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Georgia After Saakashvili: Better Life For All Its Neighbors

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  • Georgia After Saakashvili: Better Life For All Its Neighbors

    GEORGIA AFTER SAAKASHVILI: BETTER LIFE FOR ALL ITS NEIGHBORS
    by Dmitry Babich

    The Voice of Russia
    Oct 3 2012

    What effect will the defeat of president Saakashvili's "party of
    power" at recent parliamentary elections in Georgia have on Georgia's
    immediate neighbors? By neighbors one should mean not only Russia,
    but also Turkey and Georgia's fellow former Soviet republics -
    Armenia and Azerbaidjan?

    Experts suggest not to hasten with optimistic predictions. First, a
    "change of guard" in Tbilisi still has to happen. Saakashvili still
    has several months of unlimited power before the "anti-presidential"
    constitutional amendments take effect, transferring power from the
    president to the newly elected parliament. Second, characterizations
    of the leader of the election's victors - Bidzina Ivanishvili - as
    "Moscow's man," although widespread in Western press, are at best
    simplifications. At worst, they are simply not true.

    Bidzina Ivanishvili during his electoral campaign promised to move
    Georgia further into the EU and NATO (something Mr. Saakashvili
    also promises to deliver). But Ivanishvili also promises to improve
    relations with Russia (something Mr. Saakashvili is unable to deliver
    after the war of 2008). These promises do not make Ivanishvili "the
    Kremlin's stooge," as Le Figaro or The Wall Street Journal portray
    him. In fact, they reflect common sense - something Russo-Georgian
    relations have been lacking for an long time. However, some analysts
    dismiss this "contradictory" promise of Bidzina Ivanishvili as
    electoral posturing. But isn't this pessimism just a reflection of
    anti-Russian stereotypes?

    Russia did not hamper the movement of the former members of the
    pro-Soviet Warsaw Pact into the EU during the 1990s and raised no
    objection to it in 2004, when the EU's biggest expansion took place.

    Russia objected to NATO membership for countries like Bulgaria, Czech
    Republic, Slovakia or Hungary. However, while voicing its concerns,
    Moscow never drew any "red lines" for these countries. In fact their
    integration into NATO, when it did happen, didn't prevent Russia from
    seeking (and largely achieving) good relations with these countries.

    Other stories (like relations with a new NATO member Poland) were less
    rosy - but Russia can hardly be faulted for that. Of course, under
    the aggressively pro-American and anti-Russian regime of Mikhail
    Saakashvili, Georgia's membership in NATO could pose a threat to
    Russia's security, and Russia will most likely oppose Georgia's
    membership in military blocs. But Russia never objected to having
    a peaceful and friendly Georgia in the EU. In fact, during a short
    "detente" in Russo-Georgian relations in 1994-1996 Georgia already
    had European integration as one of the chief objectives of Georgian
    foreign policy, and Moscow never had problem with it.

    In fact, a confrontational view of Georgian election (seeing it as a
    fight between the pro-Western forces of "good" and "old Soviet" forces
    of "evil") was most typical for Saakashvili and his cronies, and not
    for the majority of Georgian people. Saakashvili's foreign policy was
    a reflection of this simplified world view: he opens Georgia's borders
    and markets to neighboring Turkey and aggressively seeks confrontation
    with Russia. This policy led to the flooding of Georgia's markets
    with cheap merchandise from Turkey coupled with numerous hurdles on
    the Georgian-Russian border, which hampered trade and movement of
    people between the two Orthodox Christian countries. In fact, Georgian
    Orthodox church, frustrated with Mr. Saakashvili's divisive policies,
    became one of the main electoral allies of Mr. Ivanishvili.

    In fact, the confrontational policy of Mr. Saakashvili did not profit
    any of Georgia's neighbors, Christians and Moslems combined. Armenia
    became an indirect victim of the sealing of Russo-Georgian borders,
    since most of Armenia's trade with Russia and other European countries
    was done via Georgian territory. So, the shutting of Verkhny Lars,
    a border pass between Russia and Georgia, immediately stopped the
    movement of goods between Armenia and Europe. In fact, it forced
    Yerevan to rely on its trade with neighboring Iran, which is itself
    under international sanctions now. As for Azerbaijan, it had a dispute
    with Saakashvili's Georgia over a territory on the border where the
    famous Georgian monastery David Garedji is located.

    Turkey, a seemingly obvious beneficiary of Saakashvili's policy,
    is also not interested in viewing Georgia by Saakashvili's eyes -
    as a battleground between Russia and NATO countries. This kind of
    vision moulds Russia and Turkey in a nineteenth or even eighteenth
    century paradigm - as two antagonistic imperial powers vying for the
    sympathies of sly Georgian rulers, who pit one side against the other.

    In the twentieth century, Turkey renounced this imperial tradition -
    and it will not return to it for pragmatic reasons.

    One of these reasons is that this kind of vision would make Georgia a
    natural competitor for Turkey in a tricky business of hosting American
    bases in case of new tensions in the Middle East. (Saakashvili granted
    American citizens and especially the military the right of free access
    to Georgian territory). Also, Georgia's NATO membership would oblige
    Turkey to provide its "ally" in Tbilisi with military assistance in
    case Tbilisi gets embroiled in one or two more local wars (Georgia
    already got embroiled in 5 wars during the last 22 years).

    So, Mr. Ivanishvili's promised vision of Georgia as a territory
    of peace, not confrontation, may be much closer to the hearts of
    Turks, Russians and Armenians than Saakashvili's continued crude
    confrontation with Russia. The difference would be all the more obvious
    if Mr. Ivanishvili backed up his words with some steps towards Moscow's
    legitimate concerns in the spheres of security and economy.




    From: A. Papazian
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