Ilham Aliyev
will go to considerable lengths to avoid the fate that apparently
awaits Saakashvili. They will see the value of alliance with the
United States in greatly diminished terms. All will urgently seek
ways to accommodate Russian interests.

But the message will extend beyond those countries. Iran and Turkey
will be forced to recognize that Russia is reemerging as a force
in their region, and that their economic and security interests in
the future will have to be more closely harmonized with those of
Russia. Former Soviet Republics such as Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
will be far wearier of entanglements with the United States that
might provoke Russian displeasure.

The apparent helplessness of the United States to respond in behalf of
a nation that we have publically taken in our arms as an ally is in
part the product of a war that has not only squandered our national
security resources but has left us with virtually no reserves to
contend with problems that might erupt in other parts of the world.

That failing is one that national security experts ranging from
the center to the left of the political spectrum have warned
about repeatedly. We now have no division in reserve or even a
brigade. Whether we would have or should have used our military
resources in behalf of Georgia is a legitimate question but from
Putin’s vantage point it was not at issue. His adventure could be
launched with assurance that U.S. military resources were not in play.

We have provided aid and comfort to the Russian invaders in other
ways, too. We have established a new standard that nations must meet
before crossing the sovereign boundaries of other nations–trumped
up charges based on manufactured intelligence will do nicely. Our
diplomatic standing to challenge Russia’s irresponsible meddling is
even weaker than our military standing.

This dismal state of affairs should remind neocons, moderates, and
progressives alike of the 1984 Reagan re-election campaign ad–one
of the classic television ads of all time. The script was as follows:

There is a bear in the woods.

For some people the bear is easy to see.

Others don’t see it at all.

Some people say the bear is tame. Others say it’s vicious and
dangerous.

Since no one can really be sure who’s right, isn’t it smart to be as
strong as the bear? If there is a bear?

Georgia proves that there is a bear in the woods. Among those who did
not see the bear was the conservative president of the United States,
who with his many "hard-line" advisors looked into Vladimir Putin’s
eye and "found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy…I was
able to get a sense of his soul." According to Bush their meeting was,
"the beginning of a very constructive relationship."

Scott Lilly is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress.

–Boundary_(ID_ahoFXLDP7jAucwXJcnYbDA)- –

House Resolution Commemorates 1958 Azorean Refugee Act

HOUSE RESOLUTION COMMEMORATES 1958 AZOREAN REFUGEE ACT
By Michael Doyle

McClatchy Washington Bureau
August 12, 2008
DC

WASHINGTON — John F. Kennedy helped populate the San Joaquin Valley
with Azoreans. Now, the Valley’s lawmakers offer a belated thanks.

In a commemoration that’s also a rich political lesson, six House
members are honoring long-ago congressional efforts on behalf of
Azoreans displaced by a 1950s volcano. The volcano subsided, but the
consequences of Kennedy’s efforts can still be felt today.

"We understand the 50th anniversary is an important milestone,"
Rep. Jim Costa, D-Fresno, said Tuesday.

Costa recently introduced a resolution commemorating the
half-century-old Azorean Refugee Act. The legislation and its
successors welcomed thousands of refugees fleeing the Capelhinos
volcano, which boiled the island of Faial between September 1957 and
October 1958.

"Everywhere within a four-mile radius the lava and ash spread fear and
destruction," Kennedy declared on the Senate floor on June 30, 1958.

The new commemorative resolution, in turn, is the kind of symbolic
shout-out that proliferates in a Congress highly attuned to ethnic
voting blocs.

Costa and his Valley co-authors, Reps. Devin Nunes, R-Visalia, and
Dennis Cardoza, D-Merced, all represent sizable Portuguese-American
constituencies. Costa himself had one grandfather who emigrated from
Portugal in 1899, and another who came in 1904.

The three other Democratic co-sponsors come from Rhode Island
and Massachusetts, which are likewise well-populated by
Portuguese-Americans.

