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PR coup in the Rose Kingdom An epic public welcome for Bush

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  • PR coup in the Rose Kingdom An epic public welcome for Bush

    South China Morning Post
    May 15, 2005

    PR coup in the Rose Kingdom An epic public welcome for President Bush
    was a triumph for Georgia's young leader. But the discovery later of
    an unexploded grenade is a reminder that the country is a powder keg.
    Fred Weir reports


    Over the past 16 years Tbilisi's main square has been the venue for
    most key events of local history. They include a brutal 1989 massacre
    of Georgian dissidents by KGB troops, a bloody post-Soviet civil war
    that devastated the ancient city's centre and, most recently, the
    euphoric "Rose Revolution" that vaulted a young American-trained
    lawyer, Mikhail Saakashvili, into power.

    But Freedom Square had never witnessed anything like the epic
    welcoming party laid on - partly at the expense of American taxpayers
    - for visiting President George W. Bush last Tuesday.

    Nearly 250,000 people crammed into the vast circular space next to
    Georgia's parliament to greet Mr Bush, roaring chants of "Bushi,
    Bushi" and waving thousands of American and red-and-white Georgian
    flags.

    To thunderous cheers, Mr Saakashvili introduced his American guest as
    "a freedom fighter". Mr Bush returned the compliment, hailing the
    Georgian president "who has shown such spirit, determination and
    leadership in the cause of freedom".

    At the height of the festivities someone, unseen in the crowd, tossed
    a Soviet army-issue hand grenade that landed within 100 metres of the
    two presidents. It failed to detonate, but left behind the
    unmistakable suggestion that all may not be well in Mr Saakashvili's
    Rose Kingdom.

    Many regional experts say the democratic revolution orchestrated by
    Mr Saakashvili, which overthrew the incompetent and kleptocratic
    regime of Eduard Shevardnadze in November 2003, was largely political
    smoke and mirrors.

    Though the telegenic, polyglot, 38-year-old Mr Saakashvili has proven
    adept at charming western leaders and talking up global democratic
    revolution, his own regime has veered towards autocracy and left the
    majority of Georgians mired in poverty, with unemployment rates of
    about 45 per cent.

    "We are witnessing a triumph of public relations, which has nothing
    to do with the real world of Georgian politics or the actual struggle
    for democracy in the world," says Alexander Iskanderyan, a Georgia
    expert and director of the Centre for Caucasian Studies based in
    Yerevan, Armenia.

    "Saakashvili is a PR genius, who turns words into gold. His goal is
    to grab media attention and secure foreign aid. He's doing that very
    well," he says.

    A graduate of Soviet-era Kiev University, Mr Saakashvili went on to
    study law in the United States at Columbia and George Washington
    universities, before going to work with a New York law firm in the
    mid-1990s. But he was soon attracted to Georgian politics, won a
    parliamentary seat in 1996, and quickly became a leading member of
    the ruling party and a protege of president Shevardnaze.

    Georgia, a mountainous, ethnically diverse country of 5 million, was
    once known as "the fruit basket of the USSR", famous for its lush
    agriculture, sweet wines, thick Borzhomi mineral water and
    sub-tropical Black Sea tourist resorts.

    After the Soviet collapse Georgia dissolved in civil strife and
    separatist war. Two regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, won de facto
    independence from Tbilisi following bloody conflicts. Another
    province, Ajaria, largely ruled its own affairs. Chechen rebels from
    Russia took over another rugged mountain area, the Pankisi Gorge, and
    the disaffected Armenian region of Samtskhe -Javakheti threatened to
    break away.

    Mr Shevardnadze, a silver-haired former Soviet foreign minister, came
    to power following the bitter civil war in 1992, pledging to
    introduce sweeping democratic reforms and free-market economics.
    Though it seems largely forgotten today, during his decade in power
    he was considered a key regional ally by American leaders, who made
    Georgia the third-largest recipient of US aid after Israel and Egypt,
    and sent a brigade of US special forces to train the Georgian army.

