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  • Where's the Catch?

    Transitions on Line, Czech Republic
    June 3 2005

    Where's the Catch?
    by Molly Corso
    3 June 2005

    Some in Georgia worry that the Russian base withdrawal deal comes
    with a catch. From EurasiaNet.

    TBILISI, Georgia | Georgian leaders have hailed a deal on the
    withdrawal of Russian troops from two military bases in Georgia as an
    "historic event" that clears the way for the normalization of bilateral
    relations. Some political analysts and opposition politicians in
    Tbilisi are concerned, however, that President Mikheil Saakashvili's
    administration paid too high a price to secure Moscow's commitment
    to take its troops out of Georgia.

    Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili and her Russian
    counterpart Sergei Lavrov signed the base accord on 31 May, committing
    Russia to complete the withdrawal process by the end of 2008. According
    to the text of the agreement posted on the Russian Foreign Ministry's
    website, Moscow will begin closing its base at Akhalkalaki immediately,
    with at least 40 armored vehicles and 20 tanks to be withdrawn by 1
    September. Russia is also expected to transfer a tank repair facility
    to Georgia by 1 September. The withdrawal from the Akhalkalaki base is
    to be completed by the end of 2007. Russia's other base, in Batumi,
    will close at an unspecified point in 2008. Russia's command and
    control personnel in Georgia will also cease operations in 2008. Both
    bases are to be delivered to Georgia in "as is" condition.

    In addition, the document calls for both Georgia and Russia to seek
    "additional external sources of financing for the transportation costs"
    connected with the Russian withdrawal. The accord also contains vague
    language concerning the creation of a Georgian-Russian Anti-Terrorist
    Center, to be "formalized by a separate document," as well as a
    bilateral commitment to conclude a pact regulating joint border issues
    "as soon as possible."

    Tbilisi and Moscow had haggled over the Russian troop withdrawal since
    a summit of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    (OSCE) in Istanbul in 1999. At a 30 May news conference, Saakashvili
    said the bilateral accord will end "the 200-year presence of Russian
    troops in Georgia." He went on to say that one of the most "painful"
    issues hampering Tbilisi's ties with Moscow - Russia's two remaining
    bases in Georgia - had now been cleared away, raising hopes for "close,
    friendly relations." Saakashvili also sought to reassure the ethnic
    Armenian community concentrated near the Akhalkalaki base, which
    has been the main source of employment for area residents. "We have
    already launched the rehabilitation of roads, schools and launched
    social programs," Saakashvili said. "We are also ready to recruit
    [local] personnel ... for the Georgian army."

    It was what Saakashvili did not mention about the pact - specifically
    the creation of the joint anti-terrorism center - that had some
    observers and politicians in Georgia feeling uneasy. Before the text of
    the accord had been made public, Tina Gogueliani, a political analyst
    with the International Center for Conflict and Negotiations, said that
    some people worried that the accord contained loopholes potentially
    enabling Russia to maintain a military presence in Georgia. "[You
    can't] exclude the possibility that there is something the public
    will not like in this document," Gogueliani said.

    The English language daily, The Georgian Messenger, published an
    article on 1 June in which seven of the nine people interviewed
    said they were suspicious about the center's intentions. "There is
    no difference whether the bases will be withdrawn from the country
    or not if there will be an anti-terrorist center," said Tea Todua,
    a lawyer quoted in the Messenger story.

    The text of the agreement states that an "agreed upon portion of
    [Russian] military personnel and material-technical facilities and
    infrastructure from [the Batumi base] would be used in the interest"
    of the joint anti-terrorism center. Tiko Mzhavanadze, a press secretary
    for the New Right opposition group, voiced concern that the status
    quo could end up being preserved. "If the [anti-terrorism] center
    will be Russian, we have traded the old bases for new [military]
    equipment," she said in a phone interview with EurasiaNet.

    "And that will be even worse."

    Irakli Menagarishvili, a former foreign minister who now is the
    director of the Strategic Research Center, cautioned that it is too
    soon to jump to any conclusions. "It is hard to say anything concrete
    at this time," he said in a phone interview. "There is nothing
    decided, or we don't know anything yet, about the center except for
    the title." He added that the center could assume a variety of forms,
    ranging from an analytical-research think tank to an armed unit.

    "Those are two different things-and actually any number of variations
    could exist between them," he said. "If it is the first version,
    it could be acceptable for Georgia. But the second is completely
    unacceptable. That is like exchanging the bases for the same thing
    with a different name."

    Zourabichvili, speaking at a 31 May news conference, sought to dispel
    fears that the deal would allow Russia to retain a significant military
    presence in Georgia. "The anti-terrorist center will not represent a
    new base. It will be a joint center, which will accept all decisions
    jointly, with the participation of the Georgian side," Zourabichvili
    said, adding that "the existence of this anti-terrorism center is in
    Georgia's interests as well."

    The opposition party spokeswoman, Mzhavanadze, said that to ensure
    Russia does not wield undue influence in the planned anti-terrorism
    center, participation should be expanded. "If there is going to
    be an anti-terrorism center in Georgia, [it] should be three-,
    or four-sided; not just Georgian and Russian [members], but also
    American and possibly European."

    Zourabichvili said on 31 May that substantive negotiations concerning
    the anti-terrorism center have not started. "As far as I know, Russia
    adopted one document that we have not received yet," she said. "We have
    enough time for negotiations and there is no reason to hurry. We should
    think together about what we want and how we want [to receive it]."

    Georgia's National Security Council will be the lead agency
    responsible for guiding Georgian negotiators on the creation of the
    anti-terrorism center. Davit Gunashvili, the press officer for the
    NSC, said very little has been decided to date. "I can only tell you
    that the Georgian side will only support an analytical-information
    gathering [center]," he said. "As we know no weapons or large armies
    can defeat terrorism." He added that while there is no date set for
    the negotiations, both the NSC and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    will be involved.

    Molly Corso is a freelance journalist and photographer based in
    Tbilisi. This is a partner-post from EurasiaNet.
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