In a similar expression of all-politics-is-local, Fresno-area
lawmakers whose districts include tens of thousands of
Armenian-American constituents have long championed an Armenian
genocide resolution. The Valley’s politically vocal Hmong refugees
convinced Rep. George Radanovich, R-Mariposa, to denounce the socialist
Laotian government. The Valley’s significant Sikh population persuaded
former Rep. Gary Condit of Ceres to opine on internal Indian politics.

The 2000 census identified 1.1 million Portuguese-Americans living in
the United States, including about 330,000 in California. Many are
concentrated in certain regions, a trend that typically amplifies
business and political clout. The new resolution, for instance,
asserts that roughly half of the San Joaquin Valley’s dairy farms by
the 1970s were owned by Portuguese-Americans.

"There are still a lot of living immigrants who came as a result of
that (1958) legislation," noted Nunes’ chief of staff, Johnny Amaral,
whose own grandparents and father immigrated from Faial.

Costa and his colleagues introduced the Azorean Refugee Act
commemoration July 31. Costa and Nunes shortly thereafter departed
for the Azores, a cluster of islands 900 miles west of Portugal,
where they visited relatives and helped island residents commemorate
the volcanic eruption.

"The eruption of the Capelhinos volcano led to a wave of Portuguese
immigration that brought more than 175,000 Azoreans to the United
States between 1960 and 1980," the resolution states.

The resolution glosses over some politically instructive details.

The initial moving force behind the Azorean Refugee Act was Sen. John
O. Pastore, a Rhode Island Democrat who introduced the measure June 4,
1958. The legislation authorized 1,500 visas for Azoreans affected
by the volcano.

Kennedy, a Massachusetts senator still two years away from his 1960
presidential bid, came on board three weeks later. So did others
attentive to Portuguese-American voters.

"In the district which I represent in California are a great many
families of Portuguese extraction," then-Rep. John McFall, a Democrat
from Manteca, declared Aug. 22, 1958 House. "These people have earned
the reputation as fine, hardworking, law-abiding citizens."

The 1958 political maneuvering took some familiar-sounding turns.

Other senators including New York Democrat Jacob Javits said they
wanted "comprehensive" immigration legislation. Senate leaders,
though, warned the Azorean refugee bill would die if anyone hijacked
it as a vehicle for broader immigration reform.

"I know it is not an idle threat," a frustrated Javits declared, adding
that "it should be made clear that far more inclusive immigration
action in the interest of the United States is urgently required."

But in the kind of side deal that often lubricates legislation,
lawmakers did add several thousand additional visas for Dutch
nationals. The initially limited Azorean visa program then expanded
in future years, until quotas were lifted altogether.

Boxer Ratnayake Beaten, Vidanage Finishes 16th

BOXER RATNAYAKE BEATEN, VIDANAGE FINISHES 16TH
Dinesh Weerawansa

Ceylon Daily News
13 August 2008
Sri Lanka

Boxer Anuruddha Ratnayake shattered Sri Lanak’s hopes when he went
down to Latin American silver medallist Robenilson Vieira in their
men’s 51kg flyweight category first round bout of the XX1X Olympic
Games here in Beijing today.

The Brazilian, making the full use of his height and long arms, took an
upper hand from the first round of the bout worked off at the Workers’
Gymnasium ring under lights. It was a blank point sheet during the
first minute of the round one before Robenilson came to the picture
with two calculated punches to lead 2-0 at the end of the first round.

Robenilson had a big advantage with his height in evading punches
from relatively small-made Sri Lankan.

The Brazilian kept his cool and boxed to his original strategy and
extended his lead to six points to one at the end of round two. Two
powerful left hooks by the Latin American Games fly weight silver
medallist saw Ratnayake trailing 2-9 at the end of round three.

It was a tall order if Ratnayake was to make any comeback in the fourth
round, which he opened with a seven-point deficit. Though the tussle
looked even during the first one minute of the fourth round, at least
three vital punches from Ratnayake went unnoticed. If the Lankan had
caught the attention of the judges during his most aggressive moments,
he would have got into a psychologically important position.

