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Saakashvili Has Put All His Eggs Into The Wrong Basket

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  • Saakashvili Has Put All His Eggs Into The Wrong Basket

    SAAKASHVILI HAS PUT ALL HIS EGGS INTO THE WRONG BASKET

    Russia Today
    http://www.russiatoday.com/Politics/2009-06- 02/Saakashvili_has_put_all_his_eggs_into_the_wrong _basket.html?fullstory
    June 2 2009

    The worst expectations have come true: the process of Georgia's
    de-sovereignization continues to accelerate and appears irreversible.

    The government's unreasonable and clumsy policy has got the country
    down to the level of a third-rate state which other countries
    disrespect.

    For example, during Saakashvili's recent visit to Baku, at the airport
    he was met not by "brother Ilkham", or the Speaker of Parliament,
    or the Prime Minister, but only by one of the Azerbaijani PM's
    deputies. The majority of countries in the world ignored Georgia's
    Independence Day on May 26 and, despite common custom, did not deign to
    send a greeting telegram. And "the true friends of Georgian democracy"
    from Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia probably decided
    not to spoil their reputations completely, and did not dare to appear
    in Tbilisi.

    Georgia's 20-year-long internecine strife for the President's chair
    has distracted the candidates from the disintegration of the country,
    surreptitiously organized by geopolitical players who pursue their
    own interests. In name only, Georgian jurisdiction has so far spread
    through the whole country apart from breakaway Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia. But in reality, an increase in the influence and control by
    distant and close neighbors is tearing Georgia apart. With every new
    president of the post-Soviet era, Georgia has only lost territory,
    gaining instead non-committal claims of backing from the USA, the EU,
    and NATO.

    No doubt due to its geographical position, Georgia is on one of the
    most important strategic trade and economic cross-roads of the Eurasian
    continent, especially in the region of the Black and the Caspian
    seas. Due to this fact, Russia, Iran, and Turkey have been arguing
    about dominance on this bit of land for centuries. Globalization
    has attracted the attention of other countries with various aims and
    interests. However, Georgia has not managed to profit from this for
    the benefit of its national identity and prosperity.

    The stereotypical mentality of the country - where all through its
    history Georgian tsars, then local nobility, succeeding communist
    leaders and "independent" presidents of the present day of the
    small and helpless territory were always eagerly looking for a
    powerful protector - played a bad joke with today's leaders of the
    country. Having been educated abroad, President Saakashvili ignored
    the wise sayings of the Anglo-Saxon world: "the only free cheese is in
    the mousetrap" and "look before you leap". And the most important one:
    "don't put all your eggs in one basket".

    Saakashvili and his team preferred the American 'basket' with NATO's
    'handles'. As a result, everybody is satisfied and is laughing - all
    but Georgia. The USA in particular got undivided control over energy
    resources transit on Georgian territory, by-passing Russia. Americans
    did not want anything else from Georgia. They tried the strengths of
    Russian army, cynically using Georgian soldiers as cannon-fodder. And
    now they have refused Georgia free weapons deliveries, saving the
    money of their tax-payers.

    NATO and the European Union have got tired of coddling extravagant and
    restless Georgia; they have seen the light and distanced themselves
    from bold attempts to enter the peaceful community of the Old
    World. Only due to European good manners do they not upset Georgia
    with a complete refusal. In Brussels, they wisely and pragmatically
    decided that it is too costly and hopeless to tame Georgia in its
    'recognized' borders. In August last year, Angela Merkel made a
    Freudian slip talking about 'core' Georgia. As we know from history,
    its core part consists of Kartli, Kakheti and Imereti which, at the
    end of the 18th century, became part of Russia. Of course Stalin's
    constitution, thanks to which the 'core' Georgia has swollen, does
    not mean a thing to Europe.

    The Old World surviving two catastrophic world wars in the previous
    century values and preserves peace. That's why the Georgian 'tinderbox'
    causes so much preoccupation and worry. If there is a fire there,
    the consequences will be felt in Europe, the USA, and Russia. The
    European Union actively suppresses the militarist initiatives of
    Tbilisi and recently has urged it to agree to extend the area of
    control of Abkhazia and South Ossetia's border territories by means
    of its military observers. According to German newspapers, Brussels
    thinks that 'now there is no chance of an unexpected Georgian attack
    on South Ossetia, which last year led to Russia's invasion'.

    It's also expected that, by mid-June, the EU foreign ministers
    will agree on renewing the mandate of the European Union Monitoring
    Mission (EUMM). The European diplomats think the mission has been a
    success. Since Russia has recognized the independence of South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia, Brussels is afraid the European forces will have to stay
    in Georgia for a long time. To avoid this, the EU diplomats have put up
    a 'humble objective': making the situation stable enough to prevent
    any further outbursts of revenge and armed conflicts. As for the
    policy of reunification, they believe it is Georgia's 'personal issue'.

