RTTue, 09 Jul 2024 11:18 UTC

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Washington is preparing major protests in the former Soviet republic, Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service believes
The US is looking to achieve regime change in Georgia by fomenting large protests around the time of the parliamentary election in the former Soviet republic later this year, Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) has claimed.
Relations between Washington and Tbilisi deteriorated after Georgia passed in May the so-called foreign agents law, which required NGOs, media outlets, and individuals that receive more than 20% of their funding from abroad to register as entities "promoting the interests of a foreign power" and disclose their donors. The country's pro-Western president, Salome Zourabichvili, vetoed the legislation but was overridden by the ruling Georgian Dream party.
The SVR's press service said in a statement on Tuesday that information obtained by the agency "indicates Washington's strong determination to seek regime change in Georgia as a result of parliamentary election in the country on October 26."
The administration of US President Joe Biden has "already prepared a large-scale information campaign to discredit the Georgian Dream party," it stressed.
"The American 'curators' have already given the command to the opposition forces in Georgia to begin planning protests in the country to coincide with the election," the agency said.
The population of the country's capital, Tbilisi, the scene of heated rallies against the foreign agents law earlier this year, is going to be used as a "battering ram" against the Georgian Dream government, it added.
According to the SVR, the US expects Zourabichvili to become a key figure in igniting the protests in the country of some 3.7 million.In line with a plan by "the directors in Washington," the president will give an interview to a US media outlet in which she will "blame the Georgian government for the degradation of the negotiations on Tbilisi's accession to the EU, and warn the general public about the 'catastrophic consequences of rapprochement with Moscow,'" the statement read.
Zourabichvili's role will be to prepare the Georgian public for a "political surprise" from the opposition, which might eventually turn out to be another Western-backed color revolution, the agency warned.Last week, the US announced the suspension of this year's Noble Partner military exercise with Georgia due to a "comprehensive review" of bilateral relations by Washington. The Biden administration previously voiced plans to restrict visas for Georgian politicians who supported the foreign agents law.
On Monday, the EU said that it has put on hold the process of Georgia's accession to the bloc and froze a €30 million ($32.5 million) payment allocated to the Georgian Defense Ministry.Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze said earlier that
the heightened attention of the West towards the foreign agents law is attributable to the desire to open "a second front" against Moscow in Georgia in light of the Ukraine conflict.
Comment:
"The country's pro-Western president, Salome Zourabichvili" is according to the
Wiki born to Georgians who emigrated to France following the period of the Russian revolution. Born in 1954 she lived the first 50 years in France. There is also:
She joined Columbia University in 1972-1973 where Zbigniew Brzezinski, at the time director of the Trilateral Commission, trained her on Soviet politics and Cold War diplomacy.[11]
She has said that choosing a career in diplomacy was linked with hopes to one day being instrumental in helping Georgia.[4]
From her first marriage to Iranian-American World Bank economist Nicolas Gorjestani, Zourabichvili has two children: Kéthévane (France 24 journalist[12]) and Théïmouraz (a French diplomat[13]).
In 1992, Zourabichvili was appointed First Secretary to the Permanent Mission of France to NATO in Brussels, before becoming Deputy Permanent Representative of France to the Western European Union, still in Brussels, from 1993 to 1996.[20]
In 1996 and 1997, she held the post of Technical Adviser at the Cabinet of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Paris. In 1997-1998, she was Inspector at the MFA, still in Paris, before she was appointed Under-Director of Strategic Affairs at the Management of Strategic Affairs, Security and Disarmament of the MFA, a post she leaves in 2001 to become director of International and Strategic Affairs at the General Secretariat of National Defense. She also works with the Bureau of Strategic Affairs of NATO.[19]
Ambassador to Georgia[edit]
Between 2003 and 2004, Zourabichvili was Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of France to Georgia.[20]
What is the word... Trojan horse! Exactly what the US, NATO and EU bureaucracy needs.
From the same source:
f9 Jul, 2024 09:29
EU suspends accession process for ex-Soviet republic
The Georgian 'foreign agent' law is "incompatible" with membership of the bloc, its ambassador in Tbilisi has said
The European Union has suspended the process of Georgia's accession to the bloc, the EU's ambassador to the former Soviet republic, Pavel Gerchinsky, told Russian media on Tuesday. A €30 million ($32.5 million) payment allocated to the Georgian Defense Ministry has also reportedly been frozen.
The envoy cited Tbilisi's controversial 'foreign agent' law as the reason behind the move. After the legislation was adopted last month, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell warned Georgia that its potential accession to the bloc was in jeopardy.