Nevertheless, the Brazilian was far superior and deserved to win on
points 13-3. Ratnayake was not at his brilliant best and looked off
colour. The Lankan did not get the ideal start he was expecting and
that put Robenilson in the driving seat from round two.

"It was sad that I could not play my normal game. I should have
done better. Unfortunately things did not go in the manner which I
expected," Ratnayake said after his first round debacle.

He said the height and long arms of the Brazilian gave his opponent
a distinct advantage.

"He made use of his height and arms to stretch fully and escape when
I was charging.

But that is no excuse. I did not box well," Ratnayake added.

But Ratnayake said his presence at the Olympic ring under the Lion
flag should open a new era in Sri Lankan boxing. "I think my journey to
the Olympic boxing ring should be an inspiration to all Lankan boxers
and all those who intend to take to the ring sport. I am ever thankful
to all Sri Lankans who wholeheartedly supported my journey," he added.

Young Ratnayake said the battle is not lost altogether. "This is a
good beginning and I will survive to fight for another day. I will
make use of this experience and plan my strategy to work towards the
2012 Olympic Games," a determined Ratnayake said.

Chef-de-Mission of the Sri Lanka contingent and ABASL President Dian
Gomes was a dejected man after Ratnayake’s defeat.

But a determined Gomes said Raynayake’s Olympic journey should open a
new era in Lankan boxing. "He did not play well today and was beaten
by a better opponent. We have no complaints. But this should be an
inspiration to all and I would like to see a few more Ratnayakes
making it to the 2012 Olympics," Gomes said.

Minister of Sports and Public Recreation and Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to
China Karunatillaka Amunugama were amongst the VVIPs at the Workers’
Gymnasium to see the Lankan boxer in action. Minister Lokuge is due
to return home tomorrow.

Vidanage finishes 16th There was a little bright spot for Sri Lanka in
the Olympic arena when star weightlifter Chinthana Vidanage finished
16th in the men’s 69kg category. Vidanage, who topped the Group C
with a total lift of 293kg yesterday, was overshadowed by 15 others
who competed under Group A and B in the men’s 69kg event today.

Having established three new Sri Lanka records to head Group C,
Vidanage was looking for a place within the top 20 lifters in
his weight category. Today, the Commonwealth Games gold medallist
fulfilled that dream when he secured the 16th place in the final
standings after the A and B group lifts.

China’s Hui Liao bagged the weightlifting gold of men’s 69kg event with
a total lift of 348kg, 55kg more than the Lankan lad from Polonnaruwa.

Last year’s World champion Liao had a snatch lift of 158kg and a clean
and jerk lift of 190kg. Vencelas Dabaya-Tientcheu of France (338kg)
and Itgran Gevorg Martirosyan of Armenia (338kg) bagged the silver
and bronze medals of this weight category.

"I felt very nervous at the very first attempt of both Snatch and Clean
and Jerk." said Liao, referring to his fail in these two attempts.

"There were unnecessary mistakes, fortunately I survived. Eventually
I got the gold medal,"

he said after his memorable feat. Favorite Lee Baeyoung of South
Korea, who took silver at Athens 2004, suffered cramps in both legs
in the Clean and Jerk and failed in all three attempts. China’s Shi
Zhiyong, defending champion in the Men’s 62kg Weightlifting category,
was another favorite who failed to make the podium.

Meanwhile, Russian Islam-Beka Albiev dominated Vitaliy Rahimov of
Azerbaijan in the final of the Men’s Greco-Roman 60kg wrestling event.

Albiev took the first period by 2-0. He then went on to win the
second period 4-0, leaving no room for Rahimov to respond. Albiev’s
best personal achievement in senior competition before this gold was
a bronze medal in the 2007 World Cup.

