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Will Georgia Reenter the CIS?

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  • Will Georgia Reenter the CIS?

    Will Georgia Reenter the CIS?

    Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 10 Issue: 22
    February 6, 2013 06:10 PM Age: 4 days
    By: Giorgi Menabde


    Georgian prime minister's envoy to Russia, Zurab Abashidze (Source:
    Civil Georgia)

    The issue of Georgia's possible return to the Commonwealth of
    Independent States (CIS) and its participation in other post-Soviet
    space organizations became topical after the January 29 statement of
    the head of the CIS Department at the Russian Foreign Ministry,
    Mikhail Yevdokimov, about `contacts' with Ivanishvili's government
    about this matter
    (http://medianews.ge/en/russiasaysnegotiationsongeorgiareturntocisunderway/30160).

    Yevdokimov did not mention the term `talks' or even `consultations.'
    By `contacts,' the Russian official may have meant that hints about
    Georgia's reentry were dropped during recent meetings of the Russian
    and Georgian diplomats at different levels. Notably, the special
    representative of the Georgian prime minister for negotiations with
    Russia, Zurab Abashidze, met with Russian Deputy Minister of Foreign
    Affairs Grigory Karasin on December 14 in Switzerland
    (http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=25550).

    Almost immediately after Yevdokimov's statement was published,
    Abashidze repudiated the allegations, saying that his `contact' with
    Grigory Karasin did not entail any talks about Georgia's membership in
    the CIS. `The Commonwealth of Independent States was not mentioned
    during our talks even once,' the prime minister's envoy emphasized
    (The Messenger, January 31).

    President Mikheil Saakashvili's party, the United National Movement
    (UNM), accused Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili of altering the
    foreign policy course of the country, causing it to fall into the
    `Russian influence zone.' `If the government is really discussing the
    issue of accession to the CIS, it is treason. If Yevdokimov had lied,
    why has the Georgian foreign ministry not sent a note of protest to
    Moscow?' one of the leaders of the UNM, Georgy Gabashvili remarked
    (http://www.kommersant.ru/pda/kommersant.html?id=2116522).

    Georgia's Minister for Foreign Affairs Maia Panjikidze hastened to
    deny all allegations, saying that Ivanishvili's government did not
    even consider the question of joining post-Soviet organizations. `If
    we become members of any international union, it will only be NATO
    [North Atlantic Treaty Organization] or the EU [European Union],' the
    minister asserted (http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=25693). The
    chairman of the parliamentary committee for international affairs,
    Tedo Japaridze - who had just recently been nominated to the position of
    ambassador to the United Kingdom - called the statement by Mikhail
    Yevdokimov `absurd,' using rather non-diplomatic languare. Japardize
    said there were many `Yevdokimovs out there, and it was better not to
    pay any attention to them'
    (http://www.newsru.com/world/31jan2013/evdokimov.html).

    It is not difficult to understand the motivation for such a swift and
    emotional backlash by the ruling Georgian Dream coalition against
    allegations about joining the CIS. The governing party members wanted
    to deny President Saakashvili and his allies the ability to accuse
    Prime Minister Ivanishvili of deviating from the course toward joining
    NATO and of `filling the Kremlin's orders.' However, many Georgian
    politicians already suspect Ivanishvili of pursuing a
    behind-the-scenes agreement with the Kremlin.

    `Georgian Dream is a Russian landing party in our country,' the leader
    of the People's Front, Nodar Natadze, told Jamestown. Meanwhile, not
    trusting Ivanishvili's government, one of the closest associates of
    President Saakashvili, Georgy Baramidze, demanded the adoption of a
    special law that would codify Georgia's pro-Western foreign policy
    orientation (http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=25695). `The law
    will prevent any authorities in power from joining the CIS, Eurasian
    Union or the [Russia-Belarus-Kazakhstan] Customs Union, as well as
    other organizations that were created under the auspices of the
    occupier country [Russia],' Baramidze said. President Saakashvili
    advanced even further, proposing changes to the constitution. `In the
    primary law it should be written that Georgia will not reject the
    course for Euro-Atlantic integration,' the head of state declared
    (http://news.am/rus/news/138322.html). Yet, the leader of the
    parliamentary majority, David Saganelidze, rejected these proposals.
    `We are not in a position to burn all bridges,' he pointedly stated,
    confirming suspicions that despite all denials, the issue about
    Georgia's participation in post-Soviet integrationist projects has not
    been entirely removed from the political agenda.

    Georgian authorities are particularly reluctant to make any decisive
    statements about Russia at this point in time. Ivanishvili's
    government is starting difficult talks with Gennady Onishchenko, the
    head of the Russian government agency for consumer products oversight,
    about the return of Georgian exports, such as wines, mineral water and
    agricultural goods, to the Russian market. Moscow had unofficially
    embargoed all Georgian produce since 2006, following the rise of
    tensions between Russia and Georgia over the status of South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia (http://en.rian.ru/world/20120403/172590686.html).

    Experts do not exclude that the statements by the CIS department of
    the Russian foreign affairs ministry was a diplomatic hint at the
    conditions under which Moscow will allow Georgian exports. `Maybe
    there have been no contacts yet, but Russia apparently proposes a
    barter exchange - Georgia's return to the CIS in return for a resumption
    of imports [from Georgia],' independent expert David Avalishvili told
    Jamestown.

    Experts and politicians have few doubts that if Georgia rejoins the
    CIS, which the country left immediately after the August 2008 war over
    South Ossetia, it will be only the first step toward membership in the
    Customs Union and then in the Eurasian Union championed by President
    Vladimir Putin.

    Georgian society equates the CIS with several dramatic developments
    for Georgia in its recent past. President Eduard Shevardnadze led
    Georgia to become a member of this organization at the beginning of
    October 1993 (Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia 2004, Taylor &
    Francis Group, 2003) after a heavy defeat in the war with Abkhazia and
    losses in the civil war with `zviadists,' followers of the first
    president of Georgia, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, who declared independence of
    the country from the Soviet Union. All these past years, up to the
    Russia-Georgia war in 2008, Georgian elites had hoped to reclaim
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia through their loyalty to Moscow and
    participation in integrationist projects. However, geopolitical
    realities quickly shifted after the end of Boris Yeltsin's era in
    Russia, its victory over Chechen separatism and the gradual increase
    of Moscow's influence in the South Caucasus. As such, an overt return
    to the CIS will likely prove politically unpalatable for many in
    Georgia.

    http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=40424&tx_ttnews[backPid]=620




    From: A. Papazian
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