Azerbaijan and Armenia are signing a historic peace treaty in Washington, which is changing the politics of the entire region - at that time, the prime minister of the de facto government was in Turkmenistan, where he was participating in a conference of landlocked countries, - Grigol Gegelia, Foreign Secretary of the Lelo-Strong Georgia, stated at the briefing.
According to Gegelia, "it looks comical that the Georgian Dream is making desperate attempts to make the so-called multi-vector policy”.
“Today, history is being written in Washington, but Georgia is not part of this history. Under the mediation of President Trump, Azerbaijan and Armenia are signing a historic peace agreement, which fundamentally changes and transforms the politics and regional dynamics of the entire region. A decades-long conflict is coming to an end and a new economic and security architecture is being born, which will have a huge impact on our entire region. Including on the geopolitical field and function of Georgia in the heart of this region. Where is Georgia at this time? Nowhere. The de facto government, which no longer has strategic relations with Washington and was not invited to the most important format held in Denmark, was in Turkmenistan, where it was participating in the conference of landlocked countries. The meeting of landlocked states was not attended by the leaders of either Azerbaijan or Armenia. They are in Washington, where they are making a new history of the region. Instead, the meeting of the landlocked states was attended by the de facto Prime Minister of a state that has a 310-kilometer coastline. This is how comical the doomed attempts of the Georgian Dream to conduct the so-called multi-vector policy look, which is just as unsuccessful as it is in creating peace or prosperity. The Georgian Dream destroyed strategic relations with the United States, destroyed relations with the European Union states, but it did not have the talent to offer anything as a counterweight to a poor nation that is waiting for the prospect of development,” Gegelia said.
According to Gegelia, “today, the Georgian national government should sit at all the tables where the fate of the new world is being decided and where a new security architecture is being formed.”
“The isolationist government is not at any table, does not conduct any negotiations, and does not care about protecting the economic, political, and social rights of all Georgian citizens,” Gegelia said.