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Interview: Giorgi Kvelashvili - Georgia'S 'Unprecedented' Opportunit

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  • Interview: Giorgi Kvelashvili - Georgia'S 'Unprecedented' Opportunit

    INTERVIEW: GIORGI KVELASHVILI - GEORGIA'S 'UNPRECEDENTED' OPPORTUNITY
    Michael Cecire

    Eurasia Review
    http://www.eurasiareview.com/2010/04/interv iew-giorgi-kvelashvili-georgias.html
    April 28 2010

    Giorgi Kvelashvili, an analyst and regular contributor with the
    Jamestown Foundation, speaks to Evolutsia.Net about Georgia's
    development, foreign policy, and politics.

    Evolutisa.Net: Giorgi, thanks for agreeing to the interview.

    To start, you've been very active writing about Georgia's geopolitical
    position at the Jamestown Foundation. With the recent US-Russia nuclear
    arms limitations agreement and the fitful start-stop 'reset,' do you
    think that the US and Russia are any closer to seeing eye to eye on
    things like Iran and, closer to home, Russia's neighborhood policy?

    Giorgi Kvelashvili:

    Unlike his predecessor, the incumbent US President, Barack Obama,
    at least in his rhetoric, focuses more on issues of global security
    and peace than freedom, democracy and human rights when prioritizing
    America's foreign policy agenda. Pretty accurately, this stance seems
    quite logical given Obama's domestic priorities, which puts justice
    above liberty.

    To be sure, President Obama's rhetoric is not very good news for small
    nations like Georgia or the Baltic states since we would be better
    off, and the world would be safer, if the United States exerted more
    pressure on Moscow so that the latter move toward a freer and more
    open society. Cooperation with Russia or China, for that matter, on
    security, energy and technology issues, should be conditional and
    closely linked to those countries' domestic behavior. This means
    that the human dimension of security should not be decoupled from
    the international security; otherwise we will be heading toward a
    very fragile world where peace would be a temporary good.

    Having said that, I do not think that any bargaining is going between
    the current U.S. administration and the Kremlin at the expense
    of Georgia or other countries in Russia's neighborhood. America's
    'no' to Moscow's proposal on a new European security treaty - whose
    ill-hidden aims are to undermine NATO and carve for Russia a sphere
    of influence by limiting the small nations' freedom of choice -
    is proof of the assumption I have just made.

    On the other hand, the United Staes have never openly demanded that
    Russia withdraw its troops from the occupied Georgian territories.

    Those troops and the very fact of occupation are a direct threat
    to Georgia's sovereignty. This is a very volatile status quo. It
    cannot be maintained long given the fact that Russia has achieved
    very little by having those territories under its control. There are
    two outcomes from this situation: either Russia will be forced to
    leave or it will expand its rule all over Georgia. There is no third
    outcome. I am pretty sure of it.

    As far as Iran is concerned, Russia would only benefit from the
    deepening crisis over Tehran's nuclear and missile programs. I do not
    think that the American government would offer Russia a freedom of
    action in Georgia for its cooperation over Iran. Not at all. Moscow's
    hope lies in other calculations. Namely, if the Iran crisis descends
    into open military hostilities, then Russia would feel it is time to
    act in Georgia and in other parts of the former Soviet Union. Simply,
    no one would care about Georgia then and Russia as an opportunistic
    power will capitalize on an "attention vacuum" as well as on high
    energy prices.

    Evo: Based on these developments, and President Obama's outsourcing
    of the US Georgia policy to Vice President Joe Biden, do you think
    that the US-Georgia relationship is headed in the right direction?

    Giorgi Kvelashvili:

    The "outsourcing," even if it were really happening, is a mere
    technical issue. It would be better to look at the situation from a
    different perspective. This administration seems to be as committed
    to Georgia's nation-building efforts and democratic transformation as
    the previous administration was. I do not see any deviation from the
    pattern. Americans are helping us as ever before and this is not only
    financial and technical support - it is also moral support. Without
    an exaggeration, Georgia is governed by US-educated people from the
    president and high-ranking government ministers to mid-level and
    low-level public officials. And most of them have been educated at
    top US schools on American taxpayers' money. I wish we had as many
    US-trained medical doctors though. America is an inspiration for the
    Georgian youth and I do not think any nation in the world can best
    the Georgians in their admiration for the United States and its values.

