Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

TBILISI: Georgia Parliament Ups Ante On Russian Bases

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

  • TBILISI: Georgia Parliament Ups Ante On Russian Bases

    RFE/RL Analysis: Georgia Parliament Ups Ante On Russian Bases
    Thursday, 10 March 2005

    By Liz Fuller

    Deputies in Georgia's parilament voted unanimously on 10 March to call
    on the government to effectively blockade the bases if the two countries
    do not agree on their removal by mid-May.

    Under an agreement signed at the OSCE Istanbul Summit in November 1999,
    Russia undertook to close by 1 July 2000 its military bases in Vaziani,
    near Tbilisi, and Gudauta, Abkhazia, and to begin talks with the
    Georgian leadership in 2000 on the timeframe for closing its two
    remaining bases in Batumi and Akhalkalaki. Russia complied with first of
    those commitments, and embarked as required on talks on shutting down
    the latter two bases.

    But in the course of those talks, Russian officials have consistently
    argued that a lengthy time period is required to build housing in Russia
    for the troops to be withdrawn from Georgia. (That argument is specious
    insofar as many of the personnel at the base in Akhalkalaki are in fact
    ethnic Armenians who are citizens of Georgia.) Initially, Russian
    officials said they needed 15 years to close the bases, then 14; that
    figure was revised downward to 11, and then eight years, according to
    Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli on 9 March.

    After the Georgian and Russian sides failed during Russian Foreign
    Minister Sergei Lavrov's visit to Tbilisi last month to make any
    progress toward solving either the deadlock over the bases or any of the
    problems bedeviling bilateral relations, it was agreed to establish
    working groups to seek to narrow the disagreements and report on 1 May
    to the countries' two presidents. Those working groups will focus on six
    issues, including the proposed framework treaty on friendship and
    cooperation and the timeframe for the closure of the two bases.

    "If Russia rejects or refuses to met that deadline, the Georgian
    parliament would declare the bases illegal and measures would be taken
    to prevent them from functioning: Georgia would, for example, decline to
    issue visas to Russian military personnel."

    Despite that agreement, Givi Targamadze, chairman of the Georgian
    parliament's Defense and Security Committee, announced within days of
    Lavrov's departure that the two remaining Russian bases should close by
    1 January 2006 at the latest. On 25 February, parliament speaker Nino
    Burdjanadze suggested that the Georgian leadership might declare the
    Russian bases illegal if an agreement is not reached soon on a date for
    their closure. Then on 7 March, parliament deputy Giga Bokeria unveiled
    a draft bill that would require Russia to agree formally by 15 May to
    close the two remaining bases by 1 January 2006. If Russia rejects or
    refuses to met that deadline, the Georgian parliament would declare the
    bases illegal and measures would be taken to prevent them from
    functioning: Georgia would, for example, decline to issue visas to
    Russian military personnel.

    Bokeria's draft bill appeared to take the Georgian leadership by
    surprise. ITAR-TASS on 8 March quoted parliament speaker Burdjanadze as
    telling the independent television station Rustavi-2 that parliament
    should not adopt such a bill until after the expiry of the two months
    agreed by Moscow and Tbilisi to try and reach a compromise. President
    Mikheil Saakashvili also implicitly cautioned the parliament against
    adopting the bill. He reaffirmed on 8 March Georgia's "crystal-clear"
    position that the bases should be closed, but proposed waiting to see
    whether it is possible to reach an agreement with Russia within the two
    month period, as did Prime Minister Noghaideli. Parliament was scheduled
    to debate the draft bill on 9 March, but postponed the debate until 10
    March at Burdjanadze's request.

    On 8 March, a senior Russian military official condemned the planned
    debate as an attempt at blackmail, and on 9 March the Russian Foreign
    Ministry warned that the debate would make it more difficult for the two
    sides to reach the hoped-for compromise agreement. "The Russian side
    will shortly submit its proposals aimed at finding solutions to existing
    problems," the Foreign Ministry statement continued.

    In what have may have been a deliberate leak intended to defuse mounting
    tensions, on 10 March, izvestiya.ru quoted an unnamed Russian Defense
    Ministry official as saying that Russia does not want to keep the bases
    in Georgia forever, but their personnel will be redeployed to the
    Caucasus to serve in a new mountain rifle division which will be formed
    only three or four years from now. While that time frame might appeal to
    the Georgian leadership -- in that the bases would theoretically have
    been closed prior to the expiry of Saakashvili's first presidential term
    -- it may not be enough to mollify the parliament. And that anonymous
    statement represents a clear retreat from earlier Russian arguments in
    favor of simply renaming one or both bases an "anti-terrorism center."

    Meanwhile, the Georgian State Employment Agency is already addressing
    the problem of providing employment for the Armenians who currently
    account for up to one third of the personnel at the Akhalkalaki base,
    and who are already expressing unease at the prospects of losing their
    livelihood in a region with few employment opportunities. The Georgian
    daily "Rezonansi" on 10 March quoted the agency's chairman, Levan
    Peradze, as saying that a job-creation program is in the works, and he
    suggested some of the personnel in question may find jobs in private
    security services. And Goga Khachidze, who was recently named governor
    of the Djavakheti region where the Akhalkalaki base is located, pledged
    the same day that the Georgian leadership will do everything possible to
    ensure that its closure "is painless" for the local Armenian population.

    As the Georgian authorities have failed consistently to deliver on
    earlier promises to improve conditions in the remote, mountainous and
    impoverished region, the Armenians are understandably skeptical. David
    Rstakian, leader of the Virk party that represents the local Armenian
    community, was quoted by Caucasus Press on 10 March as saying, "The
    Armenians of Javakheti will do all they can to prevent the Russian
    troops from leaving Akhalkalaki. If Russia refuses to pull out its
    troops, it may need our help."

    That help, he implied, would be willingly offered.


    http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/03/b1362b79-3fdb-46a3-a4c6-a4e08287285b.html
Working...
X