Gia Volski: Neither Joe Wilson nor anyone else knows what stance the new U.S. administration might take toward specific regions. Let’s wait—I believe the future is positive

Neither Joe Wilson nor anyone else knows what stance the new U.S. administration might adopt toward specific regions. Let’s wait—I believe the future is positive, and this doesn’t concern only Georgia, - First Deputy Speaker of Parliament Gia Volski told journalists.

According to Volski, Georgian Dream finds hope in the fact that on several key issues, their position aligns almost entirely with that of the newly elected U.S. president.

"This includes matters like illicit money, programs carried out under the name of the American people that harm the U.S.'s image, the themes of war and peace, and issues aligned with conservative views.

It’s natural for everyone to want reassurance that the world isn’t heading toward chaos, as some of our opponents might wish, but instead is avoiding a Third World War and the disasters that could follow from an expansion of the conflict zones.

This is the position that Wilson, among others, holds. However, there are people within the U.S. administration who, as opinion-makers, may hold different views before officially starting their work," Volski said.

Chairman of the U.S. Helsinki Commission, Republican Joe Wilson, recently made three posts about Georgia on Platform X.

Wilson wrote that Donald Trump’s stance toward America’s self-declared enemies is very clear: "President Trump has made his position on America’s self-declared enemies absolutely clear. If Bidzina Ivanishvili follows through with his plan to destroy Georgian democracy by December 29, he will face consequences beyond anything he can imagine."

Wilson also commented on the agreement signed with a sanctioned Chinese company for the construction of the Anaklia deep-sea port: "Why did Bidzina Ivanishvili, an aspiring dictator of Georgia, sign an agreement with a sanctioned Chinese company to build the Anaklia deep-sea port? Ready for sanctions, Bidzina?" Wilson wrote.

Ambassador of Korea Hyon Du KIM - Korea’s strength lies in high-tech manufacturing while Georgia’s strength is in logistics and service areas - Georgia should not be just considered as a single market but as a market that can encompass the region and beyond
Oleksii Reznikov - Russia, in reality, is a paper tiger