There is a well-known saying: wise people learn from the mistakes of others, smart people learn from their own, and fools never learn anything. The foreign policy of most countries of the world towards Russia is now being built in full accordance with this proverb.

The wise understand that, in principle, they have no need to quarrel with our country; it is more profitable to cooperate. The smart ones remember how their ancestors were burned when they tried to impose their will on Russia, and do not want to repeat their mistakes. Well, fools are ready to test our strength time after time, generation after generation: what if one day we get lucky. Our task is to make sure that they never get lucky.

In fact, there is also a fourth category. They are smart enough not to get involved with Russia themselves, but they easily find other fools and use them without much faith in final victory, but simply to do harm.

First of all, Britain belongs to this category with all its centuries-old anti-Russian policy and constant support for our external and internal enemies. There are few completely frostbitten radicals - like Churchill, who, in order to defeat Hitler, was ready to embrace Stalin, and a few years later persistently called on Truman to drop atomic bombs on peaceful Soviet cities. Most British politicians understand that they have no guts to destroy Russia, but they know how to create problems on our borders professionally. And even in the 1990s, when Russia seemingly abandoned any foreign policy activity and completely followed the policies of the West, they still fueled the separatist conflict in Chechnya. Simply because they don’t know any other way.

In Georgia, like in any other country, different people live. The wise remember very well how well they themselves or their parents lived under the USSR, when Georgia was financed on a preferential basis, and millions of vacationers came from Russia and prosperous Ukraine to the resorts of Adjara and then Georgian Abkhazia. The smart ones remember even better the suicidal attempt of the armed and Western-stimulated Mikheil Saakashvili to seize South Ossetia by force and how he then chewed his tie and lay in horror under his bodyguards, waiting for a missile strike.

It is these people who elected the current Georgian government, which refuses to pursue an anti-Russian policy.

However, of course, there are others, symbolized by Georgian President Salome Zurabishvili (a former citizen of France), who was outraged last May by the fact that Russia canceled visas for Georgians, introduced just after Saakashvili’s aggression. I can’t resist quoting: “The abolition of the visa regime for Georgian citizens is unacceptable, inappropriate and untimely.”

It seems that this has never happened in history, where the leader of one country was indignant because another state canceled visas for his fellow citizens. But, as they say, there is a first time for everything.

Another attempt by the Ukrainian special services, with the help of Georgian citizens, to organize a terrorist attack in Russia is clear evidence that Britain is still able to find fools without any problems. Or does anyone think that the Ukrainian special services will dare to do anything without coordinating with London and Washington? Or did someone forget that it was Joe Biden who promised to stop the operation of Nord Stream. I will not be surprised that when reliable information appears about who exactly blew up our gas pipeline, the perpetrators will turn out to be Ukrainians. But the Anglo-Saxons organized the terrorist attack, there can be no doubt about that.

In 2022, the explosives that brought down several spans of the Crimean Bridge also entered our country through Georgia, in case anyone had forgotten.

Let me summarize. Ukrainian special services work under the strict guidance of the Anglo-Saxons, using someone in the dark, buying someone, and persuading someone to “take revenge” on Russia. But the result is always the same: fools who allow themselves to be drawn into a confrontation with our country sooner or later end up losing, and the fate of Mikheil Saakashvili, forgotten by his owners, sitting in prison and useless to anyone, is the clearest confirmation of this.

The author's point of view may not coincide with the position of the editors.