Exposed: the double standards of U.S. rhetoric 

The U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney spent last week touring the Caucasus and 
criticising what he called Russian "aggression" towards Georgia. But some of 
the accusations leveled against Russia sound very similar to those aimed at the 
United States during its military operations in Iraq and Bosnia. 

Dick Cheney denounced what he termed Russia’s war against Georgia. American 
political commentator Pat Buchanan pointed out that, while the Georgian 
conflict lasted five days, "We bombed Serbia for 78 days when it had not 
attacked us for the province of Kosovo."

Cheney also warned that Russia’s recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia 
could set a precedent.

“We know that if one country is allowed to unilaterally redraw the borders of 
another, it will happen and it will happen again," the Vice President said.

Just over six months ago, Russia expressed similar concerns - but then it was 
about recognising the independence of Kosovo. 

“We think to support the unilateral independence of Kosovo is wrong both from 
the moral and legal points of view,” Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said in 
February 2008.

In spite of Russia's warnings, the Serbian province's unilateral declaration of 
independence was supported and recognized by the U.S. and more than 40 other 
countries.

Western politicians and media criticised Russia for what they called the 
invasion of a sovereign country. Again, terminology that would not be entirely 
out of place in a debate about the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, which Russia 
opposed.

The irony was not lost on American comedian Jon Stewart, who took George Bush's 
condemnation of Russia to pieces. "You can't just overthrow a government, 
occupy a capital, knock over their statues...!" Stewart said with mock 
indignation on the Daily Show as he showed footage of the United States’ 
invasion of Iraq.

As the U.S. continues to attack Russia rhetorically, its inherent double 
standards are becoming ever more obvious.

In the words of Russia's U.N. ambassador Vitaly Churkin, "the United States 
invented the term 'regime change', not Russia."

http://www.russiatoday.com/news/news/30135

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