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  • Saakashvil will be an unconditional friend

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part B (Russia)
    August 18, 2006 Friday

    SAAKASHVILI WILL BE AN UNCONDITIONAL FRIEND

    by Yuri Simonjan

    President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is invited to visit Tbilisi; Georgian
    President Mikhail Saakashvili, known as a loyal satellite of the
    United States and a supporter of everything American, has stunned the
    international community by inviting Iranian President Ahmadinejad,
    Washington's number one opponent and ideological adversary, to visit
    Tbilisi.

    Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, known as a loyal satellite of
    the United States and a supporter of everything American, has stunned
    the international community by inviting Iranian President Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad, Washington's number one opponent and ideological
    adversary, to visit Tbilisi.

    Saakashvili delivered his invitation to Ahmadinejad via Iranian
    Deputy Foreign Minister Mehdi Safari who was on a visit to the
    Georgian capital on August 14-15. The visit was shrouded in a veil of
    secrecy. Only some details of Safari's meetings with Saakashvili,
    Prime Minister Zurab Nogaideli, and Foreign Minister Gela
    Bezhuashvili were revealed in a brief statement for the media. The
    official authorities flatly refused to elaborate.

    It is only known that Saakashvili thanked the Iranian diplomat for
    help from Tehran that enabled Georgia to overcome the February fuel
    crisis. In fact, the Iranian assistance was moral rather than
    practical but Saakashvili certainly made a fuss of it. He even went
    so far as to ask Safari to pass an invitation to Ahmadinejad to pay
    an official visit to Georgia. This piece of news stirred the
    political establishment because the Iranian president is on the black
    list of Tbilisi's principal benefactor US President George W. Bush.
    (Ahmadinejad called for expulsion of the United States and Britain
    from the UN Security Council and for bringing Bush and Tony Blair to
    trial, the other day.)

    Irakly Menagarishvili, Director of the Center of Strategic Studies
    and ex-Foreign Minister of Georgia, admits that the invitation to
    Ahmadinejad to visit Georgia may have a negative effect on Tbilisi's
    relations with the US Administration but says that there is no need
    to be overly dramatic about it. "There is more to relations between
    Georgia and Iran than contacts with the Iranian regime that has
    challenged the West," Menagarishvili mused. "Georgia and Iran are
    neighbors, with relations going back centuries. Saakashvili's desire
    to have stable economic relations with a neighbor is but rational and
    logical."

    Sources in Tbilisi point out that Ahmadinejad already paid a visit to
    Baku and this never affected Azeri-American relations. The same
    applies to Armenia and some Central Asian countries of the CIS that
    have been advancing relations with Iran.

    A source in Iranian diplomatic circles says that Ahmadinejad's visit
    to Tbilisi "is indeed a possibility." According to the diplomat, both
    countries are interested in promoting economic contacts - Georgia
    even more so because of its difficult relations with Russia that
    cause it problems and leave it in need of alternative sources of
    energy.

    Politicians and observers in Tbilisi itself do not rule out the
    possibility that Safari came to Tbilisi for guarantees that Georgian
    airfields will not be used in an anti-Iranian military campaign, if
    it ever came to that. Israeli media outlets reported with references
    to official sources in Georgia earlier this year that air strikes at
    Iran might be staged from Georgian airfields. Tbilisi categorically
    denied this suggestion then.

    Military expert Koba Liklikadze told us that even if an anti-Iranian
    military coalition is formed, Georgia will not play any active or
    significant role in it. "Our participation in this hypothetical
    anti-Iranian alliance is not going to amount to anything more than
    involvement in the anti-Iraqi alliance does," Liklikadze said.

    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, August 18, 2006, p. 6

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
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