China’s Zhong Man claimed the gold medal in a 15-9 two-round bout in
the final of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games Men’s Individual Sabre at
the Fencing Hall. Nicholas Lopez of France took home the silver. Thus,
Zhong became the first Chinese fencer in Olympic history to win
this event.

Hosts China continued to head the latest medals standings of the
Beijing Olympics. At the time of writing, China headed the latest
medals standings with 13 golds, three silver and four bronze medals.

USA is placed second with only seven gold, six silver and eight bronze
medals. In the third place is South Korea with five gold medals,
six silver and a bronze medal.

None of the Lankan Olympians will be seen in action on day five of
the Beijing Olympics on Wednesday.

But at the Water Cube on Thursday, Sri Lanka’s Daniel Lee will swim
in men’s 50m free style first round heats.

UEFA Cancels First Leg Of Georgia Team’s Match

UEFA CANCELS FIRST LEG OF GEORGIA TEAM’S MATCH

PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung)
2008-08-12 21:26:04 –
Austria

NYON, Switzerland (AP) – UEFA canceled the first leg of a football
match Thursday between Georgian club WIT and Austria Vienna because
of fears for the players’ safety.

The UEFA Cup qualifying match, which was supposed to be contested
over two legs, will now be decided in a single game in Vienna on
August 28. The winner qualifies for the competition’s first round.

"(WIT is) not in a position to organize a safe and secure venue in
Georgia, nor to play at an alternative venue," European football’s
governing body said Tuesday in a statement.

The decision ends two days of international football diplomacy to
find a way for WIT to fulfill its obligations amid hostilities between
Georgia and Russia. The club, based in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi,
had hoped to maintain one match close by so that it wouldn’t completely
forfeit its home advantage.

But it failed to find agreement with football authorities to stage
the match in neighboring Armenia or Azerbaijan, its preferred options.

The club opted early Tuesday to play in Turkey, in the Black Sea port
city of Rize _ 60 miles (97 kilometers) from the Georgia border.

But that plan fell through within hours, UEFA said, adding it accepted
the request but was "subsequently informed by the Georgian Football
Federation _ also speaking on behalf of WIT _ that the squad could
not travel due to security concerns.

WIT’s Mikheil Meskhi Stadium in the capital city was judged on Monday
as too dangerous for the game.

UEFA did not say how it would deal with a draw, which normally is
decided by the away-goal tiebreaker.

"UEFA will contact the clubs and national associations concerned in
due time to communicate the rules applicable to this single match,"
it said.

WIT is the last club from Georgia remaining in UEFA-organized
competitions this season. Champion Dinamo Tbilisi was knocked out of
the Champions League last week by Greek side Panathinaikos.

Dinamo’s German coach Rainer Zobel and six foreign players left
Georgia earlier this week to seek safety in Germany.

Thoughts On Russia And Georgia

THOUGHTS ON RUSSIA AND GEORGIA
John Stinson

AINA
8-12-2008 19:25:30
CA

(AINA) — Under the terms of a Department of State contract, I was
hired to be an advisor to the Republic of Georgia’s Ministry of Defense
and General Staff. I arrived on the very day of the "Rose Revolution"
which launched the current president, Mikheil Saakashvili into the
international arena. My job was to assist the Georgians in their
reform effort — the extant military organizations were based on the
Soviet model and they wanted to chance into a modern, Western model.

I was to advise the Ministry staff on planning, programming and
budgeting. Similarly, I worked with the General Staff — their G-5 —
on military force structure and stationing. There was a parallel effort
going on which was to thoroughly reorganize the ground forces from
the individual soldier level up. Part of this work (but not within
the scope of the contract) was the reshaping of the entire national
security apparatus of the former soviet republic. For example, the
Georgian Ministry of Interior maintained its own fleet of trucks,
tanks and artillery (for internal security purposes). These units
were either integrated into the regular armed forces or reshaped
into something like our Department of Homeland Security. These are
the people who suffered the initial casualties during this invasion
— Georgian cops with patrol cars vs. IEDs planted by separatists
supported by Russian tanks and artillery.

