Georgia Beyond “Radical Europeanness”: Undiscovered Directions of Foreign Policy

Georgia’s turn to the West signifi cantly aff ected its geopolitical and foreign policies. The author shares the view expressed by Georgian scholars that the country’s continued commitment to the Western vector is a direct consequence of ideas expressed by political elites (constructivist theory) an...

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Main Author: A. Т. Sikharulidze
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: MGIMO University Press 2020-11-01
Series:Международная аналитика
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.interanalytics.org/jour/article/view/283
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spelling doaj-315b59ed62cc41a48af867183e6172d72021-07-28T13:00:58ZrusMGIMO University PressМеждународная аналитика2587-84762541-96332020-11-011129110810.46272/2587-8476-2020-11-2-91-108271Georgia Beyond “Radical Europeanness”: Undiscovered Directions of Foreign PolicyA. Т. Sikharulidze0Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State UniversityGeorgia’s turn to the West signifi cantly aff ected its geopolitical and foreign policies. The author shares the view expressed by Georgian scholars that the country’s continued commitment to the Western vector is a direct consequence of ideas expressed by political elites (constructivist theory) and their self-identifi cation as “European,” coupled with Western-style liberal democracy as a social order preference (liberal theory). Georgia’s political elites are driven by the concept of “Europeanness” and thus focus primarily on the state’s aspirations to be integrated into the “Western world,” which is pushing the state towards European and North-Atlantic integration. Georgian elites believe that institutional reunifi cation with “European family” under the NATO defence shield will not only deter Moscow but will fi nally put an end to Moscow’s attempts to bring the post-soviet state under its control. Moreover, due to the tensions between the generalized West and Russian Federation, the Kremlin’s aspirations to stop what it perceives as a geopolitical expansion of the West to the east, Georgia’s approach has become even more radical. The paper argues that the concept of “Europeanness” has been transformed into “radical Europeanness,” meaning that the political elites maintain economic cooperation with non-Western countries, but there is no proactive foreign policy beyond that, even with its most important strategic partners, namely Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey. In spite Tbilisi enjoys trade relations with these countries, the existing level of political and military cooperation between them conceals signifi cant bilateral challenges. Additionally, this approach is perfectly refl ected in Georgia’s relations with China, when the country’s political elites pushed for free trade, without attention to the political and geopolitical aspects of economic cooperation. Thus, Georgia – China relations are also the part of research interest in this paper, as the free trade regime between the two countries is subject to serious scrutiny after the Donald Trump administration made it clear that Washington would not welcome Chinese economic and geopolitical expansion in Georgia.https://www.interanalytics.org/jour/article/view/283georgia“radical europeanness”identityforeign policyelitessocial order
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Т. Sikharulidze
spellingShingle A. Т. Sikharulidze
Georgia Beyond “Radical Europeanness”: Undiscovered Directions of Foreign Policy
Международная аналитика
georgia
“radical europeanness”
identity
foreign policy
elites
social order
author_facet A. Т. Sikharulidze
author_sort A. Т. Sikharulidze
title Georgia Beyond “Radical Europeanness”: Undiscovered Directions of Foreign Policy
title_short Georgia Beyond “Radical Europeanness”: Undiscovered Directions of Foreign Policy
title_full Georgia Beyond “Radical Europeanness”: Undiscovered Directions of Foreign Policy
title_fullStr Georgia Beyond “Radical Europeanness”: Undiscovered Directions of Foreign Policy
title_full_unstemmed Georgia Beyond “Radical Europeanness”: Undiscovered Directions of Foreign Policy
title_sort georgia beyond “radical europeanness”: undiscovered directions of foreign policy
publisher MGIMO University Press
series Международная аналитика
issn 2587-8476
2541-9633
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Georgia’s turn to the West signifi cantly aff ected its geopolitical and foreign policies. The author shares the view expressed by Georgian scholars that the country’s continued commitment to the Western vector is a direct consequence of ideas expressed by political elites (constructivist theory) and their self-identifi cation as “European,” coupled with Western-style liberal democracy as a social order preference (liberal theory). Georgia’s political elites are driven by the concept of “Europeanness” and thus focus primarily on the state’s aspirations to be integrated into the “Western world,” which is pushing the state towards European and North-Atlantic integration. Georgian elites believe that institutional reunifi cation with “European family” under the NATO defence shield will not only deter Moscow but will fi nally put an end to Moscow’s attempts to bring the post-soviet state under its control. Moreover, due to the tensions between the generalized West and Russian Federation, the Kremlin’s aspirations to stop what it perceives as a geopolitical expansion of the West to the east, Georgia’s approach has become even more radical. The paper argues that the concept of “Europeanness” has been transformed into “radical Europeanness,” meaning that the political elites maintain economic cooperation with non-Western countries, but there is no proactive foreign policy beyond that, even with its most important strategic partners, namely Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey. In spite Tbilisi enjoys trade relations with these countries, the existing level of political and military cooperation between them conceals signifi cant bilateral challenges. Additionally, this approach is perfectly refl ected in Georgia’s relations with China, when the country’s political elites pushed for free trade, without attention to the political and geopolitical aspects of economic cooperation. Thus, Georgia – China relations are also the part of research interest in this paper, as the free trade regime between the two countries is subject to serious scrutiny after the Donald Trump administration made it clear that Washington would not welcome Chinese economic and geopolitical expansion in Georgia.
topic georgia
“radical europeanness”
identity
foreign policy
elites
social order
url https://www.interanalytics.org/jour/article/view/283
work_keys_str_mv AT atsikharulidze georgiabeyondradicaleuropeannessundiscovereddirectionsofforeignpolicy
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