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Georgian Dream' Comes True

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  • Georgian Dream' Comes True

    'GEORGIAN DREAM' COMES TRUE

    EDITORIAL | OCTOBER 29, 2013 5:58 PM
    ________________________________

    By Edmond Y. Azadian

    The presidential election in Georgia is not only significant for the
    Georgians, but also for its neighbors in Armenia and the entire region.

    Georgian Dream is a political coalition put together by the Georgian
    billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili to unseat President Saakashvili and
    his United National party ruling for the last 10 years.

    Mikheil Saakashvili came to power through the Rose Revolution, which
    ousted President Eduard Shevardnadze and set Georgia on a new political
    course. It was a time when political activists, funded and trained by
    the Soros Foundation, fomented political upheavals in the former Soviet
    republics with the avowed purpose of promoting democracy, but in fact,
    were reorienting the policies of those countries towards the West.

    The following year, Ukraine was "democratized" through the Orange
    Revolution.

    The US-trained Saakashvili placed his country in a path firmly heading
    towards the West and NATO and in the process, he antagonized his
    northern neighbor, Russia, to a point that in 2008, war broke out
    between the two and Georgia lost two regions - Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia - to Russia.

    That full decade of rule was marked by mixed results - the economy was
    developed, rule of law was established and corruption almost uprooted.

    But the campaign, which had started to bring democracy to the country,
    experimented with changes at the expense of harsh rules - excessive
    cases of detentions, torture and this time corruption by the new
    administration.

    During the election campaign, Ivanishvili noted that tax collection
    mechanisms became very efficient only to be able to misappropriate
    the collected taxes.

    Under Saakashvili, the Georgian government's relations with Armenia
    were very unfriendly - if not outright hostile. This Georgia always
    voted against Armenia and with Azerbaijan at the UN, despite the fact
    they are the only Christian nations in this Islamic ocean.

    Saakashvili's last hurrah was his speech at the UN last September,
    making unsavory remarks about Armenia's joining the Customs Union
    with Russia. Saakashvili also conspired with Azerbaijan to isolate
    Armenia in all regional developments - oil and gas lines were routed
    through Georgia to deny Armenia access to those energy resources.

    There were four main reasons that shaped the Georgian policy regarding
    Armenia:

    ~U The Tbilisi government perceived Armenia as Russia's vanguard in
    the region.

    ~U Armenia, already blocked by two hostile neighbors - Turkey
    and Georgia - would not react to Tbilisi's actions in order not
    to compromise a third border access with the world. Against all
    provocations by Tbilisi, Armenia soft-pedaled its Georgian policy

    ~U The restive Armenian region in Javakhk would be agitating for
    autonomy, therefore Armenia had to be punished for Javakhk's political
    aspirations and ~U Georgians have always been jealous of the Armenians
    who built their capital, Tbilisi, and handed it over to them on a
    silver platter.

    Of course the 2008 war with Russia further complicated the relations
    between the two nations. But a revolution, which had started with
    roses, had begun to serve only thorns to the Georgian people, when Mr.

    Ivanishvili came into the picture.

    Ivanishvili's Georgian Dream Coalition soundly defeated Saakashvili's
    United National Movement Party last year, occupying a comfortable lead
    in the parliament with 85 seats. That began a year of French-style
    cohabitational politics, with a lame-duck president representing
    the opposition and a prime minister and the parliament representing
    the majority.

    Although the West qualified the process as maturing democracy, the
    president and the prime minister exchanged openly-bitter barbs with
    each other until the October 27 presidential election, where Mr.

    Ivanishvili's handpicked candidate, Giorgi Margvelashvili, won 67
    percent of the votes against David Bakradze's 20 percent, while Nino
    Burjanadze trailed in third place with 10 percent of the votes. She
    was a former Saakashvili ally who had turned against him during the
    2008 war with Russia, openly advocating a policy of rapprochement
    with the Kremlin. Her 10-percent vote may also denote the measure of
    Russia's popularity in Georgia.

    Georgia's constitution was changed to leave a ceremonial role for the
    president, except for being commander in chief of the armed forces,
    concentrating all executive powers in the hands of the prime minister,
    to be elected after Mr. Ivanishvili retires in 2014. The name of the
    next prime minister still remains a myster.

    The new president is a colorless academic with scant experience in
    politics. He fits exactly Mr. Ivanishvili's image of a leader. Indeed,
    the billionaire politician vowed to eliminate from Georgian politics
    the "superman" rulers, which Saakashvili tried to portray.

    The NATO, PACE and EU representatives qualified the election as
    transparent and fair. They all found the elections moving Georgia
    towards a Euro-Atlantic sphere.

    The leaders of the Georgian Dream Party plan to have a balanced
    policy; while moving towards European integration, they will try to
    mend fences with Moscow.

    Western powers rushed to congratulate the victory of the new
    president. As of this writing, no message was issued by the Kremlin.

    Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov wished that the new administration
    would have an improved relation with Moscow.

    Armenia has become a hostage to the hostility and the rivalry between
    Moscow and Tbilisi. To measure the level of rancor and the grudge
    harbored by the Georgian president, it suffices to read about the
    exchange of insults between Mr. Saakashvili and Vahakn Chakhalian,
    an Armenian activist in the Javakhk region, jailed by the government
    for expressing autonomy aspirations for Javakhk Armenians.

    During the presidential campaign, Saakashvili visited an Armenian
    Church in Akhalkalak, where he faced Chakhalian. The latter said, "You
    took four and a half years of my life." Saakashvili called Chakhalian
    and a few others "bandits," "separatists" and "criminals." He
    boasted about having expelled the Russian military base from that
    Armenian-populated province (which was providing security and jobs to
    area Armenians) and he enforced the Georgian language to assimilate
    the young generation, while forbidding the importation of textbooks
    from Armenia.

    Saakashvili's policy was two-pronged: while assimilating the young
    generation of Armenians, he impoverished the province to force many
    Armenians to leave, which they did and he was able to quell the
    autonomy aspirations.

    Mr. Ivanishvili thus far has made contradictory statements about
    Armenians in Georgia, since coming to power. But the majority of
    the Armenians voted for his candidate, perhaps out of spite toward
    Saakashvili's policies, and also with the hope that some change could
    be brought in to improve the economy of the province.

    If and when relations normalize between Moscow and Tbilisi, transit
    trade and movement of people and goods will be facilitated with the
    outside world.

    As far as confiscated Armenian Churches in Georgia and the tacit
    discrimination against Armenians are concerned, only patience and
    non-violent resistance will help.

    Georgian presidential election promises positive changes for the
    region, hopefully with some dividends also going to Armenia.

    - See more at:
    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/10/29/georgian-dream-comes-true/#sthash.3i6UMb4U.dpuf

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