Georgian prime minister accuses US of fueling ‘revolution attempts’

Demonstrators gather during an opposition protest near the Parliament building in Tbilisi, Georgia.
Zurab Tsertsvadze, Associated Press
Demonstrators gather during an opposition protest against “the Russian law” near the Parliament building in Tbilisi, Georgia, May 2, 2024. Protesters denounce the bill as “the Russian law” because Moscow uses similar legislation to stigmatize independent news media and organizations critical of the Kremlin.

The prime minister of the country of Georgia on Friday accused the United States of supporting what he criticized as “revolution attempts,” following the Biden administration’s support for anti-government protests that are rocking Tbilisi. 

Irakli Kobakhidze, head of the majority Georgian Dream Party, lashed out at the U.S. in a post on social platform X, amid pressure from the Biden administration and European leaders against the government’s pursuit of legislation criticized as mirroring Russia’s “foreign agents law.”

Critics of the draft law say it will be used to silence dissent and criminalize opposition, forcing nongovernmental organizations that receive funding from abroad to register as “foreign agents” with the internal security services. 

Kobakhidze, following a conversation with the No. 3 official in the State Department, counselor Derek Chollet, said that the law is necessary to root out groups the government accuses of funding “violence” and supporting “revolutionary processes.” 

Kobakhidze focused his criticisms against the former U.S. ambassador to Georgia, whom he painted as supporting “two revolution attempts of 2020-2023 … and those carried out through NGOs financed from external sources. Had these attempts been successful, the second front line would have been opened in Georgia.”

Kobakhidze repeated a common argument by Georgian Dream Party that seeks to paint U.S. support for Georgian civil society organizations as fueling opposition movements in the country. The reference to a “second front line” is an argument by the party against closer ties with the European Union and NATO, warning that Georgia will be drawn into a war with Russia amid its offensive war against Ukraine. 

But an overwhelming majority of the Georgian population supports joining the European Union and is critical of the government’s policies. 

A poll by the International Republican Institute published in April 2023 found 50 percent had a very negative, or somewhat negative view of the government’s relations with Russia; and 44 percent viewed the government as more pro-Russian than pro-Western. A poll published by the National Democratic Institute in December 2023 found 79 percent of Georgia’s population supported joining the EU. 

And protesters have massed in Tbilisi for more than a month against the “foreign agents” law. Protesters succeeded in 2023 in getting Georgian Dream Party to withdraw consideration of the law, but the party reintroduced the legislation in early April. 

The government is expected to bring the draft law for a third and final reading May 17. While Georgia’s President Salome Zourabichvili has vowed to veto the law, that can be overridden with a majority vote in the Parliament. 

The government pursuit of the draft law and a violent crackdown by security forces on protesters is raising increasing alarm in Europe and the U.S.

Chollet, in a post on X, said he “reinforced” to Kobakhidze “our concern for Georgia’s current trajectory – the Government’s hostile rhetoric and support of antidemocratic legislation places Georgia’s Euro-Atlantic future at risk. The United States urges the Georgian government to recommit Georgia to the Euro-Atlantic future the overwhelming majority of Georgians desire.”

Republican and Democratic senators have warned that sanctions could be imposed on Georgian government officials and U.S. assistance to the country could be restricted if the “foreign agents law” is put into effect. 

The Biden administration has held back on threatening a U.S. policy shift but has said it is keeping a close eye on developments. 

Tags Derek Chollet Joe Biden

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