    On its part, Georgia, which is not even a NATO member yet, has
    made tremendous contributions to the US-led international efforts in
    Afghanistan by deploying nearly 1,000 troops under French and American
    command. This move has created a new dynamic in Georgian-American
    relations. We have attached no national caveats to our deployment and
    nor have we tied this issue to the NATO membership process. Of course,
    we seek several important benefits from our friendly move and this is
    exactly what goes against the current Russian leadership's Georgia
    policy. Tbilisi's international isolation is the Kremlin's number
    one objective and our international involvement can successfully
    foil that plan. Closely linked to the 'isolation policy' is Moscow's
    desire to leave Georgia as a member of the international community
    void of function. Our cooperation with the West on transit, energy
    and military issue thwarts the Kremlin's plan as well.

    But this is just a very small part what Georgia is doing for what
    the United States stands for in the contemporary international system.

    Georgia is building a modern nation which is an alternative to
    what Russia epitomizes itself and advances in its neighborhood. Our
    sovereignty aside, Russia fears our way of life and institutions.

    Modernity is the single most important issue that distinguishes
    Georgia from Russia. We are the first and unfortunately so far the only
    country in the region that created a Western-styled functional police,
    a public register, armed forces and other nation-state attributes
    which are absolutely different from the Soviet-era analogues present
    in all other post-Soviet states, except the Baltic nations.

    Evo: Of course, I agree with everything you're saying, but you can't
    deny that many see US support as fairly half-hearted (the EU question
    aside!) and something of an afterthought. I'd agree that the Georgian
    contribution to Helmand is definitely worth mentioning and worthwhile,
    but it's still a pretty small amount compared to the overall number
    of forces in Afghanistan. It's hard not to understand the point some
    Western analysts make when they say that a foreign policy orientation
    should not depend on 1,000 additional troops in Helmand.

    How do you think Georgia can cultivate a relationship with the US where
    it becomes an American value, agreed upon by most of the population,
    that Georgia is worth helping and worth defending, as Israel has done?

    Giorgi Kvelashvili:

    Georgia under President Saakashvili has been acting as a de facto
    American ally. I would agree that a nearly 1,000 Georgian troops
    is of course a pretty small amount compared to the total number of
    forces currently deployed in Afghanistan. But nonetheless, it means
    that we are assisting our strategic partner as much as we can and,
    besides, we are projecting ourselves as someone who has a role in
    the international system. It is not only via our already materialized
    function as an energy transit country in the East-West corridor but
    also through our military involvement in the West's peace efforts
    that we are proving being useful to the world.

    By the way, our very existence as a sovereign nation is already a
    contribution to the international security and peace. Why do you think
    the Russians covet Georgia so much? Is not it because having Georgia
    in their fold would allow them to control the energy corridor, enjoy
    higher stakes in the bargaining with the United States over Iran and
    other issue, and overall, increase their relative power vis-a-vis the
    West. I do not think the world would be a safer place to live should
    Moscow's strategy materialize. Sovereignty of the former Soviet states
    is crucial if we do not want to have Cold War 2.

    Talking with officials in Washington is important and I think we have
    been quite successful at advancing our case, but I have a feeling that
    we could do better in relation to our reaching out to the American
    public. I mean not only think tanks, academia and pressure groups -
    and keeping good contacts with all of them is indeed very important -
    but also to the American people in general. Administrations come and
    go but the American men and women are always there. We have to talk to
    them. I know they will listen. They bear the Torch of Freedom and they
    are the ones who elect America's leaders. We share so many values with
    them and there are so many unexplored avenues in this regard. In short,
    I am talking about the indispensability of human-to-human contacts.

    Evo: Vano Merabishvili is on record saying that he doesn't believe
    another war is looming. I'd agree, but Jamestown has generally been
    less upbeat about this kind of thing. What are your impressions?

    Giorgi Kvelashvili:

    I am not positioned to make a point on the Jamestown Foundation's
    behalf. What I will say is my own observation.

    I am extremely happy with the level of cooperation I have developed
    with the president of the Jamestown Foundation Glen Howard, his
    extraordinary staff and the highly insightful and talented analysts who
    work with this organization. I am also very glad that the Jamestown
    focuses on the Caucasus more emphatically and more deeply than any
    other research institutions in the US or elsewhere in the West. It is
    day-to-day work and almost all Jamestown writers base their research
    on non-English sources which are not accessible for those who do not
    speak Russian, Georgian, Ukrainian, Chechen or other languages across
    the Caucasus and wider Eurasia.

    As for Minister Merabishvili's claim, I only have access to open
    sources and of course he has highly confidential information as well.

