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Tbilisi: Frequent flier pilots Georgia's diplomacy

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  • Tbilisi: Frequent flier pilots Georgia's diplomacy

    Messenger.com.ge, Georgia
    Aug 12 2004

    Frequent flier pilots Georgia's diplomacy

    Nine months have passed since the Rose Revolution and its
    leader-turn-president has conducted twenty-one visits abroad both on
    the state level and unofficial level. Averaging over two visits a
    month, President Mikheil Saakashvili has redefined Georgia's foreign
    policy as proactive, engaging and ambitious.

    A geographical survey of his visits shows the variety of interests of
    the Georgian leader in his strive to establish economic progress and
    achieve territorial security of the country.

    The opposition prefers to criticize his frequent travels and suggests
    that he should stop traveling abroad and instead concentrate on
    Georgia's internal affairs of the country. However, in the case of
    Georgia it is often difficult to distinguish between the country's
    foreign and internal affairs as they are very closely linked with
    each other.

    The first country visited by Saakashvili after the Rose Revolution
    was Ukraine in December 2003. At the time the Georgian leader met
    with Ukrainian opposition leaders who were planing to perform a
    Ukrainian version of Rose Revolution against President Leonid Kuchma.
    This meeting created a noticeably cold climate between official
    Tbilisi and Kiev.

    However, later the strategic interests of the two countries prevailed
    over personal sympathies/antipathies. In April 2004 while on an
    official visit to Kiev, President Saakashvili repeatedly confirmed
    the strategic-partner relationship between Georgia and Ukraine and
    outlined the prospects of strengthening those relations.

    In January 2004, during his visits to Switzerland, France and
    Germany, newly elected President Saakashvili firmly asserted
    Georgia's intention to integrate into European structures thus
    underscoring Georgia's strategic path for the future.

    In April-May 2004 President Saakashvili visited Poland and Rumania.
    The attitude of the Georgian government is that deepening
    relationships with these countries and sharing their experience for
    integration into the European commonwealth and NATO would very much
    assist Georgia in doing the same.

    Saakashvili twice visited Moscow, in February and recently in June.
    Immediately after the Rose Revolution, the Georgia administration
    tired to establish a completely different relationship with Russia.
    It suggested forgetting past misunderstandings and starting a new
    phase of relations from a blank slate.

    However, in doing so Georgia is combating the legacy of its past
    questionable policies and Russia's deeply entrenched imperialists who
    became only further secured in Russia's Parliamentary elections this
    year. While the war of words has ricocheted back and forth between
    parliamentarians, ministries and officials, it is notable that
    President Saakashvili has never uttered a single word of criticism
    against President Vladimir Putin. Correspondingly, Putin has ever
    criticized Saakashvili.

    This coming fall Putin is expected to visit Tbilisi. It is envisaged
    that a new framework agreement between the two countries should be
    signed. There is significant hope in Tbilisi that this tete-a-tete
    meeting will let the two leaders to overcome the antagonism shared by
    their underlings and Georgian-Russian relations will be clarified and
    developed in a better direction.

    President Saakashvili has also visited countries of the Mid East -
    Turkey, Iran and Israel. With Turkey, Georgia maintains one of its
    closest partner relationships. The president of Georgia has invited
    Turkish businessmen to participate in the privatization process now
    underway in Georgia. Wednesday's visit of Prime Minster Erdogan
    accompanied by 115 businessmen is a clear evidence of the deepening
    neighbor relationships.

    Strengthening of relationships with Iran is also planned. With Israel
    Georgia's relationship is more unique and Saakashvili tried to
    interest Israeli citizens who had left Georgia many years in reviving
    their ties with their former homeland by accepting dual citizenship.
    Reviving lost ties was also a theme of President Saakashvili in other
    countries though the potential for Israeli-Georgian relationships
    appear the greatest.

    During Saakashvili's visit to Azerbaijan and Armenia he encouraged
    the neighbors to establish a common Caucasus market and suggested
    Georgia could play a role of locomotive in integrating the region
    into Europe. However, in this particular case the Kharabakh conflict
    creates serious problems for Azerbaijan and Armenia to cooperate.

    It was very important for Georgia to participate in the NATO Istanbul
    Summit this June. There he once and forever attached the Georgia's
    development to western interests. It was also very significant that
    the summit participants urged Russia once again to fulfill its
    commitment and withdraw military bases from Georgia.

    Saakashvili visited the United States twice, and his most recent
    visit was very timely as it coincided with the deterioration of
    relations with Russia and controversy over the BTC pipeline in the
    Borjomi Gorge.

    Judging by Saakashvili's relentless personality, it is safe to assume
    that his intense travels will continue. Compared to former President
    Shevardnadze's foreign policy of balancing interests, Saakashvili has
    chosen a very goal oriented and clear-cut strategy of pointing
    Georgia's orientation towards the west and defining the country's
    interests before others do that for him.
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