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The elections in Georgia: an analysis of Shevardnadze's victory
By Vladimir Volkov
2 May 2000
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Incumbent Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze won the presidential
elections in Georgia on April 9 with a landslide majority. Of
the 70 percent of voters who went to the polls in the Caucasian
republic of 5.5 million inhabitants, 80.4 percent cast their vote
for Shevardnadze. His biggest rival, Communist Party Chairman
Dzhumber Patiashvili, got 16.6 percent of the vote.
There were five other candidates, among them the chairman of
the Supreme Council of Adzhariya and head of the Alliance for
Democratic Rebirth, Aslan Abazhidze.
Patiashvili and Abazhidze were considered Shevardnadze's most
dangerous rivals. Prior to the elections they formed an alliance
that could have become a serious threat to the president, particularly
if it had received backing from Russia. But this did not happen.
Just before the elections Abazhidze withdrew his candidacy and
didn't even call on his supporters to vote for Patiashvili.
Political differences were only of secondary importance during
the election campaign. None of the candidates questioned Georgia's
secession from the former Soviet Union. Also, they all supported
the implementation of capitalist reforms and rapprochement with
the West. The only bone of contention was what role Georgia was
to play in relations between Russia and the West and how the country's
regional and ethnic problems were to be solved.
The elections took place against a backdrop of severe economic
crisis and a dramatic reduction in the standard of living of the
majority of the population. Regional conflicts also threaten to
tear apart the country. In two regionsAbkhasia and South
Ossetiathe elections weren't even carried out. The Adzhariya
region has a semi-autonomous status and rarely yields to decisions
taken by the government in Tiflis, Georgia's capital.
A typical case is that of presidential candidate T. Assanidze.
A few years ago he was sentenced to jail for an economic crime.
Last autumn Shevardnadze granted him a pardon. But Adzhariya's
supreme court refused to accept this presidential order, forcing
Assanidze to run his election campaign from behind prison bars.
The West backs Shevardnadze
In the lead-up to the elections, the 72-year-old Georgian president
succeeded in getting the unanimous support of the leading Western
powers and also of Russia and several CIS (Commonwealth of Independent
States) countries such as the Ukraine and Azerbaijan.
There were visits to Georgia by numerous international dignitaries
prior to election day. The most important of these was the official
visit by German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder. Schröder
gave a speech to the Georgian parliament, declaring that it was
a great honour for him to meet with the parliamentarians on the
anniversary of Georgia's independence. Germany was one of the
first European countries to recognise Georgia as an independent
state.
During his speech, Schröder expressed regret for the "dark
sides of history", in particular the Second World War (Shevardnadze's
brother lost his life defending the Brest fortress during that
war). But having said that "for us, the crimes committed
in the name of Germany remain a source of grief and shame",
the German Chancellor immediately added: "Nearly 40,000 people
from Georgia's German minority ... also paid for this criminal
policy with deportation ordered by Stalin and death."
Schröder's confessions of guilt are merely a thin cover
for re-emergent desires within the German ruling class. They want
to have a share of the Caspian oil business, and are picking up
the thread of so-called "Great Game" politics dating
from the beginning of the twentieth century. At that time, the
fight for Caspian oil played a significant role in the outbreak
of the First World War. In 1918, Imperial German troops fighting
the British army occupied Georgia, which had just gained its independence
from the Russian empire.
Schröder portrayed this as one of the positive sides of
Georgian-German relations and placed it within the context of
the present. He said: "More than eight decades ago, Imperial
Germany helped give birth to modern Georgia. Eight years ago,
the Federal Republic of Germany was the first European state to
recognise Georgia when your country re-gained its independence."
Shevardnadze plays a key role in Georgia's relations with Germany.
As the Soviet foreign minister in 1989, he was instrumental in
achieving the reunification of Germany. Since then, he has been
a close friend of Hans-Dietrich Genscher, his German counterpart
at the time.
It was Genscher who advised Shevardnadze to return to Georgia
in March 1992 to succeed ousted President Svyad Gamzakhurdia.
In support of this move, Genscher arranged for the European Commission
to grant financial aid to Shevardnadze. Since then, Germany has
become the second largest international donor of development aid
to Georgia, having provided 350 million marks so far. According
to Schröder, another 60 million marks will be available shortly.
Genscher, who no longer has any official functions, together
with his wife accompanied Schröder on the recent trip to
Tiflis, where the former German foreign minister was made an honorary
citizen of Georgia. Genscher praised the "historic achievements"
of Georgia under the presidency of Shevardnadze, who made an official
visit to Germany only last year.
Schröder was also full of praise. Striking a note of hypocrisy
that would be difficult to surpass in view of the catastrophic
social conditions in this Caucasian state, he said: "Under
the leadership of Eduard Shevardnadze, your country has made remarkable
progress in developing a democratic, constitutional state. It
is an impressive sight to see how people, particularly young people,
in your country are now building a civil society on the ruins
of the Soviet Union."
Shevardnadze is also receiving substantial support from the
US. Shortly before the elections, CIA director George Tennet visited
Georgia. According to Georgia's government information agency
Sakinform, Tennet and Shevardnadze discussed "measures
for the fight against terrorism and perspectives for mutual cooperation
in this field" during their meeting.
Georgia's relations with NATO were also intensified prior to
the elections. Shevardnadze has been emphatically stating for
some time that his country intends to join NATO by 2005, at the
latest. Just recently he was reported in the Financial Times
as saying: "We are going to knock very loudly on NATO's door."