    Based on the information I am familiar with and given the reality I
    have described above, another Russian intervention cannot be ruled out
    at all. A lot will depend on how the Iran crisis develops. Karabakh
    is another story. What I mean is that if another war over Karabakh
    breaks out, Russia will be the primary beneficiary. All in all,
    for the Kremlin's current bosses, the Caucasus is quintessential
    for Russia's imperial growth. Besides, they feel that without having
    Tbilisi under control sometime soon, their imperial strategy will have
    to be abandoned altogether. In this respect, time is on our side. The
    longer we will survive, the greater will become the chance of Russia's
    own transformation into a modern, responsible and democratic nation.

    Evo: I'd like to take a little turn from this question. On one hand,
    I think you're making a really good point about Russia seeking
    suzerainty over Georgia in the medium to long term. However, a lot
    of thoughtful observers have said that Turkey would never agree to
    such an arrangement, as Georgia is seen in Ankara as a useful buffer
    against Russian expansion. Russia's 're-imperialization' has been the
    focus of many articles and discussions, as has the concept of Turkish
    'neo-Ottomanism,' to put it crudely. However, there's a lot less
    treatment on how both of these forces affect the future of Georgia.

    I'd contest that Georgia's strategic geography is once again at work
    here. Turkey could never fulfill (or even Iran, some might say) its
    larger strategic ambitions if Georgia becomes a Russian satellite,
    connected to Armenia to the south. What do you think? Though Ankara
    and Moscow are cooperating now, do you think Georgia can use its role
    as a buffer by leveraging Turkey to some extent against Russia?

    Giorgi Kvelashvili:

    Turkey has been our good friend since the very beginning of our
    revival as an independent country in 1991. We are now strategic
    partners and are engaged in very fruitful and mutually beneficial
    relationship. Turkey is our number one economic partner as well.

    Ankara supports the independence and territorial integrity of all
    former Soviet states and this feature distinguishes it from Moscow.

    Besides, I do not think that the prevailing strategic thinking in
    Turkey is based on the premises of zero-sum game. Turkey supports
    our NATO membership and we support Turkey's EU membership, the
    normalization of the Turkish-Armenian relations and, in general,
    Turkey's greater role in the Caucasus. This would only increase
    stability and security in our region. As concerns your notion on
    'buffer' states, we do not see ourselves as a buffer between the larger
    neighboring powers. We are an actor who aspires a NATO membership
    and a full incorporation into the Trans-Atlantic system of states.

    Evo: Despite Russia's requirement modification, it seems that the
    Mistral sale is a done deal. Many Western analysts have pooh-poohed
    the idea that the Mistral poses a threat to Georgia. What do you
    think? And, political advocacy notwithstanding, how can Georgia
    compensate for the increased threat level posed by a helicopter
    carrier sitting off of Georgia's coastline?

    Giorgi Kvelashvili:

    The Mistral at Russia's disposal is of course dangerous and I do not
    think we have to be the only one who should be ringing the alarm bell.

    But even more dangerous is the very fact that a deal like this is
    being struck between Russia that invaded its smaller neighbor in
    2008 and France, a NATO member Western nation, that mediated the
    ceasefire agreement between Russia and Georgia. In gross violation
    of that agreement, Russia is continuing its illegal occupation of
    Georgia's sovereign territory, and the Mistral deal is seen in the
    Kremlin as a reward for the occupation.

    Two weeks after Stalinist Russia invaded Finland on November 30, 1939,
    it was kicked out of the League of Nations. Are we safer today some
    sixty years later when we have a functional United Nations instead of
    a "dysfunctional" League of Nations and a P5 member Putinist Russia
    getting away easily with a grabbing of someone else's property? I do
    not think so.

    Meanwhile, Georgia, the victim of Russia's aggression, has been under
    effective US arms embargo since August 2008. US Senator Lugar and
    his supporters in Congress have called for a change in that direction.

    Georgia's outstanding security concerns remain while Russia's actions
    are only checked diplomatically. Diplomacy is a powerful deterrence
    but in the long run it becomes lame if real force on the ground is
    not coupled with it.

    Evo: On that last point, I am reminded of a conversation I had with
    Remy Gwardamadze just the other day. Remy was speaking with someone
    and asked about the average Georgian male's willingness to join the
    military, and his friend responded that most people are trying to
    avoid military service. To be honest, that has been my impression as
    well - that most Georgians don't seem to be exactly jumping at the
    chance to join the Georgian military forces. To put this into context,
    I remember the 2008 war. When Russian troops seemed to be poised to
    march on Tbilisi, Georgians didn't start forming paramilitary bands
    or head to the hills for a protracted guerilla war, but instead had
    a European-style protest!

