Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Wikileaks: Armenia Tries To Balance Relations With Georgia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Wikileaks: Armenia Tries To Balance Relations With Georgia

    WIKILEAKS: ARMENIA TRIES TO BALANCE RELATIONS WITH GEORGIA

    times.am
    Nov 29 2010
    Armenia

    Here is the summary of the documents, published by Wikileaks,
    where it is spoken about Armenian-Georgian relations. The summary
    especially says:

    Top Armenian officials are growing increasingly offended by Georgians'
    non-responsiveness to Armenian efforts to reach out. The most
    discourteous, perhaps, was the Georgian FM's refusal even to meet
    FM Nalbandian for a few minutes in Yerevan Airport, as she passed
    through en route overland to Georgia in the early morning of August 15.

    President Sargsyan is starting to take domestic criticism for his
    presumed "failure" to call Saakashvili, after he did call President
    Medvedev. Armenians feel their good intentions have been met with
    an undeserved cold shoulder. Both the president and foreign minister
    remain new enough in their jobs for such perceived slights to sting
    more than perhaps would be the case of more seasoned hands.

    Armenian officials are growing increasingly agitated, in private
    meetings with CDA, about the continuing refusal of their Georgian
    counterparts to take their calls, whether at the presidential,
    prime minister, or foreign minister level. A key presidential aide
    confided to CDA that President Sargsian had wanted to call Presidents
    Saakashvili and Medvedev on the same day, so as to avoid any appearance
    of Armenian bias between the two sides, but that when Medvedev took the
    call and Saakashvili did not, the appearance of pro-Russian preference
    was created. After repeated attempts to get a call through, Sargsyan
    finally just sent a letter to Saakashvili , in a substitute effort
    to show support for the Georgian side.

    Local opposition newspapers have already sharply criticized President
    Sargsyan for calling Medvedev and not phoning Saakashvili , and have
    accused him of sacrificing Armenia's national interests in a misguided
    effort to cozy up to Russia. This is galling to Sargsyan after his
    efforts to get Saakashvili on the telephone to offer condolences
    and assistance.

    The Prime Minister, likewise, was frustrated (reftel) by his inability
    to reach his Georgian counterpart to discuss trade and transportation
    issues which are of critical importance to the Armenian economy.

    Meanwhile, Armenian officials have kept their public statements about
    Georgia determinedly positive, even as their private exasperation
    mounts, though they have begun to suggest that they will take a sharper
    public tone if the cold shoulder from Tbilisi continues much longer.

    The Foreign Minister called in CDA August 15 for a one on one
    meeting, in which he vented his own simmering frustration, over
    what he termed Georgia's "hostile attitude." Visibly agitated, FM
    Nalbandyan noted that Armenia is trying to help Georgia by taking
    in more than 4,000 refugees and offering to serve as a humanitarian
    corridor for international relief efforts. He stressed that Armenia
    needs a good relationship with Georgia not only for economic reasons,
    but also for its contribution to regional stability. Nalbandyan added
    that the GOAM had meticulously avoided any statements that could
    be construed as siding with the Russians. Despite these efforts,
    Nalbandyan fumed, Saakashvili has refused to return repeated calls
    from President Sargsyan, and the Georgian PM has ignored calls from
    his Armenian counterpart "for more than a week.

    " The final indignity, according to the FM, was when FM Tkeshelashvili
    arrived at Yerevan Airport at 4:00am on August 15 en route overland
    to Tbilisi and declined Nalbandyan's proposal for a short Airport
    meeting at that hour. Tkeshelashvili said she was "under instructions"
    to return to Tbilisi immediately. "What more do they want from us?"

    Nalbandyan asked rhetorically. He said that the GOAM is "avoiding any
    negative public statements about Georgia," and warned that were such
    a statement to be issued, the reaction of ethnic Armenians in Javakhq
    (Javakheti) would be "very dangerous" for Georgia. Despite the obvious
    threat behind his words, Nalbandyan insisted that "this is not a card
    we could play" with Georgia, but "just a reality."

    CDA spoke briefly with the Georgian Ambassador August 15, after signing
    the embassy condolence book. When CDA gave a brief synopsis of the
    meeting with Nalbandyan, the Georgian ambassador said he had been
    working the phones with Tbilisi for several days to try to set up a
    Saakashvili -Sargsyan call, but to no avail. Although he expressed
    frustration at Tbilisi 's lack of responsiveness, he attributed the
    failure to the exigencies of the current emergency rather than to
    any desire to slight the Armenians. The Ambassador added that he
    would inform Saakashvili 's office in his next communication that
    the American Charge had been called in by Nalbandyan about this issue.

    And Times.am-Armenian news also presents the whole story on the theme,
    which is published on finchannel.com. The article is mostly about
    the Russian-Georgian war, but we have underlined the part conserning
    Armenia at first.

    The full story can be seen here:

    http://finchannel.com/Main_News/World/76354_Secret_Documents_by_Wikileaks_Confirming_tha t_War_in_Georgia_Was_Provocated_by_Russia/




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X