We formed their new units based on a US light infantry battalion model
— but with fewer crew served weapons (machine guns and mortars,)
very little logistical support, armored vehicles, artillery or air
defense weaponry. This was done specifically to assuage Russian angst
that Georgia might take military action in the provinces stolen from
them by Russian interference in the early 1990s.

These "break-away" provinces have been organically part of the Georgian
nation since before Roman Times. There was a real King Midas and a real
"Golden Fleece" from this area. Many of the Greek Fables attributed
to Aesop are in fact folk tales of Georgian origin. Abkhazia (on the
Black Sea) and South Ossetia (in Central Georgia) were Georgian before
the 1st Russ refugee ever settled in what is now Moscow.

The Soviet Union regularly forcibly moved ethnic peoples far from
their normal homelands as a control measure. Ossetians are people
from the North Caucasus — the part of Georgian they live in is called
Samachablo by the Georgians but was denominated South Ossetia by the
Soviets during the USSR period in the 1920.

South Ossetians normally take vacations in August to visit their
relatives in the North Caucasus. There is only one way to get there —
the Roki tunnel — otherwise they have to go far to the east or west (a
series of mountain passes into Chechnya or out to the Black Sea). This
year, the normal vacation period for the Ossetians became a call of
ethnic cleansing by the Russians against the Georgians. The Georgian
President responded by taking journalists to the conflict zone and
showing them that there was no mobilization of Georgian forces —
only Russian propaganda. No matter — the Russians generated an
incident and the Georgians were forced to respond.

Much — if not all — of what you’re hearing from the Russians in
the news is classic disinformation. There are open source reports
that the Russians are claiming that some of the bodies found in
Georgia have had US or NATO insignia on them and that we are engaging
in genocide. Russia clearly has been planning this for quite some
time — they’ve had their railroad troops repair the tracks on both
sides of the Russian/Georgian border; they hacked all the official
Georgian governmental outlets and many of the private businesses
(anybody with an .ru e-mail and an IP address in Georgia); their navy
has landed troops far from the conflict zone; heavy trucks and tank
transporters have been moving south through the mountain passes from
the North Caucasus.

Most disturbing is the timing of all this — President Putin launched
this during the Olympic Games as he was meeting with President Bush —
clearly a direct & personal insult.

This war is very much about oil — there is a pipeline from Azerbaijan
through Georgia into Turkey. This is a private business venture
managed by British Petroleum. Clearly, if the Russians can cut this
then Europe will continue to be dependent on them for oil and gas.

Russian railroad troops refurbishing the double-tracked, electrified
heavy, main line from Russia into Georgia along the Black Sea
is part of a larger plan to provide munitions and "material" to
Iran. Russia and Armenia have already signed an agreement for a Russian
"private" company to take over the Armenian railroad. There are rail
connections in Armenia into Iran. Open source reports indicate a
three-way agreement is being developed to fix the Armenian-Iranian
rail connections. A cowed (and crippled) Georgia would be forces to
allow the transshipment of whatever cargo the Russians wanted to send
through its client (Armenia) to its ultimate customer (Iran.)

What is going on in Georgia now is of a piece with Ukraine in the 20’s,
Finland in the 30’s, the Berlin Airlift in the ’40’s, Hungary in the
’50’s, Czechoslovakia in the 60’s, Afghanistan in the 70’s, etc.

It is noteworthy to say the population of Georgia is less than that
of metropolitan Boston and yet they have more soldiers in OIF than
anybody else save the Brits and South Koreans.

John Stinson is a West Point graduate and retired Special Forces
Lieutenant Colonel who spent one year in Georgia and two years in Iraq.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Estonia To Help Georgia Fight Back Against Cyberattacks

ESTONIA TO HELP GEORGIA FIGHT BACK AGAINST CYBERATTACKS
By Matthew Harwood

Security Management
08/12/2008
Virginia

Two Estonian computer security experts will arrive in Georgia tonight
to help the besieged government battle back against an array of
cyberattacks, reports ComputerWorld.com.

