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Tbilisi: Georgia's NATO ambitions

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  • Tbilisi: Georgia's NATO ambitions

    Georgia's NATO ambitions

    The Messenger
    Nov 9 2004

    The General Secretary of NATO Jaap de Hoop Scheffer's visit to Georgia
    last week, just days after NATO accepted Georgia's proposed Individual
    Partnership Action Plan, brought closer the possibility of full NATO
    membership, although Scheffer stressed that Georgia has much to do
    before this will be possible.

    During his visit to Georgia, the General Secretary of NATO stated that
    in the future NATO is going to widen its alliance with post Soviet
    countries, but that such cooperation should not be seen as against
    anyone. The newspaper Khvalindeli Dge quoted Scheffer as saying:
    "We are not entering the Caucasus or Central Asia to banish anyone
    from these regions; nor is it a competition. We are doing it to open
    the door widely for those countries which admire Western values and
    want to be integrated into western structures."

    Scheffer's statement was clearly intended for Russia, which is
    concerned about NATO expansion east. The Secretary General's message
    was conciliatory but firm: while NATO expansion is not intended as
    a threat to Russia, he said, it will go ahead whatever Moscow's stance.

    Scheffer visited the three South Caucasus countries, suggesting that
    NATO is open to all three joining. But in fact NATO's relationship
    with the individual countries is somewhat different, with relations
    between it and Armenia having only a formal character, while Azerbaijan
    is less determined to join NATO than Georgia. After meeting with the
    General Secretary, President Mikheil Saakashvili underlined that only
    Georgia had presented a partnership program to NATO.

    "I do not know yet when Georgia will become a member of NATO, but I am
    interested that it happens very soon. Georgia will enter NATO during
    my presidential term," newspaper Akhali Taoba quoted Saakashvili
    as saying.

    But even though Saakashvili often says that he will be the president
    of Georgia for two terms and that his program is designed for a double
    term, his evaluation of the situation seems optimistic. For his part,
    Scheffer was more cautious: "I am a realist and I should say that
    Georgia has to do a lot to join NATO," newspaper Rezonansi quotes
    Scheffer as saying.

    During his visit Scheffer also commented on Georgia's internal
    conflicts, and made it clear that NATO will not directly intervene.
    The general secretary said: "Georgia should solve the problems of
    Abkhazia and Tskhinvali itself." "The NATO alliance respects the
    territorial integrity of Georgia," he said. But "NATO has no direct
    role in assisting for the solution of Abkhazia and South Ossetia."

    Scheffer did reiterate NATO's position that Russia must withdraw its
    bases from Georgian territory, thus fulfilling the agreement it signed
    in 1999 in Istanbul. "The Russian federation has well acknowledged
    the position of NATO. There is no doubt… Russia must fulfill the
    Istanbul summit decision," the newspaper 24 Saati quoted him as saying.

    However, the NATO General Secretary sought to assuage Russian fears
    that their bases, once removed, will be replaced with NATO bases,
    saying that there will be no NATO bases in the South Caucasus, and
    that "NATO will not play any role in guaranteeing the security of
    the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, although it is in its interest
    to guarantee the stability and the security of this region," the
    newspaper Rezonansi quoted him as saying.

    Saakashvili has repeatedly said that no Western country or organization
    will be permitted to deploy troops on Georgian territory, and he
    responded to Scheffer's advice that Georgia work together with Russia
    to resolve differences between the sides, saying that Georgia is
    still prepared to make certain compromises with Russia.

    "But there will be no compromise about Georgia's territorial integrity
    and every Georgian citizen's freedom of choice," 24 Saati quotes the
    president as saying.

    --Boundary_(ID_rALbTdn+dKnFW+MfOH1AsQ)--
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