Georgia Through Moscow’s Eyes – Nov. 8-13

From November 8 to 13, Russian state and Kremlin-loyal media outlets portrayed Georgia in several overlapping ways: as a country where a major military plane crash involving a Turkish aircraft occurred; as a “nominal candidate” for EU membership that Brussels is punishing for “deviating from democracy,” while the authorities demonstratively refuse European money; as a state where the opposition is being ruthlessly purged – from criminal cases against the former prime minister to the banning of parties and Saakashvili’s return to prison; and as a country part of whose territory is occupied by Russia, where Moscow is promoting an agenda of “non-use of force” and “multipolar world.”

Against this backdrop, two key narratives are gaining strength: Georgia as a country “victimized by the West for choosing multipolarity” and Georgia as a nation forced to “defend its democracy (or ‘sovereign democracy’)” against internal and external enemies.

Key developments

Crash of Turkish C-130: tragedy and conspiracies

On November 11, a Turkish Lockheed Martin C-130 ‘Hercules’ military transport plane crashed in the municipality of Sighnaghi, about five kilometers from the Georgian-Azerbaijani border. This was reported by the Turkish Ministry of Defense and the Georgian Ministry of Internal Affairs; It has been confirmed that the aircraft was flying from Azerbaijan to Turkey and crashed on Georgian territory. (Ria.ru)

Russian media gave further factual details: Both RIA Novosti reported the Turkish Ministry of Defense statement that 20 military personnel were on board and that a search and rescue operation is being conducted in coordination with the Georgian authorities. And later pointed to the Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announcing that the plane’s black box has been found and recovered.

But a separate line of reporting focused on a conspiracy theory insinuating some kind of sabotage in the Georgian airspace. Citing the pro-government Turkish newspaper Türkiye, Russian publications report that the destruction of the plane could have been the result of “external influence” or an “explosion of ammunition on board,” since the destruction occurred in the air, and no distress call was sent. This motive is also picked up by Russian sources, emphasizing the version of “external interference.”

Georgia and the EU break up

The second major topic of the week is the deterioration of Georgia’s relations with the European Union, which was covered by the Russian media from multiple angles. The overall picture the coverage painted was Brussels “punishing” Georgia, but the government guarding its “sovereignty” demonstratively refusing grants, and hoping that the EU will “come to its senses.”

Domestic Repression: Gakharia, Saakashvili, and the “foreign special operation”

Occupied Regions

Abkhazia: elections, conference, and shootout in Sukhumi

Geneva Discussions: Same all

Following the latest round of Geneva international discussions, the Russian Foreign Ministry emphasises the priority of developing a legally binding agreement on the non-use of force between Georgia, Abkhazia, and South Ossetia — a formula that persists for at least a decade. The official statement says that this is necessary to “ensure the lasting security of Abkhazia and South Ossetia” through the adoption of such an agreement. (Mid.ru)

Tsulukiani Gives Kremlin the Quote of the Week

The most widely quoted statement of the week was made by Teia Tsulukiani, Deputy Speaker of the Georgian Parliament, on Imedi TV about the President of Ukraine: She called Volodymyr Zelensky a “clown” leading the country to ruin and claimed that “the greatest nation and country in his hands is in the process of destruction.” Russian media outletsonly from Moscow, but also from representatives of the Georgian government (Lenta.ru).

Bitesize

Exit mobile version