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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia | |
Georgians begin to question their NATO ambitions | |
2015-06-12 | |
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NATO has assured Georgia that the door is open, but the ultimate goal keeps slipping further down the road. In March, the country was shocked when French President Hollande said that "France's position for the moment is to refuse any new [NATO] membership." In response, opposition leader Nino Burjanadze said, "Those in Georgia who claim we have a chance to become a NATO member state are liars." Advocates of joining NATO are often reduced to arguing that the military reform it requires is itself worth pursuing. Vakhtang Kapanadze, chief of the joint staff of the Georgian Armed Forces, said, "People ask what are we doing there [in Afghanistan] when we have so many problems in Georgia? I would say that this mission is very important for us. First, because it is a great way of showing the world that we are participating in its collective security. Second, because it is the best way of confronting security challenges and risks far from home rather than in our own country. We understand this. And third, because it is an excellent school for our military." He said the Defense Ministry's job is to "work, work, and work with our troops to bolster the defense capabilities of the country. Then we will be more attractive to NATO than some weak, collapsing state." | |
Posted by:ryuge |
#1 Georgia is connected to the North Atlantic in a very important way - it is the path for oil pipelines from the billions of barrels of Caspian Sea oil to Western markets that does NOT go through Russia, or to China. |
Posted by: Glenmore 2015-06-12 08:19 |