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5 Jun, 2025 12:38

NATO aspirant reining in pro-bloc propaganda

Georgia is set to fold a 20-year-old NGO advocating Western integration into the Foreign Ministry
NATO aspirant reining in pro-bloc propaganda

The Georgian government is set to fold a media center promoting Western integration into the Foreign Ministry, according to its director.

The Information Center on NATO and EU, based in Tbilisi, was launched in 2005 under then-President Mikhail Saakashvili to build public support for Georgia’s membership in both blocs.

An employee at the Center said in a social media post on Wednesday that he had received formal notification indicating the outlet would be closed by July 1. Director Tamara Tsuleiskiri later clarified that the NGO’s functions would continue under the Foreign Ministry but that the current legal structure would be dissolved. Georgian officials confirmed the restructuring to the news agency Interpress.

In 2008, NATO designated Georgia and Ukraine as potential future members, despite objections from several European leaders over concerns that the move would antagonize Moscow, which perceives the US-led military bloc as expansionist and hostile.

Months later, Saakashvili launched a military operation against the then-breakaway Georgian region of South Ossetia, during which Russian peacekeepers stationed in the area were killed. Moscow responded swiftly, leading to a military defeat for Georgia, and shortly after recognized the region’s independence.

The failed gamble damaged Saakashvili’s popularity and paved the way for the rise of the Georgian Dream party, which has taken a more skeptical view of the West. Last August, on the anniversary of the conflict, the party’s ruling council issued a statement alleging that Saakashvili’s actions “were not a result of his mental instability, but a result of instructions from the outside and a well-planned betrayal.”

Georgian Dream secured a sweeping victory in parliamentary elections last October. A coalition of pro-Western parties claimed the vote was rigged and launched street protests aimed at forcing the new government to step down. The EU and the US expressed support for the opposition’s tactics — actions the Georgian government described as foreign interference.

Georgian officials have accused the opposition of mimicking the strategy used in Ukraine in 2014 during the Western-backed Maidan coup. They have also alleged they are facing foreign pressure for not aligning with Kiev in its conflict with Moscow. Western nations, meanwhile, have accused the current government of “undermining democracy” by passing legislation that mandates disclosure of foreign grants by domestic political organizations.

Georgia has suspended accession talks with Brussels due to the tensions, but says it still seeks eventual membership in both the EU and NATO.

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