An "International Military Council" run by retired
NATO generals has already been at work in Georgia for one and
a half years. Just a few weeks ago, the Georgian Ministry of Defence
was given four overhauled American helicopters and another four
helicopters that can be used for spare parts retrieval. The Coast
Guard received a patrol boat.
Increased military activity in the region is no longer excluded
as a possibility. This is shown by comments made several months
ago by Chris Donelly, the NATO official responsible for the CIS
states. Donelly said it was time that the Caucasus conflict was
resolved, and that one perspective for this might be the "Yugoslav
model", although it was still too early for that.
Because of its geopolitical situation, Georgia is of particular
interest to the West. The most important export pipelines for
Caspian oil and natural gas are planned to run through the Caucasian
republic. US President Bill Clinton called the Baku-Tiflis-Ceyhan
pipeline project that will run from the Caspian Sea via Georgia
and Turkey to the Mediterranean "the most important achievement
at the end of the twentieth century".
Another reason for the West's activities in the Caucasus is
its desire to reduce Russian influence there. Russia, on the other
hand, wishes to regain the positions it lost in the region. This
is one of the main reasons for its war in Chechnya.
Russian manoeuvring
Russia did not support Shevardnadze's rivals in the elections,
although it would have had ample opportunity to do so, since the
three regions of the country that have, at least partially, withdrawn
themselves from the Georgian government's sphere of influenceAbkhasia,
Adzhariya and South Ossetiaare heavily influenced by Russia
in several ways. Russian troops are stationed in Abkhasia, but
are scheduled to be withdrawn by 2001 according to agreements
reached at last year's Organisation for Security and Cooperation
in Europe (OSCE) summit. A Russian tank division with which the
leader of the autonomy movement (and presidential candidate) Aslan
Abazhidze has friendly relations is stationed in Adzhariya. And
South Ossetia is in direct contact with Russia via North Ossetia,
which is part of Russia.
Nyezavissimaya Gazeta, the newspaper controlled by Russian
oligarch Boris Berezovsky, characterised Russia's approach to
Shevardnadze as follows: "Russian diplomacy ... not only
looked on with indifference as 'Candidate No. 1' achieved his
election triumph, it actively supported him. For instance, a few
weeks before election day the Russian utility 'JES Rossiya' 'switched
on' the lights and heating in Georgia again. And two weeks before
that there was suddenly no more talk of terrorist camps or Chechnyan
evacuation routes to Georgia."
One of the reasons for this approach is that at present Russia
wants to avoid any further exacerbation of its relations with
the West. At the same time it is trying to recapture the initiative
in the region and at least gain control of some of the most important
transportation corridors. These matters were discussed in early
March during a visit to Tiflis by the president of (Russian) North
Ossetia, A. Dzazochov. Dzazochov described the development of
Russian-Georgian relations as a "strategic partnership"
and proposed the realisation of the "Gateway to the South"
project to Shevardnadze.
At present, two major transportation routes run from Georgia
to Russia, and both of them pass through Ossetia. Most of the
freight traffic from the southern Caucasus (the so-called "Transcaucasian"
region) to Russia is transported along these routes. Historically,
both routes are part of the old "Silk Route" from Asia
to Europe.
The objective of the "Gateway to the South" project
is to enlarge these traffic routes and combine them with the European
TRASECA project, in order to re-direct a significant portion of
freight traffic coming from Asia and the Middle East to Europe
through Russian territory.
Another important element in Russia's rapprochement with Georgia
was the handing over of documents compiled by the so-called "Sobchak
Commission", which investigated the tragic events of April
9, 1989, when 19 supporters of the independence movement were
shot dead by the Soviet Army during a demonstration in Tiflis.
According to the commission's findings, the main responsibility
for the use of armed force against the demonstrators rested with
the Georgian Communist Party leadership of that time. A resolution
passed by the Georgian CP's central committee on April 8, 1989
explicitly sanctioned the involvement of the Soviet army in suppressing
the demonstration. One of the signatories of the resolution was
Dzhumber Patiashvili, Shevardnadze's main opponent in the recent
elections. It is a remarkable coincidence that the elections were
held on the eleventh anniversary of these dramatic events.
The "indestructible" Shevardnadze
With his ceremonial inauguration on April 30, Shevardnadze
began his second five-year term as president of independent Georgia.
He is a typical careerist from the ranks of the Soviet bureaucracy,
who successfully adapted himself to every turn in politics and
was thus able to play a leading role for decades.
Born in 1928, he was elected first secretary of the Central
Committee of the CPSU in Georgia in 1972. At that time he praised
Leonid Brezhnev, then secretary general of the CPSU, with the
words: "For some people, the sun rises in the East. For us
in Georgia, it rises in the North."
With Gorbachev's accession to power, Shevardnadze became one
the foremost propagators of the "New Thinking" which
culminated in the fall of the Berlin Wall and the dissolution
of the Soviet Union. In December 1990 he resigned from the Gorbachev
government after declaring that a military coup was imminent.
After that, he disappeared from the stage for a while, only returning
to politics in 1992 when he took over the office of president
of newly independent Georgia from his ousted predecessor Sviad
Gamzakhurdia. He survived two assassination attempts in 1995 and
1997.
In the opinion of some commentators, Shevardnadze won the latest
elections "Soviet-style", i.e., through tricks and manipulation.
His victory signifies the continuation of the politics of rapprochement
with the West and NATO, combined with a difficult balancing act
with respect to Russia. But the political and social problems
of Georgia will remain unsolved. The conflicts in the various
regions of the country will continue to fester and the majority
of the population will continue their daily struggle to survive.
See Also:
Russia
and the CIS
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