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  • TBILISI: Base withdrawal negotiations drag on

    Base withdrawal negotiations drag on

    The Messenger.
    Thursday, May 19, 2005, #090 (0864)

    Despite the frequent top-level meetings between Georgian and Russian
    officials, no agreement has yet been reached on the withdrawal of
    Russia's military bases in Georgia, although there are signs that a
    deal is close.

    Georgia has been boosted in its efforts to have Russia remove its bases
    by statements of support from Western countries and organizations,
    most notably U.S. President Bush, but it is clear that it is up to
    Georgia and Russia to reach an agreement. The question for Georgia
    is how this should best be achieved.

    Following six years of Russian dallying after Moscow agreed to
    withdraw its bases back in 1999, the Georgian government earlier this
    year called for a period of intense negotiations to finally reach
    an agreement on the timeframe and terms of withdrawal. Parliament
    followed up on this on March 10 by adopting a resolution charging
    the government with declaring the Russian bases illegal and taking
    measures to unilaterally force their withdrawal should a bilateral
    agreement not be reached by May 15.

    This resolution was supported at the time by neither government
    ministers nor Speaker of Parliament Nino Burjanadze, all of whom
    sought to distance themselves from a resolution unlikely to lead to
    warmer Russian-Georgian relations. The resolution was criticized by
    the Russian ministry of foreign affairs, which is representing the
    Russian Federation at negotiations, as hindering the negotiations
    process by forcing an artificial deadline on both sides. There may be
    some truth in this, but on the other hand it is clear that a great
    deal has been achieved in the two months or so since it was adopted
    than in the six years prior.

    May 15 has now passed, and the resolution has come into force. But
    the government has backed away from acting on its recommendations.
    The Russian bases have not been declared illegal; visas for Russian
    soldiers have not been withheld; the bases have not had their
    electricity switched off. The only Russian military installation
    suffering is the central Russian military office in Tbilisi who,
    according to Kommersant, had its water service cut of this week because
    of debts to the Tbilisi water system. Presidential spokesperson Gela
    Charkviani said on Saturday that progress had been made in the talks,
    and that it was important to give negotiators more time to reach
    an agreement.

    In Russia, however, both the media and government officials have
    played up the significance of the resolution, stating that the
    livelihood of the Russian soldiers may be endangered by Georgia's
    actions. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Monday that that
    Russia is doing all it can "to ensure that nothing threaten the
    normal life, property, armament as well as military equipment of
    those Russian citizens who are on Georgian territory and who work in
    these military bases as well as the bases itself." The Russian Duma,
    meanwhile, is preparing to adopt a counter-resolution calling on the
    government to take anti-Georgian measures such as raising the price of
    electricity exported to Georgia, refusing to give visas to Georgians,
    and deporting many of those Georgians currently living in Russia.

    Meanwhile, the leaders of Abkhazia and South Ossetia Sergei Bagapsh
    and Eduard Kokoiti have offered to host the Russian bases being
    withdrawn from Georgia. In Russia, Vice President of the Russian
    Academy for Geopolitical Problems Leonid Ivashov suggests that the
    bases could be relocated to Abkhazia and Armenia. It will, of course,
    be impossible for Georgia to accept the relocation of one of the bases
    to Abkhazia. Nor is the government willing to agree to the bases in
    Batumi and Akhalkalaki becoming anti-terrorist centers as this would
    involve little more than a name change.

    Back in Georgia, opposition parties have called on the government
    to take a stronger line and act on the recommendations in the
    parliamentary resolution. They also believe that Georgia should
    insist that Russia's peacekeepers also withdraw from South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia, and further, that Georgia should withdraw from the CIS.

    The government should be wary of taking too hard a line, however. It
    seems certain that at some point soon an agreement will be reached and
    the Russian bases eventually withdrawn: it is not necessary to further
    irritate Moscow in forcing this through. The Georgian government has
    linked the withdrawal of the bases with new, friendlier relations
    with Moscow, and it is important that this remains a foreign policy
    priority.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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