The bloom has officially faded on Georgian President Mikheil
Saakashvili�s 2003 rose revolution.
The 13 opposition parties in this nation of 4.7 million are
united and determined, and began their latest series of demonstrations 9 April,
when as many as 100,000 demonstrated in Tbilisi, capturing the nation�s mood of
frustration and, increasingly, contempt for their oversize, fanatically
pro-American president. They have vowed to persist with a campaign of civil
disobedience until he resigns.
Saakashvili�s allies are abandoning him in droves, with
former parliamentary speaker Nino Burjanadze one of the protesters. Arrests
last month of members of her Democratic Movement for a United Georgia, accused
of seeking to overthrow the government by force, burned any remaining bridges
for her. Reflecting the broad sentiment, she said Saakashvili lost all
credibility as president when he launched war against Russia last August and
that any negotiations would be only over the transition of power. Former prime
minister Zurab Noghaideli�s Movement for a Just Georgia organised a protest in
his hometown of Batumi.
After brutally quashing demonstrations in 2007, the
president is now forced to play to his US/EU patrons. Saakashvili addressed the
nation 10 April, piously emphasising his efforts in �protecting, ensuring, and
defending the people�s fundamental right to demonstrate peacefully� shortly
before the opposition deadline for him to step down expired, which he chose not
to mention. The Interior Ministry stayed in the background, though a �cleaning
crew� sent to the main square Saturday morning tore down their banners and
ripped up their computer cables. Opposition leaders described them as a
50-strong mob which attacked them. Considering Saakashvili�s unpopularity, any bono
fide cleaners would surely have joined the protesters instead of
threatening them. Of course, the Interior Ministry denied any knowledge of the
cleaners.
Yet another defector from the Saakashvili camp, former
foreign minister Salome Zurabishvili, said, �From Monday a new wave of protests
will start . . . No one should try and frighten us; it won�t work in any case.�
The man to watch now is businessman Levan Gachechiladze,
another former supporter of Saakashvili who broke with him months after the
2003 coup, accusing him of corruption in the privatisation of an aircraft
factory. He joined opposition activists staging a hunger strike during the 2-7
November protests in Tbilisi and was injured during the police crackdown on the
rally. �Grechka� (buckwheat in Russian) garnered 27 percent to Saakashvili�s
disputed 52 percent in last year�s presidential election and his widespread
popularity has put him on the path to replace his nemesis. Whatever happens in
the next few days, he will remain the chief thorn in Saakashvili�s side until
he finally departs -- his term officially ends in 2013.
Georgian �democracy� has not had a smooth path, to put it
mildly. The first post-Soviet president, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, was overthrown in
a violent uprising in 1992, as was his successor Eduard Sheverdnazde in
Saakashvili�s rose coup in 2003, though without violence (just lots of
US-EU-sponsored NGOs). Now he, too, is yesterday�s man following the ruinous
war with Russia that even the most nationalistic Georgian realises was a
conflict that the country could not win.
All this just days after triumphal celebrations of the 60th
anniversary of NATO in Strasbourg, where support for Georgia�s entry into this
club was reaffirmed. But the vow was empty, and everyone present knew it.
Georgia must meet the NATO bottom line -- no outstanding conflicts with its
neighbours or foreign troops on its territory and compliance with
member-nations� military regime. Independent Abkhazia and South Ossetia put off
any Georgian membership indefinitely. Thank you, Mr Saakashvili.
It will not be easy for Obama to let go of Georgia, which is
the US beachhead in the pursuit of its war in Afghanistan, according to analyst
Rick Rozoff. The momentum for this plan began long before Obama pledged his
allegiance, long before the ill-fated war against Ossetia last summer, and
continues apace. It is a plan laid down by Zbegniew Brzezinski in his 1997 Foreign
Affairs article, pursued enthusiastically by Bush/Cheney, and Obama is
unlikely to disagree, considering Brzezinski is his close patron and adviser.
