Who was in Charge during the Georgia Atrocities?

Aug. 19, 2008 (LPAC)--Which British agent was in control of the Georgian government, when it decided to carry out its Nazi-like atrocities against South Ossetia? That question is the logical follow-on to remarks made at an Atlantic Council forum in Washington, D.C. today, by David Bakradze, now the Chairman of the Georgia Parliament, who was previously Foreign Minister in early 2008.

After Bakradze, who was the campaign manager for President Saakashvili'e election campaign, went through his rant about how the U.S. had to "make Russia pay,'' retired USAF Gen. Chuck Wald asked him: When you decided to respond to South Ossetia ... did you inform the United States Embassy, or the OSCE, or NATO, or anybody, that you were going to do that at the time?

Bakradze answered that the majority of decision-makers were not in Georgia at the time! "I was in Turkey... the President [Saakashvili] was in Italy.... the Minister of Defense was urged to interrupt his vacation in Spain. All of the key Georgian decision-makers were on vacation."

'So who was in control?' asked former Democratic Presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche. Was it British agent George Soros directly, the man who created the Saakashvili regime, along with his cohort Lord Mark Malloch Brown? Was it Malloch Brown himself? Or was it an agent of British agent Dick Cheney?

No one should forget', LaRouche added, that the so-called Georgia-Russia conflict was British-conceived and U.S.-steered. It was started by a regime that was created by George Soros, a financial predator who got his training under the tutelage of the Hitler regime, looting his fellow Jews in Hungary. With such origins, it's not surprising that the Georgian attack on South Ossetia was itself a Nazi-like assault, characterized by atrocities against women and children.

The nature of the Georgian attack explains why the Russians are not rushing to leave Georgia. The Russian military is staying in order to tear down the infrastructure provided by the Americans, which was used by the Georgians to launch their Nazi-like atrocities in South Ossetia, so that such horrors cannot be perpetrated again. That's what all the screaming is about, LaRouche noted.