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Russia and Georgia at War

As Russian forces move deeper into Georgia, it is clear that despite questions over who started the conflict Russia’s ambitions are far larger than attaining the two Georgian separatist regions- South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

by Maria LipmanRobert Kagan, and Anne Barnard
published by
NPR's On Point with Tom Ashbrook
 on August 11, 2008

Source: NPR's On Point with Tom Ashbrook

As the Russia-Georgia conflict escalates, Masha Lipman and Bob Kagan analyze the catalyst for this clash on NPR’s On Point with Tom Ashbrook. While both agree that the crisis indicates a greater Russian ambition than simply annexing South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Lipman and Kagan disagree over what originally prompted the conflict.

Lipman argues that, “There is no doubt that Georgia has started it” and calls the original Georgian strikes, “a very bad miscalculation." Kagan on the other hand sees Russia as the main driver for the events that have now unfolded. He says, “Putin has been putting pressure on Georgia for years,” and that, “everyone was hoping that Saakashvili would tolerate this indefinitely.”

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