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U.S.-Georgia Security Pact Said To Be In The Works

U.S. and Georgian soldiers take part in a joint military exercise at Georgia's Vaziani base in July.

December 18, 2008
By Brian Whitmore
With Georgia's hopes of quickly joining the NATO alliance deferred for the moment, Tbilisi is placing its hopes in the next best thing -- a bilateral security pact with the United States.

Details of the emerging accord are still unclear, but Georgian Deputy Foreign Minister Nino Kalandadze said the two sides are already discussing a "framework agreement" proposed by U.S. officials.

"Intensive negotiations are under way," Kalandadze told reporters in Tbilisi on December 17. "This treaty is being discussed mainly at the Defense Ministry, but also at the Foreign Ministry.... We will jointly analyze all its provisions in detail and in the end we will come to an agreement."

The negotiations come as the United States and Ukraine prepared to present a new strategic partnership statement on December 19.

Georgian officials say they hope a bilateral arrangement could not only enhance their security, but also jump-start their NATO bid. But analysts say it could also significantly raise the stakes in the South Caucasus by bringing the United States closer to a direct confrontation with Russia, which is solidifying its military and political presence in the pro-Moscow breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

"It's potentially a very big deal," says Lincoln Mitchell, a Columbia University professor and the author of the book "Uncertain Democracy: U.S. Foreign Policy and Georgia's Rose Revolution." "But the question is, does it formalize something that de facto already exists? What level of commitment does it really make?"

News of the emerging pact leaked earlier this week during a visit to Tbilisi by U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Matthew Bryza. At a press conference on December 16, Bryza said that "no agreement exists," but then went on to strongly suggest that something was indeed in the works.

"What we talked about in detail, was U.S.-Georgia cooperation on security and strategic partnership," Bryza said. "We're still working through how to reflect the beautiful words 'strategic partnership' in our actual actions and actual life."

Officials close to the negotiations say the pact will closely follow a model established by the Baltic states in the late 1990s.

Baltic Model

After gaining independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania were seeking to join NATO in the face of fierce opposition from Moscow. In January 1998, the three countries and the United States signed the U.S.-Baltic Charter.

That agreement did not have an explicit security guarantee, but said that the United States had a "real, profound, and enduring interest" in the Baltic states' security. It also committed Washington to assisting the three countries with military and other reforms with the aim of helping them integrate into Western institutions.

While it's unclear whether the incoming U.S. administration will approve, the secretary of defense will be the same.
The agreement "will be similar to the charter that was signed between the United States and the Baltic countries," Temur Iakobashvili, Georgia's reintegration minister, told RFE/RL's Georgian Service in a recent interview.

"It is not just about security, it will include the whole spectrum of the bilateral relations -- along with security, it includes economy, culture, civil society, democratic development, etc., etc. It's certainly a very broad document."

Latvian Foreign Minister Maris Riekstins calls the U.S.-Baltic Charter "the first very serious and real step towards our membership" in NATO, which the Baltic states joined in 2004.

"Although the charter doesn't specifically mention our membership in NATO, or any kind of guarantee that we will be granted such membership, I think it was a political signal that the Americans are very serious about our security," Riekstins says.

In the face of fierce Russian opposition, NATO declined to give Georgia and Ukraine Membership Action Plans (MAPs), a key step to formal membership, at the alliance's summit in Bucharest in April. The allies did, however, pledge that the two former Soviet states would eventually join.

At a foreign ministers' meeting in Brussels on December 2-3, just months after Georgia and Russia fought a bitter five-day war in August over South Ossetia, the Western alliance again declined to give Georgia and Ukraine MAPs. The allies, however, reiterated their commitment to admit Georgia and Ukraine and to assist them in that goal via the NATO-Ukraine Commission and NATO-Georgia Commission.

No Shortcuts

Riekstins says that while a bilateral agreement with the United States could smooth Georgia's path to joining NATO, Tbilisi would be advised to follow the path to membership the alliance has established.

"I think it can play some role," Riekstins says of the potential U.S.-Georgian agreement. "But I think at the same time, we should not disregard the existing framework that has been established by NATO and Georgia, and also with Ukraine. Namely, the NATO-Georgian Commission, which at the last NATO ministerial meeting was accepted as an essential instrument for negotiating all issues pertaining to military reforms and also including the potential membership issue."

The United States, Britain, and new member states like Poland, the Czech Republic, and the Baltic states have strongly supported the aspirations of Georgia and Ukraine to join NATO. Germany and France have largely opposed their bids, arguing that it would unduly antagonize Moscow, which still sees those two former Soviet states as part of its sphere of influence.

It it not certain what fate either the Georgian or the Ukrainian pacts will have once Barack Obama takes office on January 20. U.S. President George W. Bush's defense secretary, Robert Gates -- who would be a key player in any security agreement -- will retain his position under Obama, signalling the deals may not die with Bush leaving office.

Analysts in Tbilisi say that while a bilateral agreement with the United States would have symbolic political importance and would help Georgia implement much-needed reforms, it would do little in terms of providing additional security.

"We can expect a broadening of military cooperation but I think it's too early to expect America to commit itself to defend Georgia at this point," says Tornike Sharashenidze, head of the Foreign Relations Program at the Georgian Institute for Public Affairs.

