Food. Churches. Chacha. This is what Georgia has long been known for. But now this ancient country, flanked by the mountains and the sea in the heart of the Caucasus, is the battleground in a new Not-So-Cold War. Due to its strategic location — it shares a large border with Russia to the north — the country has found itself caught up in the geopolitical power play between the West and Russia. And just like the Euromaidan revolt in Ukraine a decade ago, Georgia’s domestic politics have been framed in Nato circles as an existential fight. On one side sits the Georgian Dream, the allegedly pro-Russian ruling party, in power since 2012. On the other sits the opposition, avowedly pro-Western and pro-EU.
Little wonder, then, that last week’s parliamentary elections have turned into a global event. As predicted by the polls, Georgian Dream won by a wide margin, securing over 53% of the vote. The four major opposition coalitions together managed less than 40%. There is no reason to believe that the vote was fixed: despite raising some concerns about pressure on voters, biased media coverage and an environment of political polarisation, independent observers found no evidence of electoral fraud, let alone of Russian interference.
Yet that doesn’t fit the geopolitical mood. Desperate to finally shut Russia out from its near abroad, there seems to be no line Western politicians and their allies in Georgia are unwilling to cross to achieve their geopolitical aims — even if that means ignoring basic liberal principles and or else overturning the will of the people wholesale. Dovetailed with ominously similar moves across the Black Sea in Moldova, meanwhile, and Tbilisi may not be the last capital to suffer.
Even if Georgia’s elections were almost certainly free and fair, the opposition has refused to accept defeat. They’ve accused the government of “stealing” the election as part of a “Russian special operation”. By Monday, thousands of pro-EU demonstrators had rallied outside the Georgian parliament. For its part, the opposition can count on a powerful ally within the Georgian state: the country’s staunchly pro-Western president Salome Zourabichvili.
Born in Paris, she’s spent most of her life working as a French diplomat, including as the country’s ambassador to Georgia. Yet despite only becoming a Georgian citizen in 2004, Zourabichvili was nonetheless confident that victory belonged to the opposition. “I do not accept this election,” she said. “It cannot be accepted, accepting it would be accepting Russia into this country, the acceptance of Georgia’s subordination to Russia.” Even more remarkably, Zourabichvili claimed that whether Russian interference could actually be proved didn’t matter. What was important, she said, was “what the Georgian population knows, feels and sees”.
If the roles were reversed, Western governments would rightly laugh off such claims as unhinged. Instead, they’re echoing her claims: Joe Biden expressed “alarm” at the election, while Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, and Charles Michel, president of the European Council, have both called for a probe into alleged irregularities.
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SubscribeMore NGOs, and Victoria Nuland to boot. That’s a marriage made in hell. NGOs are a pernicious and dangerous threat to democracy. They impose themselves between the electorate and the state. I find it hard to believe they are doing anything benevolent in Georgia.
Thanks for a very informative article.
I’m deeply sorry, Thomas Fazi, but your words “the 2014 coup in Kyiv” reflect your fundamental misunderstanding of the historical differences of the relations between Russia and Georgia and between Russia and Ukraine.
Forgive me, but you are no smarter than those Western politicians you criticize, they just believe in their dogmas, and you in yours.
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I believe that my comment will be deleted in order to save your pride, but your understanding of the Russian-Ukrainian war only reveals your phenomenal ignorance on this issue.
Misunderstanding? How so?
Another internet expert telling us to ignore the documentary evidence and instead listen to an anonymous expert because he says he knows atuff.
If only so much concern was being focused on what the American ruling party is up to for the election next week.
Good view.
There’s no reason to believe the vote was fixed.
Apart from the fact the President says it’s corrupt, all international observers have alleged corruption and all exit polls showed a comfortable win for the opposition.
It’s one thing to be critical of the west, it’s quite another to then blindly believe all the nonsense that comes from competing regimes because of it