Two of the four experts that staff Estonia’s Computer Emergency
Response Team (CERT) were waiting Tuesday morning in Yerevan, the
capital of Armenia, seeking permission to drive into Georgia, said
Katrin Pargmae, communication manager for the Estonian Informatics
Center. The two officials are also bringing humanitarian aid, she said.

Estonia is also now hosting Georgia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Web site, which has been under sustained attack over the last few days.

Other Georgian Web sites are currently being hosted on American
servers.

Paralleling what’s occurring militarily in the real world between
Russian and Georgian soldiers, battles have been waged in cyberspace
as well. Hackers known as the South Ossetia Hack Crew have directed
denial-of-service attacks against prominent Georgian Web sites as
the country’s Parliament and its president, Mikheil Saakashvili.

Computer security experts see Russian fingerprints on such attacks.

"The Russian government is in the position to deny that they are
directly responsible for the attacks but they have allowed the attacks
to happen and they have allowed the attacks to come out of servers that
are under their jurisidiction and their control," Scott Borg, director
of the U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit, told National Public Radio.

As ComputerWorld.com reports, the Russian government has long been
suspected of directing cyberattacks against neighboring countries
such as Estonia, Lithuania, and Georgia when political struggles
have erupted.

President Meets Cyprus Olympic Stars

PRESIDENT MEETS CYPRUS OLYMPIC STARS

Famagusta Gazette
12.AUG.08
Cyprus

President Christofias has visited the Olympic Village where he met
Cypriot athletes, competing in the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.

"We may be small but we have a big heart," he said of Cyprus and the
17-member Olympic team which represents the country at the Olympics.

He said Cyprus has won the respect of powerful nations around the
world and especially the host country China. "We are proud of this,"
he added.

The president spent three hours with the Cypriot athletes, in the
presence of the Chairman of the Cyprus Olympic Committee Kikis
Lazarides and the Chief of the Cypriot Mission Alecos Spanos.

"It’s a great honor to represent our country and it’s a great honor to
participate in this great sports fiesta," Christofias said, adding that
the presence of the Cyprus flag at the Olympic Games consolidates the
existence of the Cypriot state, which still suffers from the Turkish
invasion and the continuing occupation.

"Our wish and expectation, through the battles we wage on the political
front, is to end Turkey’s occupation and halt illegal immigration
into the northern Turkish occupied areas of the country.

"We also aim to reunite Cyprus so that it can serve the interests
of all its citizens, Greek Cypriots, Turkish Cypriots, Maronites,
Armenians and Latins in conditions of peace, happiness and prosperity,"
he stressed.

Addressing the Cypriot sailors competing in Qingdao Olympic Centre,
the President said: "we want these athletes to be able one day to
sail in the waters of Kerynia," (on the north coast of Cyprus and
still under Turkish occupation).

Christofias wished everyone success.

President Christofias visited also the headquarters of the Greek
Olympic team and offered a replica of the Kyrenia ship (ancient ship
found in Kyrenia) as a symbolic gift to the leader of the mission
Isidoros Kouvelos.

He met the mayor of the Olympic Village, toured the site, conversed
with athletes and witnessed how around 20,000 people spend their day
at the Olympic Village.

President Christofias announced that he and the Minister of Education
and Culture Andreas Demetriou would visit a Chinese school, which
was twinned with a Cypriot village as part of the Heart-to-Heart
Partnership programme of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Educational
Programme.

Georgia Team’s UEFA Cup Qualifier Cancelled Amid Hostilities

GEORGIA TEAM’S UEFA CUP QUALIFIER CANCELLED AMID HOSTILITIES

The Canadian Press
August 12, 2008
Switzerland

NYON, Switzerland — The soccer qualifying match between Georgian
club WIT and Austria Vienna was cancelled Tuesday because of safety
concerns following recent air and land attacks by Russia.

