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  • The Start of a New Friendship?

    The Start of a New Friendship?
    by Theresa Freese
    15 August 2005

    Transitions on Line, Czech Rep.
    Aug 15 2005

    Russia pulls its troops out of Georgia after two centuries, but how
    significant is the move? From EurasiaNet.

    Russia's military withdrawal from its two bases in Georgia is being
    heralded as a "new stage in Russian-Georgian relations."

    The pull-out is proceeding without a ratified framework agreement,
    leaving Georgian defense officials to fulfill details without
    a guiding document. The third stage of the withdrawal, currently
    underway, involves the removal of at least 40 armored vehicles from
    the Gonio firing range outside of the Black Sea city of Batumi to
    amphibious landing ships destined for the Russian Black Sea port
    of Novorossiysk. Twenty T-72 tanks, five BRDM combat reconnaissance
    vehicles, 12 KUB self-propelled surface-to-air missiles, and three
    Shilka air-defense systems will be withdrawn, Col. Alexander Kiknadze,
    deputy chief of the general staff of the Georgian Armed Forces in
    charge of the withdrawal, told reporters in Batumi.

    "The most important thing in the withdrawal of Russian bases from
    Georgia is that the final agreement be signed. That everything is
    agreed. That everything is laid out point by point," Col. Kiknadze
    said. "When the final agreement is signed, future stages will be
    clear," Until then, he added, Georgian officials "hope that problems
    don't happen."

    Other military facilities "not used in the interests of GRVZ [Group
    of Russian Troops in Trans-Caucasus]," headquartered in Tbilisi,
    will be transferred to Georgia by 1 September. Once these stages
    are complete, the second phase of the withdrawal will begin sometime
    after 1 September, Col. Kiknadze said.

    Without a framework agreement, Kiknadze explained that he and
    his Russian counterpart, Gen. Valeri Yevnevich, refer to the draft
    framework agreement, as well as to the deadlines established in the 30
    May Joint Declaration on Russia's withdrawal. "We agree on questions
    as they arise and make decisions."

    Malhaz Mikeladze, Georgia's ambassador-at-large for political-military
    affairs at the foreign ministry, stressed that Moscow bears the burden
    for completing the agreement. "On our side, we concluded this work,"
    Mikeladze stated. "We look forward to the Russian side making similar
    steps. We are ready to sign this agreement." Mikeladze said the two
    sides "reached a consensus" on 17 June on the text of the so-called
    Agreement on Timeframe, Mode of Functioning and Withdrawal of the
    Russian Military Bases from Georgia. He attributed Russia's delay
    to its "great bureaucracy" and various "internal procedures," but
    said that he remains "optimistic" that the final agreement will soon
    be concluded.

    An opportunity to set a date for a final agreement may come at the 27
    August summit of leaders of the Commonwealth of Independent States in
    the Russian city of Kazan, where Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili
    and Russian leader Vladimir Putin are scheduled to meet. "[I]t's up
    to these presidents to decide when the framework agreement is to be
    signed," Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili said, according
    to a 2 August statement released by the Georgian foreign ministry.

    Since the military pull-out began on 29 July, four convoys of
    approximately 44 military vehicles have left from the 62nd base in
    Akhalkalaki and the 12th base in Batumi. Three convoys headed to the
    Russian territory of Kabardino-Balkaria and one to the Russian base
    in Gyumri, Armenia. Russia has also already transferred to Georgia
    the 142nd Armor/Tank Repair Factory in Tbilisi, and is expected to
    hand three additional military facilities over to Georgian officials
    by 1 September.

    Georgian television reported that Batumi residents were on hand
    to distribute flowers and champagne to Russian soldiers departing
    Batumi on 30 July. "I'm proud when Georgian boots are marching, not
    Russian," said Ketevan Antidze, a Batumi-based political activist
    for the governing National Movement Party.

