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Georgia's PM: South Caucasus Railway Can Be Reopened

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  • Georgia's PM: South Caucasus Railway Can Be Reopened

    GEORGIA'S PM: SOUTH CAUCASUS RAILWAY CAN BE REOPENED

    By Eka Janashia (02/03/2013 issue of the CACI Analyst)


    During a visit to Armenia on January 17, Georgia's Prime Minister
    Bidzina Ivanishvili opened for restoring the South Caucasus railway
    (SCR) connecting Armenia to Russia via occupied Abkhazia. Ivanishvili
    said that the issue can be resolved despite the troubled relations
    between Moscow and Tbilisi if all engaged parties are willing to do
    so.
    The new Georgian government first aired the possibility of reopening
    the SCR in November, much to the irritation of Baku which considers
    the initiative as a challenge to its national interests. Azerbaijan's
    opposition and Abkhazia's negative response to the proposal induced
    the Georgian government to temporarily downplay the issue. However, a
    statement made by the Georgian PM a month later triggered new concerns
    in Baku. At that time, Ivanishvili questioned the economic value of
    the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars Railway (BTKR) for Georgia at an early stage of
    its operation. He said that BTKR - a project that links Georgia and
    Azerbaijan to Europe via Turkey - may decrease the cargo turnover at
    Georgia's Black Sea ports.
    Ivanishvili's remarks induced Georgian and Azerbaijani media to
    provide extensive coverage of the BTKR issue ahead of the Georgian
    PM's visit to Baku. In Azerbaijan, however, Ivanishvili had to
    acknowledge that he had made `hasty' and `politically flawed' comments
    on BTKR and that he should not have talked about it publicly but
    should have discussed it privately with Azerbaijani authorities.
    Nonetheless, the statement Ivanishvili made in Yerevan about the
    possibility of restoring the SCR renewed the debate over railways.
    Commenting on Ivanishvili's statements, President Mikheil Saakshvili
    said that they held alarming connotations. Since the BTKR would likely
    reduce the viability of Russia's Trans-Siberian Railway, Saakashvili
    said Russia could be expected to make far-reaching efforts to
    challenge the project, though it should not do so through the Georgian
    government itself.
    Another problem related to reopening the SCR, according to
    Saakashvili, is the fact that Russia is in control of both the Abkhaz
    and Armenian segments of the railway and such a move on Georgia's part
    would indirectly acknowledge Russia's right to the Abkhaz railway and
    facilitate Moscow's efforts to legitimize its occupation of Abkhazia.
    `Georgia should not take a single step that will contribute to it,
    unless the de-occupation of Abkhazia is fully resolved; or this issue
    can be resolved in parallel with the de-occupation of Abkhazia and can
    be discussed as part of the de-occupation,' Saakashvili said.
    Saakashvili maintained that Tbilisi does seek good relations with
    Yerevan though not at the expense of Georgia's strategic interests.
    Saakashvili lamented that Ivanishvili's statement on the BTKR had
    already complicated the country's relations with Turkey and resulted
    in a suspension of Turkish investments. Any problem emerging in
    Georgia's ties with Ankara would amount to losing Georgia's historic
    chance to join NATO, he said.
    Meanwhile, Sokhumi has seemingly changed its stance regarding the
    restoration of SCR. Whereas in November, the Abkhaz government
    categorically stated that such ploys would never lure Sokhumi into the
    political and diplomatic traps set by Tbilisi, at this time it clearly
    softened its tone. On January 18, the breakaway region's president
    Aleksander Ankvab said that `If there are concrete proposals [on
    restoring the SCR] then we will sit down and discuss them together.'
    Though it is not clear whether the SCR will be actually restored any
    time soon, the continued discussions over it, especially when framed
    as a competitor to the BTKR, raises questions regarding the future
    viability of the Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey (AGT) transportation axis.
    In fact, apart from the economic benefits of BTKR, it also represents
    a geopolitical endeavor to boost integration between the AGT countries
    and reduce Russia's role as the major transit country between Europe
    and China. Moreover, after the BTKR will be commissioned this year,
    Azerbaijan and Central Asian countries will not be depend on the
    Iranian Razi-Sarakhs railway for trade transit to Europe.
    The BTKR project is thus intended to bring the region more autonomy
    vis-à-vis both Iran and Russia. However, especially in light of
    Moscow's proposed Eurasian Union, Russia will plausibly seek to
    challenge the project via efforts to undermine unity among the AGT
    states that is grounded in the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and
    Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum projects.
    Whereas the SCR does not directly overshadow the BTKR perspectives, it
    slams Azerbaijan's interest in marginalizing Armenia, fuels tension
    between Tbilisi and Baku and hence provokes AGT disunity. In this
    context, the questions Ivanishvili has raised regarding the benefits
    generating from the BTKR and the possibility of restoring the SCR
    could weaken the existing confidence between the AGT states and may
    trigger realignment in the region.

    http://www.cacianalyst.org/?q=node/5915

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