Senator Barack Obama's response to the Georgian - Russian crisis was 
more measured, better thought through, and more neutral than Senator 
McCain's response.  This allow Senator Obama to act more as a mediator 
between the two countries to facilitate a cease fire in step with the 
European Union, NATO and President George W. Bush's approach.

#------------------------
Excerpt:

An initial statement from Obama, his Democratic rival, did not directly 
blame Russia. The Illinois senator instead offered a more measured 
response, which largely echoed the official comments of the European 
Union, NATO and President George W. Bush.

"Now is the time for Georgia and Russia to show restraint and to avoid 
an escalation to full-scale war," Obama said. He urged negotiations 
aimed at "stability."

Obama did harden his rhetoric later, shortly before flying to Hawaii on 
vacation. "What is clear is that Russia has invaded Georgia's sovereign 
- has encroached on Georgia's sovereignty, and it is very important for 
us to resolve this issue as quickly as possible," he said.

On Saturday, Obama's advisers said, he too spoke about the crisis with 
Saakashvili, and with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/08/10/america/box.php
or
http://tinyurl.com/6akyr6

#------------------------------------

Regards,

LelandJ


Bob Calco wrote:
> http://tinyurl.com/5u33p4
>
> - - -
> The Obama campaign has for months pursued the odd strategy of having the
> junior senator from Illinois act as if he were already kinda-sorta president
> of the United States. In June, it tried sticking a quasi-presidential seal
> on his lectern. In July, Obama conducted what seemed like official state
> visits with foreign leaders and delivered something like a "prenaugural"
> address in Berlin, inviting comparisons to JFK and Reagan.
> ...
>
> Now fate has given Obama a chance to be presidential rather than pretend.
> Taking advantage of the Olympic distraction in Beijing, the Russians invaded
> Georgia, a democratic U.S. ally. Initially, the Russians bombed civilians,
> rolled tanks across an internationally recognized border and threatened to
> launch an all-out, destabilizing war. Now it looks as if their army has cut
> Georgia in two.
>
> ...
>
> Obama's response?
>
> First, on Friday, he gave a conventional written statement calling for calm,
> United Nations action and "restraint" from both sides - followed an hour
> later by a slightly stronger condemnation of Russian aggression and a call
> for a cease-fire.
>
> So for an international crisis, Obama puts away the soaring rhetoric and
> hides behind a statement we might expect from any State Department
> functionary. But that's not to say he didn't make it to the cameras. The
> next day he headlined a rally celebrating his vacation in Hawaii. He
> promised "to go body surfing at some undisclosed location."
>
> During Obama's make-believe presidency, we've heard about bold action, about
> the courage to talk to dictators. When faced with a real "3 a.m. moment,"
> Obama - who boasts roughly 200 foreign policy advisors - proclaims, "I'm
> going to get some shave ice."
>
> ...
>
> By Monday, Bush and Obama were playing catch-up to Sen. John McCain, who
> grasped the gravity from the start. McCain, whose support for Georgia is
> long-standing, immediately denounced Russian aggression and demanded an
> emergency meeting of NATO and Western aid to the fledgling democracy.
>
> The geopolitical significance of the Georgia crisis at this stage is hard to
> gauge. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin may not wish to revive the
> Soviet Union, but he clearly seeks to restore Russia's imperial stature. And
> Item One on that agenda is to crush Georgia's independence and smother hopes
> for NATO's expansion to Russia's "near abroad."
>
> ...
>
> Yet this moment calls for more than playacting, and Obama looks lost without
> a presidential script. Events in the Caucasus - and in Beijing - suggest
> that the times aren't so new after all. Two powerful antidemocratic foes are
> once again flexing their muscles when America seems weak and distracted.
>
> That is no new challenge but a very old one. Perhaps this isn't a time for a
> novice spouting grand rhetoric about a new page in history, but for someone
> who's actually read the pages of some old but still relevant books. Perhaps
> this is not the time for playacting.
>
> Perhaps it is not the time for body surfing.
>
> - - -
>
> He didn't even mention Obama's most naive statement, which was that Russia's
> actions ran contrary to the spirit of the Olympics. Well, duh.
>
> I bet the Kremlin is licking their chops at the prospect of an Obama
> presidency. 
>
> McCain seems at least on this issue to have more brains and gumption than
> Obama and Dubya combined. Can't trust him on much else, but on this he seems
> more solid than I would have supposed. I especially like his comment about
> looking into Putin's eyes and seeing "a K, a G and a B" -- that shows a lot
> more insight than Bush's claim to have seen the man's soul, and liked what
> he saw.
>
> - Bob
>
>
>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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