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America has big stake in supporting democracy in X-Soviet Georgia

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  • America has big stake in supporting democracy in X-Soviet Georgia

    News from Washington University in St. Louis (press release),
    Washington
    June 8 2005



    America has big stake in supporting democracy in former Soviet
    Republic of Georgia, suggest international studies expert


    June 8, 2005 - As Americans celebrate independence this July 4, they
    may wish to consider the plight of another democracy - one that is
    young and struggling and whose continued success could have a
    dramatic impact on the world economy, the price of gasoline and other
    critical U.S. interests, suggests James V. Wertsch, director of
    International and Area Studies at Washington University in St. Louis.

    Given America's obsession with war and terrorism in the Middle East,
    it is countries such as Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan that may come
    first to mind. However, by focusing on this troubled region, the
    United States is missing an opportunity to partner with a nation
    where Americans are actually welcomed with open arms; one where the
    fate of a struggling democratic system could have huge ripple effects
    around the globe. That country is the former Soviet Republic of
    Georgia, says Wertsch, the Marshall S. Snow Professor in Arts &
    Sciences at Washington University.

    Why is Georgia so important to the U.S.?

    Part of the answer, Wertsch contends, lies in the pipelines running
    across Georgia's territory that carry oil and gas to the West.
    Georgia provides a new route to the oil riches of the Caspian. This
    is a route that avoids Russia and Iran at America's insistence, as
    well as Armenia, at the insistence of Azerbaijan, which is the source
    of the oil. In particular, Georgia is the transit country for the new
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline running from Azerbaijan to the
    Mediterranean coast of Turkey. This pipeline, which is just beginning
    to pump oil, will eventually carry a million barrels of crude a day
    to the West.

    Dependence on foreign oil is an issue of obvious importance to most
    Americans and it should be especially compelling for those anguishing
    over the cost of fueling up for traditional Independence Day driving
    excursions. However, as Americans celebrate their own love of freedom
    and democracy, they should realize, says Wertsch, that it is these
    same institutions that underlie the real strategic value of Georgia
    to the United States.


    James Wertsch

    Wertsch points to the tumultuous welcome that thousands of Georgians
    gave President George W. Bush when he visited in May to support his
    assertion. The visit's purpose was to cast a spotlight on democratic
    developments following the "Rose Revolution" of November 2003, the
    nonviolent popular uprising that overturned the corrupt Georgian
    government of post-Soviet president Eduard Shevardnadze. Even the
    subsequent discovery of a grenade in the area where Bush addressed a
    huge crowd in Tbilisi did little to dampen positive impressions on
    both sides, he says.

    Wertsch says the United States should redouble its efforts to support
    and strengthen the emerging democratic movement in Georgia because
    what happens there may be a bellwether for the fate of democracy in
    nations across much of Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

    "The ramifications of the Rose Revolution extend well beyond
    Georgia's borders," says Wertsch, the co-editor of the journal
    Caucasus Context and the 2005 volume Enough! The Rose Revolution in
    the Republic of Georgia. "The attention it has garnered has made
    democratic upheaval thinkable in places like Ukraine, a country where
    Georgian flags sprouted in the massive rallies of the "Orange
    Revolution" of last winter. And it is commonly brought up in
    discussions of Kyrgyzstan's "Tulip Revolution" of this spring and
    even in talk about potential upheaval in Russia."

    During his visit Bush was effusive in his praise of Mikheil
    Saakashvili, the youthful president of Georgia who led the Rose
    Revolution. This praise is warranted, suggests Wertsch, but the mark
    of true friendship is the ability to speak frankly about problems
    others may wish to ignore, and today Georgia definitely is in need of
    a friend.

    "The afterglow of the Rose Revolution has now faded," Wertsch notes.
    "Corruption remains a major problem, disruptions in electricity and
    water services have re-appeared, and Georgians are becoming
    increasingly frustrated with the lack of jobs and economic
    development. Thanks to weak opposition, Saakashvili's presidency is
    not in danger at this point, but his approval ratings have gone into
    steep decline. In short, he has largely used up the political capital
    he acquired from the Rose Revolution, and the country stands at a
    juncture where a new style of leadership is required."

    "What Georgia needs now is solid, day-to-day leadership, but
    Saakashvili has continued to rely on populist gestures that all too
    often appear, at best, impulsive," says Wertsch.

    "There are all too many parties who would love to see the Georgian
    experiment in democracy and civil society fail. America needs to see
    it succeed," says Wertsch. " As true friends of Georgia, we need to
    stress that the days of populist revolution are over, and the time
    for steady, solid leadership and governance has arrived. In the end,
    Georgians are the only ones who can provide such leadership. The U.S.
    should stand ready to help in any way possible, starting with
    ongoing, frank assessments of the problems facing the country today
    and the steps required of a responsible leadership to address them."

    ----------------------------------------------------------------

    Regional outlook

    Georgia's regional neighbor Uzbekistan has been in the news as the
    result of a May 13 anti-government protest that was put down by Uzbek
    troops in what some describe as a massacre of citizens fed up with
    the nation's repressive post-Soviet government.


    Map source: U.S. Central Intelligence Agency

    Wertsch suggests that the volatile situation in Uzbekistan is
    noteworthy in part because it shows just how that nation is following
    a much different path than Georgia.

    "To be sure, some folks in Uzbekistan looked to Georgia as a model
    for what they wanted to create there," says Wertsch "I have discussed
    this with Uzbeks for over a year. However, what happened there is
    quite different for some pretty identifiable reasons, and the result
    is that no democracy has emerged in Uzbekistan and more trouble is
    inevitable in the future."

    "Ukraine is the best follow-on case, and Kyrgyzstan and especially
    Uzbekistan are very different. The Russians have a vested interest in
    portraying all of these "color revolutions" as the same - illegal
    putsches that are bound to lead to instability and failure, but there
    is some pretty critical discussion going on in Moscow about how this
    might be the wrong way to look at things."

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