UEFA said the Mikheil Meskhi Stadium in the capital city of Tbilisi
was too dangerous for Thursday’s UEFA Cup qualifying match amid
hostilities between Russia and Georgia.

The two-match qualifying event will be shortened to one and played
in Vienna on Aug. 28.

Earlier Tuesday, UEFA had said the match would be moved to Rize,
Turkey. But that plan fell through when the Georgian Football
Federation – also speaking on behalf of WIT – announced the squad
could not travel due to security concerns.

"(WIT is) not in a position to organize a safe and secure venue in
Georgia, nor to play at an alternative venue," European soccer’s
governing body said in a statement.

The decision ends two days of international soccer diplomacy to
find a way for WIT Georiga to play. It failed in efforts to play in
neighbouring Armenia or Azerbaijan.

UEFA did not say how it would deal with a draw, which normally is
decided by the away-goal tiebreaker.

"UEFA will contact the clubs and national associations concerned in
due time to communicate the rules applicable to this single match,"
it said.

WIT is the last club from Georgia remaining in UEFA-organized
competitions this season. Champion Dinamo Tbilisi was knocked out of
the Champions League last week by Greek side Panathinaikos.

Dinamo’s German coach Rainer Zobel and six foreign players left
Georgia earlier this week to seek safety in Germany.

Wrestler Sasamoto So Near, Yet So Far

WRESTLER SASAMOTO SO NEAR, YET SO FAR
Ken Marantz

The Daily Yomiuri
Aug 13, 2008
Japan

After the long years of living with a loss that should never have been
and the countless hours of preparing for the moment, how cruel that
four seconds out of Makoto Sasamoto’s life could have such an impact.

Sasamoto was four seconds from winning his second-round match at
the Beijing Olympics before victory was snatched from his hands and,
a short time later, his dreams of an elusive medal ended as well.

Sasamoto, Japan’s top hope for a men’s wrestling medal, was dealt a
heartbreaking 2-1 (0-4, 2-0, 2-0) loss by two-time Olympic champion
Armen Nazarian in the Greco-Roman 60-kilogram class Tuesday at the
Beijing Agricultural University Gymnasium.

While that loss erased Sasamoto’s hopes of a gold medal, any chance
of leaving Beijing with even a bronze ended when Nazarian lost his
quarterfinal match to Azerbaijan’s Vitaliy Rahimov, a loss that kept
the Japanese out of the repechage round that leads to the bronze-medal
playoffs.

"I wanted to win a medal, and to lose in the second round leaves me
with nothing but regrets," the 30-year-old Sasamoto said.

After outclassing Nazarian in the first period, turning him over twice
with surprising ease, Sasamoto only had to resist being turned over
in the final 30-second down position of the second period to win the
period and the match.

Nazarian pressed and pressed and, with the clock ticking down to the
single digits, finally broke down Sasamoto’s resistance, lifting him up
and tossing him for two points to send the match to the third period.

In the final frame, it was Sasamoto who was on top at the end and
needing to somehow turn Nazarian to win the match. He came close as
he strained with all his might. But the Bulgarian held out to clinch
the win.

"I was in good shape," Sasamoto said. "At the end, it was a matter
of who could hold out more."

As the 2007 world silver medalist, Sasamoto had come to Beijing aiming
to become Japan’s first Greco-Roman gold medalist since 1984.

The loss marked the third time that Nazarian defeated Sasamoto at
the Olympics, although his victory in the semifinals in Athens four
years ago was steeped in controversy.

A call against Nazarian that would have given Sasamoto the win was
reversed by an on-site FILA official, who later admitted he made
a mistake.

"It’s really disappointing," Sasamoto said. "To lose to the same
opponent three times…"

The 34-year-old Nazarian won a gold medal for Armenia at the 1996
Atlanta Olympics, then repeated as champion for Bulgaria in Sydney
in 2000. In Athens, the three-time world champion had to settle for
the bronze medal.

