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  • Georgia pursues campaign against espionage

    GEORGIA PURSUES CAMPAIGN AGAINST ESPIONAGE
    Molly Corso 3/31/06

    EurasiaNet, NY
    March 31 2006

    Amid rancorous exchanges between Georgia and Russia, Georgian
    President Mikheil Saakashvili is pursuing a campaign to root out
    suspected spies operating in Tbilisi.

    In televised comments March 28, Saakashvili announced that individuals
    spying against the Georgian government would receive amnesty if they
    gave themselves up by May 1. Without going into details, he asserted
    that "many" foreign agents were currently operating in Georgia.

    "If they cooperate with us, I give my personal guarantee to them that
    they will be absolutely untouchable regardless of what they have done
    until now," Saakashvili said. "These people should know that we have
    a lot of information but we want them to cooperate with their own
    country based on our country's interests."

    Saakashvili comments came just hours after the arrest of Simon
    Kiladze -- a low-level official in the presidential administration
    press service -- for allegedly spying for an unnamed foreign
    government. According to Vano Merabishvili, the minister of internal
    affairs, Kiladze had been engaging in espionage since 2004.

    The alleged spy had been "systematically passing to special services of
    a foreign country information of a confidential nature on the Georgian
    president, the heads of the country's executive and legislature,
    visits by state delegations, their meetings, issues discussed at such
    meetings and other information of strategic importance," Merabishvili
    said in comments broadcast by Imedi television. The interior minister
    added that Kiladze had received "a minimum of $20,000" in exchange for
    information that he provided. In a telephone interview with EurasiaNet,
    Interior Ministry spokesperson Shota Khizanishvili said officials
    Kiladze's activities had been under investigation for "months,"
    but he declined to elaborate, saying the probe into his activities
    was ongoing.

    Kiladze is one of many moles working inside government agencies,
    Saakashvili alleged. "I am afraid this is not the only person in
    the governmental structure who is engaged in this kind of activity,"
    he said. "We have too much information, which we have been gathering
    for a long time." While the president implied the government already
    knows the identities of at least some secret agents, he did not go
    into details and did not mention one particular country.

    Davit Losabaidze, a project director at the Caucasus Institute for
    Peace, Democracy and Development in Tbilisi, suggested that Kiladze's
    arrest was likely connected to several foreign and domestic factors.
    On the foreign front, Georgia has been experiencing growing pressure
    from Russia, as the two states have argued over the political future
    of the separatist South Ossetia territory. [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive]. Domestically, Saakashvili has been facing
    growing opposition.

    "This [Kiladze's arrest] is a show of strength," Losabaidze said. "It
    an example [to show] they [Georgian officials] are not going to
    back down."

    The latest move in the Georgian-Russian political chess match
    occurred March 30, when Moscow banned the importation of wine from
    Georgia and Moldova. Russian official alleged that Georgian wines -
    a major export commodity for Tbilisi - did not meet Russian safety
    standards. Given that Russia is perhaps the most important market for
    Georgian wine, Tbilisi reacted furiously to Moscow's action. Georgian
    officials insisted the ban was politically motivated, and said they
    would have an independent lab in Switzerland test a wide selection
    of the country's wines to disprove the Russian assertions, the Civil
    Georgia web site reported March 31.

    In a telephone interview with EurasiaNet, Gela Charkviani,
    a presidential spokesperson, declined to comment on whether the
    alleged activity of Kiladze or of other supposed spies had undermined
    national security, or posed a particular threat to the president's
    safety. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Charkviani
    merely reiterated that Kiladze would face treason charges, adding
    that no further details would be released until the completion of
    the investigation.

    Saakashvili has repeatedly warned in recent weeks that Georgia's
    stability was being threatened. On March 9, Saakashvili said an
    "ideological war" was being waged against Georgia. "Very influential,
    very rich, very important forces are engaged in discrediting Georgia
    and in portraying Georgia as unstable, dangerous, unreliable [and]
    non-European," Civil Georgia quoted Saakashvili as saying. The
    president and other Georgian leaders later characterized the foiled
    mass prison escape in Tbilisi on March 27 as a part of a conspiracy to
    destabilize Georgia. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    There are indications that the Georgia government remains very
    concerned about possible destabilization. On March 31, officials
    announced that Saakashvili had postponed a visit to Ukraine that
    had been planned to begin on April 4. Officials gave no reason for
    the postponement, or indicated when the trip would be rescheduled,
    Civil Georgia reported.

    Despite the fact that authorities assert they have compiled "firm"
    evidence of widespread espionage in Georgia, many local analysts
    wondered whether the alleged espionage posed a serious national
    security threat.

    Uri Simonian, a member of the political information department at
    the South Caucasus Institute for Regional Security, voiced skepticism
    about Saakashvili's allegation that dozens of secret agents working
    in Georgia. "I didn't understand when they said there are a lot of
    spies that operate here in the open. It is rare that a spy operates
    in the open," he said. Simonian suggested that Saakashvili was using
    'spy' as a euphemism for critics.

    Although Russia has not been openly accused by either authorities or
    reports in the Georgian media in connection with Kiladze's arrest,
    Simonian said he immediately assumed that authorities were talking
    about Russia, Belarus or Armenia. Simonian, who also works as a
    correspondent for the Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta, noted
    that when the president announced "a lot of spies" were working in
    the county, he interpreted this as a reference to journalists working
    for Russian, Armenian and Belarusian publications. "I think some
    concrete steps will be taken against these journalists," he said.
    While he could not cite any specific examples, Simonian claimed that
    he and his colleagues have long felt pressure from officials.

    Losabaidze, meanwhile, suggested that while Saakashvili's assertions
    should be taken seriously, there also existed an incentive for the
    president to play up the potential threat posed by espionage. Over
    the past few weeks, several Saakashvili administration domestic
    policies have faced extensive criticism. Tbilisi merchants, for one,
    have staged protests in opposition to a government policy requiring
    most retail businesses to record transactions using cash registers.
    [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. And on March 29,
    Georgian media mogul Badri Patarkatshvili attacked the Saakashvili
    administration for attempting to stifle independent media coverage of
    politics. "It smells like they [officials] want to turn the public's
    attention to another topic," Losabaidze said.


    Editor's Note: Molly Corso is a freelance reporter and photographer
    based in Tbilisi.
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