RFE/RL's Georgian Service contributed to this report

This forum has been closed.
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Comments page 1 of 3
by: Dimitri
January 01, 2009 03:48
I thank the Americans, and the Entire world for the support they are showing Georgia. The Russians are clearly in the wrong, and have been since they began Undermining Georgian sovereignty since the early 1990's. The Russians are two faced, telling the West one thing, and doing another. They are no peace keepers. The Russians are fighting a proxy war against Georgia using the Abhaz, and Ossetians for their own Imperialistic goals.

by: Anton from: Auckland
December 30, 2008 03:27
I do not remember discussing your views, Andrew - in any open society people have any sorts of views. All what surprised me was the emotional load in your posts, expressing these views. It does not matter for me on which side you are and whom you consider your opponents, the weird part (for a Kiwi) is your deep emotional personal involvement, and I find this part very unusual, if not to say inadequate. You obviously receive a lot of information, presented in other languages as English, or at least its translation, and I really can not imagine a Kiwi involved that deeply - unless this Kiwi has nothing else to do 24/7 in his wheelchair or invested his life savings in NABUCCO project.

NZ is most certainly very charming country, but I never noticed it to be that severely politicized as you describe it, and I doubt very much you are able to change my opinion:)

by: Andrew from: Auckland
December 28, 2008 16:41
You are the one in the middle ages Anton.
Not to mention the inadequacy of your reasoning.

Lets see, I support international rule of law, freedom of expression, democracy, racial equality (yes even for Russians :)), international peacekeeping & conflict resolution, and the elimination of racist & tyrannical regimes (such as Putin, Mugabe, Burmese Junta etc).
You support the law of the jungle, racism, ethnic cleansing, genocide, you frequently resort to personal insults when you have no legitimate way to respond to the points that others make against you.
If I am stuck in the middle ages, you are a neanderthal.

Your insults to the Kiwi's who died in both world wars (NZ suffered some of the highest per capita losses of any country in both world wars) are pretty offensive seeing as how you live here. I suggest you go to your local RSA next ANZAC day and try that line and see where it gets you. Several of my relatives died on arctic convoys delivering aid to the USSR.

A lot of New Zealanders care about what goes on in the wider world, hence the large number of us working for the UN and various other international groups. As for your comments about Rugby & dope, this just shows your intellectual & moral bankruptcy. New Zealanders are well known for caring about matters "in insignificant countries", such as the fight against apartheid etc.

I suggest that your comments about the sickness benefit & isolation show your situation, not mine. Your rather nasty attitude would surely cause you to be shunned by the average Kiwi.

Your inadequacy far exceeds mine little man, as I am sure you have pointed out to you on a regular basis.






by: Andrew from: Auckland New Zealand
December 28, 2008 13:31
By the way Anton. Your use of "Rangatira" is inappropriate use of Maori. I can't be "Rangatira" as I have no Maori ancestry.
As usual you show your idiocy.
Try understanding other cultures a bit before you open your mouth. Or even better leave it shut.

by: Anton from: Auckland
December 27, 2008 17:45
LOL, Andrew! You do not need me to get to middle ages, neither you need to go "back" to them, as you seem to have been born in them and still remain there. :) Your inadequacy is amazing, as well as the stubbornness with which you are trying to assign Georgian political outlook to a virtual Kiwi you created. If you only knew, that there hardly is a single Kiwi in this world, who is bothered to get in the details of what is going on around Black Sea! Non-virtual Kiwis usually never heard about Black Sea, or need a help to find it on the map! As for Georgia - they only heard this name in August first time...There is no "impact" of such microscopic conflicts on NZ, even WW2 hardly touched this country, except maybe those conscripted to fight overseas.

If there indeed was such a real Kiwi you are trying to present, he would be probably on health benefit and completely alone in his life - as there is no people in this country, with whom he could discuss the issues of your interest! For a Kiwi all blacks affairs or a joint price are 1000 times more important than some lousy Georgian war or "imperial" ambitions of self-decomposing Russia. Keep this in mind, "rangatira".

by: Andrew from: Auckland New Zealand
December 27, 2008 05:35
Anton - what a charming world view.

Your ethos would have us all back in the middle ages.

by: Anton from: Auckland
December 26, 2008 17:44
Andrew - I do not care if China imposes a new reality east of Urals - I do not live there myself, and I do not have anything against Chinese as people except that some of them eat cats and dogs, which I object. If Russia can not manage those areas, then it needs to let someone else to do it or fight to substantiate its own territorial integrity. In this world the strong one wins, and the weakling loses and barks afterward.

by: Andrew from: Auckland New Zealand
December 26, 2008 04:59
Merry Christmas to you too Anton. I may not like your opinions, but I still wish you peace and goodwill.

The only person making a clown of themselves is you old boy. Your constant avoidance of answering valid points put to you by others (including myself) shows you to be poorly informed.

I cant wait to see your reaction when China imposes a "new reality" on everything east of the Urals.

by: Anton from: Auckland
December 25, 2008 18:55
Merry Xmas, Andrew! And to your NZIS friends as well.:) I can surely feel a bee under your bonnet, but I still suggest you to stop making a clown of yourself. On the other hand I am happy that I managed to inspire you to make a web research on NZ, as this may serve to the penetration of NZ culture into the wild areas of south Caucasis and may lead to promotion of NZ exports. On this note I suggest to stop the exchange, as it stops to be beneficial in its primary role of sharing opinions. Buy, katzo.

by: zysatoli pornow
December 24, 2008 22:54
recognition you for sponsoring the materials, a lot of riveting low-down. sympathetic-bye.
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