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TBILISI: Saakashvili Sends "Love" Messages, Showcases 15,000 Soldier

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  • TBILISI: Saakashvili Sends "Love" Messages, Showcases 15,000 Soldier

    SAAKASHVILI SENDS "LOVE" MESSAGES, SHOWCASES 15,000 SOLDIERS AT INDEPENDENCE DAY PARADE
    Maia Edilashvili

    The Georgian Times, Georgia
    May 28 2007

    "There is nothing capable of defeating us if we stand together ... We
    maintained our economy and become the top reformer last year amid outer
    force's efforts to destroy our economy - this has been possible thanks
    to our ability to remain united," said Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili on May 26 while addressing an audience of 15,000 servicemen
    who paraded in downtown Tbilisi to mark the Independence Day.

    Georgian government officials and representatives of the Diplomatic
    Corps from 40 countries attended the celebration. In his Independence
    Day speech which has become a traditional feature of the pompous
    military parades since the Rose Revolution, Saakashvili underlined
    that Georgian people's determination is something which is above all
    including the country's military strength and success in economic
    development.

    He stressed that Georgia is "a multi-ethnic state" but there is only
    one nation - Georgia. This nation, Saakashvili specified, is composed
    of Georgian Azerbaijanis, Georgian Abkhazians, Georgian Ossetians,
    Georgian Armenians etc.

    The latest military parade, like its predecessors, showcased Georgia's
    well-reformed military forces. 15,500 servicemen, including 3,500
    reservists, marched down on Tbilisi's Rustaveli Avenue on Saturday. The
    military parade also included four newly purchased L-39 training and
    multi-purpose light attack aircraft and 120 KRAZ-type military trucks.

    Last year 13 000 soldiers, 5 000 servicemen from the reserve troops
    and 400 officers from the Interior Ministry marched on May 26 in
    downtown Tbilisi to celebrate the Independence Day. Helicopters
    and fighter jets also appeared on Rustaveli Avenue prompting the
    commentators to describe last year's military parade as "the largest
    ever held in Georgia." "This is the first parade of the strongest
    Georgian army... Never before has Georgia had such a strong army,"
    Giorgi Arveladze, by then chief of the President's administration said.

    The most modest of the military parades during the last four years
    was the one in 2005 in which only about 1,500 Georgian servicemen and
    dozens of armored vehicles took part. On May 25, President Saakashvili
    said that Georgia did not want to speak "in the language of force."

    Yet, the most contrasting compared to Shevardnadze-era Independence Day
    celebrations and military parades was the first military parade staged
    following the Rose Revolution. On May 26, 2004 Georgian government
    organized what was described as "the largest-ever military parade
    in Georgia's history." Up to 8,000 soldiers and officers from the
    armed forces and up to one-hundred armored vehicles, heavy artillery
    and 'Grad' missile launchers, as well as anti-aircraft missiles
    participated in the march.

    In his televised address to the nation on May 25, President
    Saakashvili said that the event would aim to "demonstrate Georgia's
    forces." However, he also stated that Georgia would apply to only
    peaceful means to reunite Georgia. "If you asked any Georgian soldier
    why he is serving in the armed forces, each of them would reply -
    'to restore Georgia's territorial integrity'," Saakashvili said adding
    that a peaceful resolution of the Abkhazia conflict is a primary goal
    of his government. He said Tbilisi was ready to grant the breakaway
    regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia the largest possible autonomy
    within the Georgian state and vowed that Georgia would have the best
    army in the region in a couple of years.

    The Georgian authorities have been pursuing this goal consistently
    ever since. In August of 2006, Saakashvili called for the government to
    double the size of its military reserve force, to 100,000 soldiers. He
    also called for more reservist camps to be established and developed
    in line with the Western standards so that Georgia could be ready to
    use all the measures of "total defense." The announcements came as
    tensions rose between Georgia and two breakaway regions of Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia with Abkhaz leaders claiming that Georgia was preparing
    for war.

    However, Georgian government has denied the claims of being preparing
    for war saying that Georgia needs the strong army in order to be safely
    protected. Many members of the parliament have trained at reservist
    camps. In August 2006, President Saakashvili joined reserve troops
    to spend his ten-day vacation in a reservists' training camp in the
    village of Osiauri in a bid to provide an example for others.

    Under the new system of reserve troops, each citizen under the age
    of 40 are obliged to join the reserve troops for at least two weeks
    in order to get elementary skills.

    Besides, the Georgian government has recently proposed to increase
    the 2007 defense spending from the current 513.2m GEL to 957.8m GEL
    (about USD 566.7m). According to Levan Nikoleishvili, the Deputy
    Defense Minister, most of the additional funding for the Defense
    Ministry will go to purchase weaponry and ammunition. The increased
    defense funding will make up to 6% of the country's GDP, paving the
    way for the highest defense budget in Georgia's history.

    In the recent May 26 adress President Saakashvili underlined that the
    territorial integrity is Georgia's number one priority. Currently, he
    noted, Georgia has a responsibility to maintain Georgia in the borders
    "in which our ancestors left it for us," and a responsibility towards
    "our 500,000 compatriots who have been expelled from Abkhazia.

    "Not only ethnic Georgians; these are ethnic Ukrainians, ethnic
    Estonians, ethnic Jews, ethnic Armenians, ethnic Greeks and ethnic
    Abkhazians. We have duty to bring all of them back to their homes
    [in Abkhazia]," Georgian President Saakashvili said.

    He also addressed residents of breakaway South Ossetian and told
    them in the Ossetian language: "We love you," adding "it is our
    responsibility to maintain Georgia, which is multi-ethnic and
    multi-confessional."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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