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TBILISI: Zourabichvili Calls For Georgia To Be "Regional Leader"

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  • TBILISI: Zourabichvili Calls For Georgia To Be "Regional Leader"

    ZOURABICHVILI CALLS FOR GEORGIA TO BE "REGIONAL LEADER"

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Sept 6 2005

    The gathering of representatives of Georgia's diplomatic corps in
    Batumi on September 2-3 was the largest such meeting in the last
    9 years. Minister of Foreign Affairs Salome Zourabichvili said the
    agenda covered the most important issues for the country's foreign
    policy: European and NATO integration and the necessity of attracting
    European investment into the country. However, rousing the most media
    interest at the meeting was Zourabichvili's statement that Georgia
    should strive to achieve the position of "regional leader."

    At the conference in Batumi, which brought together Georgian diplomats
    accredited in 29 countries, Zourabichvili mentioned that Georgia should
    try to gain the position of leader in the South Caucasus. "Being
    a leader in the region is the most important issue for us. We need
    this in order to be at the top of new movements and directions of
    development," she said, as quoted by the newspaper Akhali Taoba.

    Observers think that the fact that such a statement was made by one
    of the country's top leaders is significant in itself, though as
    Rezonansi reports, some state that the Minister of Foreign Affairs
    should not make such bold pronouncements and that doing so is the
    job of only the president or at least the prime minister.

    It is clear that the proclamation about regional leadership does
    not extend past the South Caucasus, because Georgia's more distant
    regional neighbors include countries such as Turkey, Iran and
    Ukraine, to say nothing of Russia. It is fair to question, however,
    Georgia's capabilities to lead even within the small South Caucasus
    region. Economics is the most basic precondition for any talk about
    leadership. Is Georgia strong enough economically to even think of
    being a regional leader?

    In 2006 Azerbaijan will receive USD 5 billion in revenues from the
    BTC oil pipeline alone. Also, Azerbaijan is twice as big as Georgia
    in terms of population. Armenia has a vast and wealthy Diaspora
    abroad. Moreover, Georgia is dependent not only on Azerbaijan
    for energy resources, but also on Armenia, from which it receives
    electricity in winter. In addition, the income per capita is greater
    in both Azerbaijan and Armenia, though Georgia could theoretically
    make use of the advantages it has given its geopolitical situation
    and gain the upper hand, reports Rezonansi.

    Others believe the Minister of Foreign Affairs' statement about
    regional leadership refers mainly to democratic reform. Namely,
    that Georgia will try to pass reforms earlier than its neighbors. In
    addition, Georgia should become a leader in European and Euro-Atlantic
    integration issues. "Perhaps those countries supporting Georgia in
    its integration into NATO and EU will give the country the role
    of regional leader," one anonymous expert is quoted as saying in
    Rezonansi. One international figure encouraging Georgia to take such
    a role is the president of PACE Rene van der Linden, who during an
    August visit to Tbilisi called on Georgia to take a lead role in the
    peaceful resolution of regional conflicts. "Georgia must become an
    example for the whole region," Linden said.

    Georgia-Russian relations were another of the major issues on the table
    at the Batumi meeting. Minister Zourabichvili stated that normalizing
    relations with Russia is a pertinent issue for the foreign policy of
    Georgia. The government has taken a lot of important steps to this end,
    though according to Zourabichvili, they are not enough. "We are glad
    that Russian military bases are leaving Georgia. But we are quite
    far from normalizing our relations once and for all. We should all
    take effective steps in this area," said Zourabichvili.

    The ministry named the attraction of investments as one of the top
    priorities of Georgian ambassadors. "You are not only political,
    but also economic ambassadors. We need a strong economy to have
    a successful foreign policy. We want a strong economy. Thus the
    most important objective of your activities should be attracting
    investments," said Salome Zourabichvili. The ambassadors are now tasked
    with disseminating information about Georgia's economic development
    and the privatization processes underway in the country.

    The 24 Ambassadors present at the meeting - Ambassadors to the United
    States Levan Mikeladze, Russia Irakli Chubinashvili, as well as the
    ambassador to Poland were unable to attend - have received their new
    agenda for the next year. But for the most ambitious tasks ahead -
    attracting foreign investments, promoting Georgia as a regional leader,
    and normalizing relations with Russia - they must rely heavily on
    officials in Tbilisi to do their job first of all.
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