WILL RUSSIA BREAK APART?
Tbilisi, Georgia. It's a beautiful morning here in Georgia, and there's not a Russian soldier in sight. I could find them easily enough if I went looking for them over at the "border" with South Ossetia and Abkahzia, but here in the capital of Tbilisi and the rest of Georgia, they are nowhere to be seen.
Georgians are surprisingly unafraid of Russia inflicting its traditional role of barbarian invader upon them. There are several reasons, one of which is the videos of Russian troops they've been seeing on Georgian television.
Russian soldiers are so ill-equipped many are wearing cheap tennis shoes. They are so ill-fed they have to steal food from villagers, so hungry they eat fruit so unripe and meat so spoiled it makes them violently sick.
There is a surreptitiously-taken video of Russian soldiers ransacking a Georgian military barracks, stealing used socks (many of them have no socks), even used (!) toothbrushes, and carting off toilet commodes to sell back in Russia.
"It's really hard to take soldiers who have to steal used toothbrushes seriously," one Georgian friend told me.
Thus the discussion here is less on what the impact of Russia's invasion will be on Georgia, and more on what the impact will be on Russia.