Bush on Georgian aid....yes!

ViRedd

New Member
BTW I'm an old guy. I was wondering, do you also like long fat cocks, sign me up. I had a friend, Ron, who's line was it's not very big around, short to.
If you remember, Med ... you posted a picture of your appendege about two years ago. It looked like an acorn. :mrgreen:

Vi
 

ccodiane

New Member
You know what is funny. :-| South Ossetia should separate and be independent of Georgia, while North Ossetia is obviously a part of the Russian Federation, no independence necessary. Hilarious! The old commie north south unity ploy.............

SOUTH OSSETIA & ABKHAZIA
 

ccodiane

New Member
BBC NEWS | Europe | Ossetian crisis: Who started it?

Page last updated at 20:29 GMT, Tuesday, 19 August 2008 21:29 UK





Ossetian crisis: Who started it?

Excerpt-


'Volunteer fighters'
The immediate causes of the fighting centre on the events of 7 August. After days of heavy exchanges of fire with South Ossetian separatist fighters, and several fruitless attempts to arrange peace talks, the Georgian side had called a unilateral ceasefire.
Russia sent its troops into Georgia to 'support Russian peacekeepers'

"We do not want to return fire," said President Mikhail Saakashvili in an early evening address on national television. "Please do not test the Georgian state's patience… Let's give peace and dialogue a chance."
But five and a half hours later, Georgia's patience snapped.
The defence ministry in Tbilisi announced that it had sent troops into South Ossetia "to restore constitutional order in the entire region".
Fierce fighting erupted around the South Ossetian capital Tskhinvali, and Georgian war planes were reported to be in action bombing the town and surrounding areas.
The Georgians said they had been forced to retaliate after coming under continuing and sustained attack from the South Ossetian side.
Prime Minister Lado Gurgenidze, speaking on the morning of 8 August, said there had also been reports of an incursion of "so-called volunteer fighters" from North Ossetia coming through the Roki tunnel, which links South Ossetia to Russia.
In a news conference six days later, the prime minister amplified this, referring to "a massive column of 150 units" crossing through the Roki tunnel during the night. It was this, he said, that had triggered the decision to send in the troops.
 
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