Formally titled the Transparency of Foreign Influence Act, the new law requires NGOs, media outlets, and individuals who receive more than 20% of their funding from abroad to register as entities "promoting the interests of a foreign power" and to disclose their donors. Those who fail to comply will face fines of up to $9,500. The bill came into force despite opposition protests and a veto by Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili.
"The intentions of the current Georgian government are unclear to EU leaders. The Transparency of Foreign Influence Act is clearly a step backwards. [...] Also, the anti-Western, anti-European rhetoric is completely incompatible with the declared goal of joining the European Union. Unfortunately, as of now Georgia's accession to the European Union has been suspended," Gerchinsky said, as quoted by RIA Novosti.
While opponents of the law have described it as at attack on democracy and "Russian" because Moscow has similar legislation, its supporters have noted it is similar to what numerous Western nations, including the US, have in place.
Borrell said last month that Georgia will not progress with its EU accession unless its government changes its policies.
Georgia will hold parliamentary elections in October, and Gerchinsky expressed hope that a new government in Tbilisi, "whatever it may be," will again "begin serious work" toward EU integration.
The former Soviet republic applied for EU membership in March 2022, shortly after the start of the Ukraine conflict. In May of last year, the European Council agreed to allocate €30 million to boost Georgia's defense sector. The European Council granted Tbilisi candidate status last December.
An EU allocation to Georgia's defense sector is what one might expect from a military alliance.
The lines between NATO and the EU have in recent years becoming increasingly blurred.4 Jun, 2024 23:20
EU applicant wants to ban 'LGBTQ movement'
Georgia has introduced a set of bills against propaganda and gender reassignment
The speaker of the Georgian parliament, Shalva Papuashvili, has announced a sweeping initiative aimed at protecting traditional family values, in a move branded by critics as another Russia-inspired crackdown.
The set of proposals includes a ban on gay marriage and the adoption of minors by homosexual couples. In addition, the ruling Georgian Dream party seeks to ban LGBTQ and incest propaganda aimed at minors, and to prohibit broadcasters and advertisers from airing intimate same-sex scenes. Reassignment surgery and changing gender in official documents would also be banned under the proposals.
"Today, the parliamentary majority is initiating a package of bills on Family Values and Protection of Minors, which consists of one main bill... and 18 related bills that amend various laws, civil code, labor code, education legislation and so on," Papuashvili said at a government briefing on Tuesday.
According to Papuashvili, the proposed bill may be passed in its first reading as early as this month.
Western media have already branded the proposals a "Russian-style crackdown," pointing at how Moscow has increasingly tightened its legislation on "LGBT propaganda" since the early 2010s, first banning its dissemination among minors and ultimately expanding the prohibition to adults in 2022. Last November, the Russian Supreme Court designated the "international LGBT public movement" as an extremist group.
On Monday, Papuashvili signed into law a controversial bill on foreign agent transparency, after lawmakers voted last week to override a veto by President Salome Zourabichvili. It requires NGOs and media organizations that receive at least 20% of their funding from abroad to disclose this fact to the public.
Opponents of the new law, including the president, have branded it "Russian" and an attack on democracy. Supporters have countered that it is similar to what some Western countries, including the US, have in place.
The actions taken by Tbilisi against so-called 'foreign agents' will "fundamentally alter the US relationship with Georgia," US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said during a briefing on Monday. Washington has launched a review of its ties with the South Caucasus nation, which is an EU and NATO hopeful, he added.
In 2018, Georgia amended the constitution to explicitly define marriage as a union between a man and a woman. The ruling party now wants to introduce further changes, which would require support from the opposition to achieve a three-quarters majority vote in the parliament.
Georgia applied to join the EU in 2022 and was granted candidate status a year later. The bloc's members have repeatedly criticized the treatment of the LGBTQ community in the country, where pride events are regularly met with threats and counter-protests.
See also:
Comment:
"The country's pro-Western president, Salome Zourabichvili" is according to the Wiki born to Georgians who emigrated to France following the period of the Russian revolution. Born in 1954 she lived the first 50 years in France. There is also: What is the word... Trojan horse! Exactly what the US, NATO and EU bureaucracy needs.
From the same source:
f9 Jul, 2024 09:29
EU suspends accession process for ex-Soviet republic An EU allocation to Georgia's defense sector is what one might expect from a military alliance. The lines between NATO and the EU have in recent years becoming increasingly blurred.
4 Jun, 2024 23:20
EU applicant wants to ban 'LGBTQ movement' See also: