In the remote Caucasus, the Georgian crisis drags on, with Georgia's President Saakashvili, emboldened by Western support, continuing to goad the Russian bear. And Western governments are vowing to force Moscow to yield to Georgia's demands. Saakashvili, let it be remembered, started a war to retake
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France's pro-Bush president Sarkozy has announced that the Russians have agreed to withdraw all troops from Georgia proper within a month's time. Moreover, the Bush administration, wishing to punish Moscow, has apparently decided to cancel a deal inked in May for civilian nuclear cooperation between the United States and Russia, under the terms of which the United States would gain access to Russian nuclear technology and Russia would become a center for the storage of spent nuclear fuel from nuclear plants in the United States and elsewhere.
The cancellation of the Russian-U.S. nuclear pact may turn out to be an unintended benefit, since the shipment of vast amounts of nuclear fuel to Russia--a regime openly abetting Iran's nuclear program, lax about controls on nuclear materials, and with ties to international terrorism--could lead to calamitous consequences.