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  • Tbilisi: U.S. envoys pleased with visit to Abkhazia

    The Messenger, Georgia
    April 13 2005

    Tbilisi: U.S. envoys pleased with visit to Abkhazia

    American delegation reveals little about talks; Sergei Bagapsh flies
    to Russia and rejects notion of meeting with Bush
    By Anna Arzanova

    Although U.S. officials have said little publicly about their talks
    on Monday with separatist leaders in Abkhazia, Georgian officials on
    Tuesday said the envoys were pleased with talks and even sparked
    reports that the talks were connected with the upcoming visit of U.S.
    President George Bush to Georgia.

    The U.S. delegation included U.S. Ambassador to Georgia Richard Miles
    and U.S. Senior Advisor for Caspian Basin Energy Diplomacy Steven
    Mann, who is also the Special Negotiator for Nagorno-Karabakh and
    Eurasian Conflicts.

    Chair of the parliamentary defense and security committee Givi
    Targamadze, who met with the U.S. envoys on Tuesday, reported that
    Miles and Mann positively assessed the results of their visit.

    According to Targamadze, HE Mann told Abkhaz leaders, including de
    facto President Sergei Bagapsh, to provide additional security
    guarantees so that IDPs can return to the Gali region. Targamadze
    stated the Abkhaz leadership promised to give security guarantees not
    only to those Georgians who are currently living in Gali, but to
    those who would return there in the future.

    Neither Mann nor Miles talked in depth about their visit on Tuesday
    except to say that it was Steven Mann's first visit to the region
    and, Mann said, "it was not connected to President Bush's upcoming
    visit."

    His statement tempered earlier speculation that the delegation may
    have invited Sokhumi officials to travel to Tbilisi for Bush's visit.


    Targamadze said there was a possibility that the leaders from
    Georgia's separatist states in South Ossetia and Abkhazia would meet
    President Bush together with President Mikheil Saakashvili in Tbilisi
    on May 10.

    "The leaders of these regions may attend the meeting of the Georgian
    and U.S. presidents," Targamadze said, "Saakashvili has already said
    that he is prepared for a such meeting."

    In addition to meetings in Parliament, the U.S. delegation also met
    with President Saakashvili and Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli on
    Tuesday.

    The bulk of reports on the meetings came from Givi Targamadze
    himself, who said the U.S. group found it was much better to speak
    with Baghapsh than with his predecessor Vladislav Ardzinba.
    Targamadze reported the American diplomats saw progress but still
    want to observe whether or not Bagapsh is "free from Russia's
    influence."

    Based on his meeting with Steven Mann and Richard Miles, Targamadze
    enthused that "Sergei Bagapsh did not insult the guests and in
    addition was not too categorical."

    Bagapsh flies to Moscow for consultation

    Immediately following the visit of the U.S. delegation, Abkhaz
    president Sergei Baghapsh departed for Moscow, fueling speculation
    that the U.S. delegation had delivered an important statement.

    Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday, the newly elected
    separatist leader said he told U.S. diplomats that Abkhazia will not
    change its uncompromising stance over the region's status as an
    independent state.

    Instead he reiterated that Sokhumi is ready to discuss only economic
    issues with Georgia because negotiations on political issues will
    bring the negotiation process to a deadlock.

    Baghapsh stated that he is prepared to negotiate with American or
    other Western countries over the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict, but the
    "most important and main mediator in this issue is Russia."

    He flatly rejected the possibility that the U.S. delegation had
    invited him to Tbilisi and, moreover, said he would refuse such an
    offer.

    "Such an issue has not even been considered. Nobody has even offered
    me such a thing. I think that there is not and will not be such a
    possibility. We have already said with whom we deal with about our
    problems. This is Russia," Bagapsh said in a phone conversation with
    Imedi TV.
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