06-02-2025 17:47:01 Politic
The Georgian Institute of Politics (GIP) has published R. H. Ambassador (ret.) Kenneth S. Yalowitz's article about the US-Georgia relations.
Kenneth Yalowitz said that "if GD continues to take Georgia in a less democratic and more anti-Western direction, US-Georgian relations could become even more strained."
"President Trump has emphasized that US foreign policy will be driven by “America First” interests and that a transactional scale will be employed to measure US benefits from proposed agreements which will largely be bilateral. Sanctions and tariffs will be employed as pressure points against friends and foes alike. War avoidance is emphasized by Trump, but the possible use of US military force has not been ruled out over the Panama Canal, Greenland and Mexico. This international perspective is at odds with US post-Cold War policy with its emphasis on promoting democracy, respect for human rights and economic growth through trade and investment. Alliances and international institutions were seen to buttress international peace and stability but the new administration views them more as resource drains and liabilities to accomplishing US objectives.
The international scene facing Trump is daunting: the Ukraine-Russia war; Gaza; Syria; Lebanon; Iran; North Korea; Sudan; Russia; China; pandemic threats and climate change. Despite statements about quick resolution, the Trump team is acknowledging many of these problems have complex causation and are not amenable to simple, quick solution.
The new foreign policy team is still being put into place and there have already been miscues such as the temporary shutdown of most US government spending programs. Most foreign ministries are analyzing the Trump administration and trying to develop a strategy for dealing with the United States in the new environment. Trump also has pressing domestic issues such as inflation and border/immigration which were the main reasons for his victory and which he now must manage.
Inescapably, Mr. Trump and Secretary of State Rubio’s foreign policy attention will focus on China, Russia and Ukraine, the borders with Mexico and Canada, and the Middle East.
What will this mean for smaller countries down the priority list, like Georgia, which are important to the United States but had a worsening bilateral relationship under the previous Biden administration?
The reasons for the decline stem mainly from the ruling Georgia Dream party’s suspension of European Union accession and efforts to cooperate with the Western political and security community. It has moved instead to a transactional foreign policy and non-democratic internal steps such as: flawed parliamentary elections last fall; a Russian-style foreign agents law; crackdowns on the free media, press and NGO’s; inventing a “global war party” (read the United States) which supposedly was trying to force Georgia into the Ukraine war against Russia; and brutal treatment of those peacefully protesting the parliamentary elections and Georgia’s movement away from Europe. The latest incident on February 2 involved brutal attacks on dozen of protestors trying to block a road into Tbilisi. The GD leadership has been highly critical of the United States, USAID programs and the US Embassy and ambassadors in unprecedented fashion. For this the GD leadership has been widely condemned in Western capitals. The billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, who is the force behind GD, and other leaders have been sanctioned by the US. Washington has also suspended its strategic partnership with Georgia and some $95 million in economic aid.
Georgian Dream leaders claim that their policies have kept Georgia out of a ruinous war and that the Georgian economy has been strengthened by their not joining Western economic sanctions and maintaining trade relations with Russia. Georgia has likely helped Russia avoid some sanctions. They argue that the Georgia Dream election victory was free and fair and that the opposition is illegal and “terroristic.” Georgian foreign policy, they allege, is balanced and Georgian internal affairs is their sovereign prerogative. Meanwhile the EU and US remain critical of the October election outcome but have stopped short of demanding new elections and refusing to recognize the new government. A deadlock has persisted as many Western leaders still recognize Salome Zurabishvili as the legitimate President and not Mikheil Kavelashvili, the former professional footballer elected by the rubber-stamp GD parliament.
/Ambassador Yalowitz was a career Foreign Service Officer from 1966-2001 and served twice as U.S. ambassador to Georgia from 1998-2001. Following his retirement in 2001 from the Department of State, Ambassador Yalowitz began teaching graduate courses at Georgetown University dealing with Russia’s conflicts with its South Caucasus neighbors. From 2003-12 he directed the Dickey Center for International Understanding at Dartmouth College. His opeds or articles have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, International Herald Tribune, Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor, The National Interest, The American Interest, The Hill, Politico, Newsweek, amongst others.