    Obviously, Georgia needs arms and assistance from abroad - but if
    Georgians themselves don't seem to be prepared to fight for their
    independence, why should anyone else? What do you think? Do you see
    this as a function of a feeling of hopelessness? Or just a lack of
    confidence that Georgia could ever win such a war? Or that Russian
    occupation may not be so bad? And how can Georgia reverse this
    inclination among its people?

    I mean, on one hand, you have places like Switzerland, Singapore, and
    Israel (all three described as models for Georgia in various respects),
    but these places all have universal conscription, advanced air forces,
    and highly trained militaries. None are NATO members.

    Georgia's military, on the other hand, seems to be focused on NATO
    interoperability rather than territorial defense.

    Giorgi Kvelashvili:

    You are making very important points. It is not that I fully agree
    with you on your assumptions or perceptions. If I may say this, you
    are partly right when describing the morale of a number of Georgian
    men. But there are so many others whose patriotism is beyond doubt.

    The Russian invasion showed that we have very many good soldiers and
    real heroes. There were some serious shortcomings of course during
    the war especially in the military command and communications system
    but in general the morale in our armed forces was high. Unfortunately,
    there were reports that some of our compatriots collaborated with the
    enemy. This is very regrettable and I think huge work should be done
    to improve our human capabilities.

    I am for a system that includes universal conscription, a sizeable
    professional component and a national reserve. We should be capable
    of territorial defense, which would also be our deterrence.

    There are at least two dangers that I see. Some people in Georgia
    think that liberalism and democracy do not need teeth. On the other
    extreme of the spectrum there are ethnic nationalists who do not
    understand what nation-state really means, and for them 'survival'
    means ethnic and cultural preservation in an empire (the Russian
    empire, of course) not a survival as a nation in Western understanding.

    Georgia's education system should better focus on the modern concepts
    of citizenship. The army is another place where education should
    continue. President Saakashvili has recently unveiled a plan that
    will soon make patriotic and military education in Georgia's secondary
    schools an essential part of the academic curriculum.

    Evo: Many around the world, and Evolutsia.Net has joined this
    chorus periodically as well, still see Georgia's political and media
    environment to be badly flawed. How can the Saakashvili government
    take steps, in the near future, to correct these problems? Will they
    happen? When?

    Giorgi Kvelashvili:

    Georgia's system is in the process of making. Building a modern nation
    is of course harder than building just a state. Some ten years ago
    we did not even have a real state. Ours was a failed one. Without
    modern institutions democracy and individual liberties are just a
    dream because you cannot have liberty in the jungle of anarchy.

    I think we have made good progress both in terms of nation-building
    and democracy. But for the modern political culture to become stable
    and sustained, new elites committed to it should be formed. And this
    takes time. Establishing a responsible citizenry is a long process.

    Western-type liberal elites organized along right, centrist and
    left affiliations will someday fully replace the old-fashioned
    intelligentsia and the peculiar "political parties" of today's
    Georgia that have almost no ideologies and are simply formed around
    individuals. But this is a process whose success depends on the
    growth of our economy and the formation of a powerful and numerous
    middle class.

    The political elite that governs Georgia now has a great responsibility
    to direct this process in a due course. I would even say that the
    opportunity granted to our generation is unprecedented in Georgia's
    history.

    There is pressure on the government to expedite and deepen liberal
    political and economic reforms and I think this is very good. I
    myself want the Westernization of Georgia to proceed faster. But take
    into consideration the fact that there is even more pressure on the
    ruling elite from the old-timers who want the reforms to be abandoned
    altogether and the country to go back to some 'poor Georgian state'.

    The pro-Western class in this country is often accused of betraying
    Georgianness, whatever this means, and those retrograde and revanchist
    forces, closely associated with Russia and criminal gangs (kurduli
    samkaro) now operating outside Georgia, are still powerful enough to
    influence our future. I believe greater transparency, pluralism and
    freedom of expression will only speed up our transformation.

    Evo: Thanks for your time, Giorgi.

    Giorgi Kvelashvili, an Edmund S. Muskie alumnus, holds a Master's in
    International Relations from Yale University. He currently serves as
    an analyst for the Jamestown Foundation and regularly publishes for
    Tabula magazine.

    Michael Hikari Cecire is a writer and independent analyst living in
    Tbilisi. A former Peace Corps Volunteer in Georgia, he is a frequent
    commentator on economic development and South Caucasus policy issues.

    In addition to Evolutsia.Net, Cecire has also written for the Caspian
    Business Journal, the London Telegraph, World Politics Review, and TCS
    Daily, among others. This article first appeared at Evolutsia.Net,
    a news and analysis blogozine covering the political landscape of
    Georgia republic.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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