In his first-round match, Nazarian beat Georgia’s David Bedinadze,
who defeated Sasamoto in the final at last year’s world championships.

"It was just a small difference," Japan coach Hiroshi Kado said of
the levels between Sasamoto and Nazarian. "[Nazarian] beat the world
champion, but he was not someone [Sasamoto] can’t beat."

Sasamoto, who defeated 2006 European champion Karen Mnatsakanyan
of Armenia in the first round, said he would continue his wrestling
career, adding, "But I don’t know if I can remain at the top level."

Speaking Of India, Armenia And Those Herculean Australians

SPEAKING OF INDIA, ARMENIA AND THOSE HERCULEAN AUSTRALIANS

Los Angeles Times
11:27 AM, August 12, 2008
CA

Even though Medals Per Capita trumps the fallacy of the standard Medals
Table (as seen on the right-hand side of this page) and rightfully
exalts smaller countries as a rule, let us take this opportunity to
applaud India.

This global colossus just harvested the first individual gold medal
in its Olympic history when Abhinav Bindra won the 10-meter air
rifle event, and while MPC certainly tilts toward the Lilliputians
in exquisite fairness, that doesn’t preclude some sympathy for a giant.

MPC fully realizes that India, working with a staggering population
of 1,147,995,898 — one of only two three-comma populations in the
world — has an unforgiving road in the MPC standings, especially for
a country that has never bothered with the Olympic oomph of China,
the other billion-plus population.

India finished 75th of the 75 countries that won medals at Athens
2004, and now stands 46th of the 46 countries that have won medals
so far in Beijing.

Still, it’s a giddy 46th at the moment, so let’s say "hooray."

At the other extreme, the gumdrop nation of Armenia won zero medals in
2004, thus finishing in a 127-way tie behind even India. Well, let’s
applaud Armenia, which just grabbed two bronzes and ascended from below
the charts all the way to No. 1 in the Tuesday MPC standings. Which,
as usual, beat the mulch out of the paltry and inexcusably lazy Medals
Table used in the Olympics.

The Medals Table had the United States first at 22 and then China
at 20, as if culling 22 medals from 303,824,646 citizens or 20 from
1,330,044,605 constituted some sort of big whoop-dee-doo.

After Tigran Gevorg Martirosyan’s bronze in the men’s 62-69kg
weightlifting, and Roman Amoyan’s bronze in the men’s under-55kg
Greco-Roman wrestling, Armenia had two medals among merely 2,968,586
citizens, or one for every 1,484,293 Armenians.

That surpassed even the Herculean Australians, who form arguably the
world’s most fibrous athletic nation, and already have pared their MPC
rating to 2,060,086, despite having only 20,600,856 citizens, with
the paring surely to persist. It also made the Armenians possibly a
recurring threat to both the defending runners-up Australians and the
defending champions the Bahamians (who tend to catch up when track
and field begin).

With a nod to another former Soviet republic, the sudden No. 4
Azerbaijan, and to Koreans both North and South, here is the Medals
Per Capita top 10:

1. Armenia (2) – 1,484,293 2. Australia (10) – 2,060,086 3. Slovakia
(2) – 2,622,375 4. Azerbaijan (3) – 2,725,905 5. Finland (2)
– 2,727,704 6. North Korea (7) – 3,354,156 7. South Korea (12)
– 4,102,737 8. Austria (2) – 4,102,767 9. The Netherlands (4) –
4,161,328 10. Croatia (1) – 4,491,543

(Some select bottom-dwellers):

30. United States (22) – 14,467,840 40. China (20) – 66,502,230
46. India (1) – 1,147,995,898

— Chuck Culpepper

Culpepper is a contributor to The Times.

Photo: Indian shooter Abhinav Bindra’s mother, Babli, left, and father,
A.S.Bindra, celebrate their son’s Olympic gold medal on Monday at their
residence in Zirakpur near Chandigarh, India. Credit: Associated Press