    Moscow's military presence in Georgia stretches back over
    two centuries. Today, more than 3,000 Russian military personnel
    reportedly remain in Georgia at various bases and facilities, with
    numerous Georgian citizens providing services. Under the terms of the
    30 May Joint Declaration, the final withdrawal from Akhalkalaki and
    the transfer of facilities is scheduled for "no later than the end
    of 2007." The Batumi and GRVZ pull-out is scheduled for completion
    by 2008.

    In line with a 1999 OSCE Istanbul Treaty, Russia pulled out of its
    137th base in Vaziani, outside of Tbilisi, in 2000 and reported to have
    done the same from its 50th base in Gudauta, in breakaway Abkhazia.

    Many Georgians view the base withdrawal as a potential catalyst for
    the resolution of other bilateral issues, in particular negotiated
    settlements to the Abkhazia and South Ossetia conflicts. Some also
    believe the withdrawal could enhance Georgia's chances of joining
    NATO. "The political value is that we will be a freer country with
    greater possibility to operate in international organizations, such as
    NATO," said one Georgian official involved in the conflict resolution
    process for South Ossetia and Abkhazia, who requested anonymity.

    Even after base withdrawal process is completed, Russian troops will
    remain on Georgian soil, acting in the capacity of international
    peace-keepers in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. As long as those two
    conflicts remain unresolved, Georgia's NATO accession prospects could
    remain uncertain. One U.S. defense analyst said that "the resolution
    of these conflicts would be considered by [NATO] as a pre-condition
    for membership." However, the analyst added that "several senior
    Georgian officials" have asked NATO to re-evaluate this position
    "since it, in essence, provides Russia with an informal veto over
    Tbilisi's moving forward in the NATO accession process."

    Ambassador David Smith, the U.S. representative to the International
    Security Advisory Board, an independent defense policy advisory
    group, and chairman of the Georgia Forum, established in 2002 to
    promote closer Georgia-US relations, agreed that the frozen conflicts
    should not block Georgia's NATO membership efforts. "[W]e should not
    shoot ourselves and Georgia in the foot with preconditions," Smith
    said. "Should we ever say that Georgia cannot join NATO so long as
    the conflicts are unresolved, rest assured that Moscow will never
    allow the conflicts to be resolved."

    President Saakashvili recently praised Russia for taking a "very
    brave step" in pulling out of Georgia. Other Georgian government
    officials are hopeful that the departure of Russian troops could
    speed efforts to negotiate political settlements to the Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia conflicts. "As long as the Russian bases are here,
    there is still hope for Abkhazia and South Ossetia that Russia will
    help," said one Georgian defense official who asked not to be named.
    "When they are not here, it will be easier for negotiations."

    A Tbilisi-based Western diplomat, however, suggested that the base
    withdrawal process would have minimal impact on the separatist
    regions' peace processes. "I don't think they will have an effect
    on negotiations over the two territories one way or the other," the
    diplomat said. "I think Russian strategic planners finally realized
    that the bases were more or less worthless. ... They were kept as an
    irritant, a cheap way to keep Georgia on edge."

    Those who live in the vicinity of the two bases are worrying about
    the economic impact of the Russians' departure. The bases have long
    been a major source of jobs for local residents, and many now believe
    that when the Russian troops depart, employment opportunities will
    dwindle. At present, the official unemployment rate in Ajaria, where
    one of the Russian bases is located, is 18 percent, while the poverty
    rate is 64 percent. Those rates could rise in the coming months. "Who
    will employ the unemployed Georgians?" asked one man who owns a kiosk
    near a Russian facility in Makhinjauli, just outside Batumi. "What
    guarantee do we have after the Russians leave?"

    But for others, the expected benefits of the Russians' departure
    outweigh the potential liabilities. "We would like economic relations
    with Russia. But we don't want their bases here," said Alexander
    Chitishvili, former head of an intelligence battalion in the Georgian
    National Guard. "As long as they are here, we are a conquered country."

    Theresa Freese is a freelance journalist and political analyst who
    has been conducting research on unresolved conflicts in the South
    Caucasus since 2003. This is a partner-post from EurasiaNet.
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