    "In his time Shevardnadze was treated as a democratic hero by the
    Americans, as Saakashvili is today," says Sergei Mikheyev, a regional
    expert with the independent Centre for Political Technologies in
    Moscow. "Shevardnadze tried to build democracy, but he was
    overwhelmed by separatism, corruption, economic paralysis - all the
    problems that still plague Georgia.

    "At some point he became unsuitable to the Americans and Saakashvili,
    who is totally oriented towards the US, took his place in their
    hearts."

    A 2000 opinion poll found Mr Saakashvili, then minister of justice,
    to be the second most popular politician in Georgia after Mr
    Shevardnadze. Many analysts identified him as Mr Shevardnadze's heir
    apparent, but in 2001 he resigned from the government, citing
    pervasive official corruption and Mr Shevardnadze's inability to deal
    with it.

    In November 2003, following a parliamentary election that most
    observers regarded as rigged in favour of pro-Shevardnadze parties,
    Mr Saakashvili and several close political allies organised three
    weeks of relentless - but peaceful - street demonstrations around
    Freedom Square that ultimately forced an exhausted Mr Shevardnadze to
    resign.

    Mr Saakashvili's tribute to his former mentor bore not a hint of
    revolutionary rage: "History will judge him kindly."

    The next January Mr Saakashvili was elected, in virtually uncontested
    polls, with a staggering 97 per cent of the popular vote. The two
    main separatist regions did not participate, but most experts judged
    the result a mostly genuine product of the euphoric hopes generated
    by the Rose Revolution.

    A few months later Mr Saakashvili staged another coup, by peacefully
    deposing the independence-minded leader of Ajaria and restoring the
    Black Sea region, and Georgia's main oil terminal, to central rule.

    "Saakashvili has accomplished some notable things. He increased
    pensions and fired half the traffic police, which dramatically
    slashed corruption," Mr Iskanderyan says.

    "On the other hand, Georgia is less democratic today than it was
    under Shevardnadze. Censorship has grown, critical journalists are
    being persecuted, media outlets are being shut down."

    Some worry that Mr Saakashvili's confrontational stance towards
    breakaway Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which were largely allowed to
    go their own ways under Mr Shevardnadze, could re-ignite the savage
    ethnic wars of the early 1990s. The two provinces are backed by
    Moscow, and a majority of the population in both carry Russian
    passports.

    Mr Saakashvili has also pressed the Kremlin to close down two
    Soviet-era Russian military bases on Georgian soil. Moscow's
    reticence on this issue led Mr Saakashvili to angrily boycott last
    week's Red Square celebration of the 60th anniversary of the Soviet
    victory over Nazi Germany hosted by Vladimir Putin.

    "Shevardnadze was wise and realistic, but Saakashvili seems
    overconfident," Mr Mikheyev says. "If he tries to put his rhetoric
    into practice, there will be trouble" - including possible conflict
    with Russia.

    "Any military attempt to force Abkhazia and South Ossetia back under
    Tbilisi's rule could lead to massive bloodshed."

    But as last week's extravaganza on Freedom Square shows, Mr
    Saakashvili is a rising star in Mr Bush's global democracy crusade.
    In a much-quoted article in The Washington Post last week, Mr
    Saakashvili called for "a new Yalta Conference" to end the cold-war
    division of Europe, export freedom to still -oppressed regions of the
    former Soviet Union such as Belarus and Moldova, and foment
    democratic revolts as far afield as "Zimbabwe, Cuba and Myanmar".

    "Georgia today is a failing state, without electricity or central
    heating," says Vyacheslav Nikonov, director of the independent
    Politika Foundation in Moscow. "But what does that matter when
    Saakashvili is adored by the world media and fjted by George Bush as
    living proof that his democracy campaign is a great success?"
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