Recent evidence of the continued importance attached to
Georgia includes the US-Georgia Charter on Strategic Partnership signed in the
fading days of the Bush regime in January. In February, the Georgian Defence
Ministry released Vision 2009, outlining the plan to make Georgia�s military
compliant with NATO standards. In early March, Georgian Defense Minister David
Sikharulidze said Georgia�s military was now being rapidly rebuilt with US aid
and that �our capabilities and tactics will be designed to meet a considerably
superior force . . . As NATO seeks alternative routes to Afghanistan, we understand
our strategic responsibility as gateway to the East-West corridor. Georgia will
provide logistical support to NATO, opening its territory, ports, airfields,
roads and railroads to the alliance.�
The American warship the USS Klakring docked in the Georgian
Black Sea port of Batumi 30 March, as part of its tour �participating in
theatre security cooperation activities which develop both nations� abilities
to operate against common threats,� according to the US military.
General James Cartwright, vice chairman of the US Joint
Chiefs of Staff, joined the festivities, and was reminded by Saakashvili of
Georgia�s troop commitments to Kosovo and Iraq (there were 2,000 in Iraq until
last summer) and promise to send 300 to Afghanistan. He then demanded a quid
pro quo: �Our struggle continues
and it will end after the complete de-occupation of Georgia�s territory and
expelling the last soldier of the enemy from our country.� Cartwright added
some nonsense words of his own: �I want to say that you have a very good army
and we know what they have done.�
Saakashvili has even offered to turn the Sachkhere Mountain
Training School into a permanent NATO Partnership for Peace Training Centre,
where it will host the annual NATO South Caucasus Cooperative Longbow/
Cooperative Lancer exercises on 3 May with troops from 23 nations.
Former Indian diplomat MK Bhadrakumar says the US plans to
move materiel to Afghanistan via the Black Sea port of Poti in Georgia through
Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. �The project, if it
materialises, will be a geopolitical coup -- the biggest ever that Washington
would have swung in post-Soviet Central Asia and the Caucasus. At one stroke,
the US will be tying up military cooperation at the bilateral level with
Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan,� drawing these countries
closer into NATO�s partnership programmes.
While very clever, this plan must overcome the Bush/Cheney
legacy of intrigue and chaos. Attempts to sneak Georgia and Ukraine in NATO�s
back door have backfired. Continuing on this path so clearly anathema to Russia
will only make access to Afghanistan more and more unpredictable. Trying to
juggle all the �stans� is a perilous act. Georgia is already a weak link, soon
to be weaker. When the inevitable happens and �Grechka� or someone else with a
modicum of common sense takes over, they will rush to make up with Russia and
try to salvage something from the morass Saakashvili bequeaths them.
Obama has vowed to improve relations with Russia. With the
arrival of the Klakring, Russia decided it officially had had enough, and sent
a strong warning 2 April to the US about its plans to rebuild Georgia�s
military following last year�s war. The Foreign Ministry said helping arm
Georgia would be �extremely dangerous� and would amount to �nothing but the
encouragement of the aggressor.�
The US needs Russia, but could lose it along with Georgia as
its grab for control over Central Asia and the Muslim world lurches forward,
forcing it instead into a humiliating retreat from this cauldron. With
Americans increasingly focused on their domestic crises -- the other
Bush/Cheney legacy -- such a retreat, if done without provoking WWIII, could be
Obama�s greatest legacy, be it one that will be remembered as another Vietnam
for the US.
Nobody (except a few Saakashvilis) wants the US as the
world�s leader anymore. The EU and the BRICs are going their own way, and the
Georgias are dangerous toys best left alone. Obama should be intelligent enough
to realise this and acquiesce to the inevitable. By continuing to support,
however unenthusiastically, failed Bush policies such as the Caucasus gambit,
he merely makes any accommodation of America with the other major powers all
the more difficult, weakening his hand in the long run.
Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at geocities.com/walberg2002.