    The party most interested in stability and peace is Russia, and it
    has been consistently increasing its influence and control over the
    situation in Georgia. The war in August has brought Moscow two new
    faithful allies and partners - South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Military
    bases stationed there can securely hold back any possible encroachments
    on the part of Tbilisi. Along with the Russian capital's financial
    intervention into banking, energy, telecommunications and other
    sectors of the Georgian economy, this, metaphorically speaking,
    is Moscow's blocking-, if not controlling-, stake in relation to
    other interested parties. It is enough - for now. All the more so,
    since Moscow now has mutually-beneficial relations with countries
    sharing its worries over Georgia's thick-headed attitude. Especially
    in Turkey, which strives to be the region's leader.

    Turkey, it seems, has got its share of the pie: Adjara, where ethnic
    Georgian Muslims make up one third of the population. The heirs of the
    Ottoman empire own the airport in Batumi, with its flights included
    into Turkey's domestic flight schedule. Its expansionist policy is
    also represented by small sewing factories, agricultural product
    processing plants and the hotel and travel industry.

    Many businessmen from Turkey come here attracted by the fabulously
    cheap labor. It's worth mentioning that Adjara has a formal status
    of an autonomous republic which is also part of Georgia. This status
    is backed by the Treaty of Kars, signed by Russia and Turkey almost a
    century ago. The treaty is still in full force, and in today's Georgia,
    Adjara is virtually 'strapped' to Tbilisi.

    No-one is 'hacking up' Georgia today - it's the 21st century,
    after all. However, the Kvemo Kartli region, populated by ethnic
    Azerbaijanis, is increasingly referred to in Baku by its historical
    Turkic name, Borchali. The Armenian enclave of Samtskhe-Javakheti is
    invariably called Javakh in Yerevan.

    If politics is only a tool of the economy, then money is much more
    efficient than guns in maintaining civilized control over territories
    and resources. Kazakhstan is investing in Georgia big time. One of its
    assets is United Telecom, a telecommunications giant with a network
    of 450,000 fixed-line phone users, and an internet service provider.

    Kazakhs own the gas-distribution system in Tbilisi, as well as
    the licenses to search for and use hydrocarbon deposits in western
    Georgia. The citizens of Almaty have also bought up dozens of the
    best hotels and resorts in Tbilisi and on the Black Sea coast.

    Georgia's permanent financial problems with its foreign trade balance
    permanently in the red and its enormous foreign debts are forcing it
    to sell off what it can. Strangely enough, its American and European
    'friends' thought it wasn't such a good idea to seriously invest
    in the real economy sector, and just went for the cherry on top of
    the pie - the transit of energy carriers. In two decades, Georgia,
    unlike its neighbors Armenia and Azerbaijan, has not built any major
    plants or factories, not even a simple assembly-line. Only recently,
    the country has launched the production of nails - ordinary metal
    nails - thanks to the efforts of pensioners and retirees from the
    out-of-action metallurgical plant. Apparently, they were hurt to see
    the state their country was in.

    The Arabs are the real big spenders, on the Tbilisi scale. They've
    bought up the entire sea port in Poti and a huge plot of land to go
    with it. They're planning to build a cottage town on the sea coast with
    'budget-oriented' villas for only one million dollars each. That's
    for spending your summer holiday in Georgia's 'fresh climate'.

    The Israelis soon followed suit, lured by the low prices on land and
    real estate and the perspective to build up a solid margin for further
    re-sale. But they've slowed down now - Georgia is a loose cannon,
    and it's best not to take any risks.

    Iran is also eyeing Georgia closely. It sees Tbilisi as a potential
    bridgehead for a U.S. attack. But this doesn't stand in the
    way of more pragmatic interests. Iranian goods, mostly household
    products, have found their niche on the Georgian market. Low-priced,
    high-quality detergents and a wide range of plastic goods are gaining
    the upper-hand over the competition. From a long-term perspective,
    Tehran is attracted by Georgia's transit potential, mostly along the
    North-South vector. This can cut transportation costs by one third.

    All other regional and geopolitical players have a similar interest,
    including countries from Asia, Europe and the Middle East. Anticipating
    future dividends, these players have designed transport routes twisting
    around Georgia in fancy patterns. The regime in Tbilisi is like a
    clot in the veins of these plans; a threat to the economic interests
    of transport carriers and goods manufacturers. If this is properly
    understood, there will be concerted pressure against Tbilisi. In fact,
    the process is underway and is gaining momentum. Territorial integrity
    is not an economic category.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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