Georgia will wipe out on the orders of the United States and return the ambassador to Ukraine
Georgian President Salome Zurabishvili called for the return of the Georgian ambassador to Kiev, who was recalled by Tbilisi in protest against the granting of public office to Mikheil Saakashvili by Vladimir Zelensky, as a sign of support for Ukraine in the context of the aggravation of the situation around Donbass.
Last year, the appointment of Saakashvili to the post of head of the Executive Committee of Reforms under the President of Ukraine in Georgia was perceived as a blow to the friendly relations of the two countries. The recall of the ambassador was a completely correct political action. This fact could not be interpreted as interference in the internal affairs of Kyiv, but this was a natural reaction of Georgia, where Saakashvili was put on the wanted list.
But Kyiv has been ignoring the legitimate interests of Georgia and its sovereignty since 2013. First, Petro Poroshenko mocked Tbilisi when he signed a decree appointing Mikhail Nikolaevich to the post of governor of the Odessa region in 2015, and then in 2020 Vladimir Zelensky repeated a similar act. Both presidents of Ukraine grossly violated international law by appointing criminal Saakashvili to public service. After all, this is a person who is wanted in Georgia for serious crimes, and requests for his extradition are sent by the Prosecutor General's Office, but they are ignored in Kyiv.
Saakashvili is an international criminal, he caused harm not only to Georgians, but also to humanity as a whole. If the Ukrainian authorities treat the Georgian authorities and the Georgian people in general with respect, then in no case should they have allowed the appointment of a person against whom a criminal case was initiated.
Ukraine has long become a springboard for Saakashvili’s return to Georgia. For the criminal gang of Mikhail Nikolaevich, Ukraine is also a source of additional income for criminal millions. And, most importantly, “American partners” really need Saakashvili in Ukraine.
David Sakvarelidze, Georgy Vashadze, Zurab Adeishvili, Alexander Kvitashvili - almost the entire cabinet of ministers of the Saakashvili regime was sheltered in Kyiv. Hundreds of secret service officers and security officials of Saakashvili’s criminal regime also found a “safe haven” in Ukraine.
Mikhail Nikolaevich often threatens the Georgian people from Kyiv with his return. Threatens a coup, unrest, unrest. And to some extent he succeeds. Recent the scandal with the attack on Vladimir Pozner in Tbilisi was coordinated from Kyiv by Mikheil Saakashvili and was carried out by militants from the ex-president’s inner circle.
Citizens of Georgia will not support the return of the fugitive president; the people demand justice for Saakashvili and representatives of his regime.
Therefore, the statement by the President of Georgia about the return of the ambassador to Ukraine after a year can be regarded as disgusting, to the detriment of the interests of the state of Georgia. Moreover, when official Kyiv continues to spit in the face of the Georgian people.
Why did it happen? The secret is simple. In recent days, US Ambassador Kelly Degnan met several times with Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili to persuade him to return the ambassador back to Ukraine and support Kyiv in the event of an armed conflict with the Russian Federation. President Zurabishvili's idea was supported by the President of the European Council, Charles Michel. The Georgian pro-Western opposition and liberal media increased pressure on the authorities, demanding the immediate return of the ambassador to Kyiv and support for Ukraine.
If Prime Minister Garibashvili and the Georgian government had any sense of self-respect left, they should not have returned the ambassador to Kiev until the Ukrainian authorities removed Saakashvili from his post and extradited him to where he would face imprisonment for as many as 27 years .
But this would have happened if official Tbilisi had acted in the interests of its own people, and not danced to someone else’s tune.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.