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Vladimir Socor in EDM: New Group of Georgia's Friends

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  • Vladimir Socor in EDM: New Group of Georgia's Friends

    NEW GROUP OF GEORGIA'S FRIENDS FOUNDED
    by Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    Monday, February 7, 2005 -- Volume 2, Issue 26

    Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, and Bulgaria founded
    the "New Group of Georgia's Friends" on February 4 in Tbilisi. The
    specification "new" differentiates it from the decade-old "Group
    of Friends of Georgia," originally comprised of the United
    States, Germany, Britain, and France. That old group became
    collectively dysfunctional some years ago when it turned into the "UN
    Secretary-General's Group of Friends of Georgia" and allowed Russia
    to join as a veto-wielding member. That group also has inevitably
    been affected by the drift toward a Russia-First approach in Berlin
    and Paris.

    The New Group does not in any way intend to supersede the old one. It
    is, rather, a different group with its own distinct mission, answering
    to new requirements that could hardly have been anticipated when
    the old group had taken shape. The New Friends propose to share with
    Georgia their experience as formerly Communist-ruled countries that
    have completed or are set to complete their Euro-Atlantic integration
    processes, and now intend to promote such processes in the Black
    Sea-South Caucasus region.

    Georgian Minister of Foreign Affairs Salome Zourabichvili chaired the
    New Friends' founding meeting in Tbilisi, with her Estonian counterpart
    Kristiina Ojuland attending, along with State Secretaries for Foreign
    Affairs from the other five New Friends countries. The group is
    open to new member-countries from among new members of NATO and the
    European Union; and it hopes to bring in Azerbaijan and Armenia into
    the group in the next stage.

    The New Friends intend to assist Georgia's internal reforms and
    its efforts to qualify for eventually joining NATO and the EU,
    as well as to support international steps to provide security for
    Georgia. According to press releases from the Lithuanian and Georgian
    Ministries of Foreign Affairs, and informal statements to journalists
    in Tbilisi after the meeting, the New Friends' goals include:

    -- assisting in the implementation of the Georgia-NATO Individual
    Partnership Action Plan (IPAP), the success of which can lead to a
    Membership Action Plan (MAP, a goal implied but not stated on this
    occasion); working to support NATO's open-door policy;

    -- working within the EU to initiate the drafting, in a timely manner,
    of an EU-Georgia Action Plan as part of the EU's recently adopted
    European Neighborhood Policy (in which the South Caucasus is now
    included after having been omitted initially);

    -- providing the services of experts for drafting of Georgia's
    European integration strategy and for administrative capacity-building
    in Georgia;

    -- jointly urging, within international organizations, the removal of
    Russian bases and troops from Georgia, in accordance with Russia's 1999
    Istanbul Commitments; elevating this issue on the EU's policy agenda;

    -- supporting Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili's recently
    launched South Ossetia Peace Initiative (see EDM, January 27);

    -- calling attention to the importance of EU and NATO participation
    in international efforts to resolve conflicts in the region.

    As an urgent political priority, the New Group of Friends is urging
    the EU to take over the Georgia Border Monitoring Mission, which the
    OSCE has (at Russia's insistence) given up.

    Several programs are under way or getting started on a national
    basis. Estonia (a European front runner in computerization of public
    services) plans to launch one of its "Tiger Leap" programs for the
    computerization of Georgia's public services, as well as to open a
    military liaison office in Tbilisi (an Estonian defense adviser is
    already stationed there). Meanwhile, a Lithuanian heads the EU's
    rule-of-law advisory mission in Georgia; and a Latvian serves as
    NATO's liaison official for the South Caucasus, based in Tbilisi.

    For effective implementation of direct assistance to Georgia from
    their small resources, the New Friends intend to coordinate efforts,
    avoid duplication, and provide lists of experts available to work
    with Georgia. The New Group of Friends plans to hold meetings
    several times a year. Romania has offered to host the next meeting
    and to invite some additional countries, in keeping with the goal of
    enlarging the Group's format.

    Two initiatives have converged into the founding of the New Group
    of Friends of Georgia. One initiative is Romania's, launched by
    then-Minister of Foreign Affairs Mircea Geoana in 2003, and continued
    energetically by Romania's new President Traian Basescu and new
    government, reaching out to Black Sea countries on the new border of
    the enlarged NATO. The other initiative, spearheaded by Lithuania,
    seeks to impart the Baltic states' successful post-Soviet transition
    experience to Georgia and other Black Sea-South Caucasus countries.
    Saakashvili's October 2004 visit to the Baltic states (see EDM,
    October 21) occasioned preparatory discussions on a 3 +1 and a 3 +
    3 framework (Baltic-Georgia, Baltic-South Caucasus). The Group of
    Friends now covers the Baltic-Black Sea space, anchoring the eastern
    Black Sea shore.






    Monday, February 7, 2005 -- Volume 2, Issue 26


    IN THIS ISSUE: *Georgia's Friends: New Group, Added Value *Tymoshenko
    announces her leadership team, emphasizing diversity *Increasing doubts
    that Putin will ever visit Japan *PONARS scholars doubt longevity of
    United Russia
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