美国因《外国影响法》暂停对格鲁吉亚的援助
US Suspends Aid To Georgia Over Foreign Influence Law

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/us-suspends-aid-georgia-over-foreign-influence-law

为了回应旨在限制外国影响力的新立法,美国暂停了对格鲁吉亚 9500 万美元的援助。 该立法要求接受大量外国资金的团体注册为“外国利益代理人”。 该措施得到了执政党的支持,但遭到反对者的批评,他们声称该措施阻碍了民主,强加了“伪自由”价值观,并侵犯了国家主权。 支持者认为它可以防止恶意的外部实体。 华盛顿表示担忧,称这些行为违反了欧盟(EU)和北大西洋公约组织(NATO)的民主标准。 由于这项立法的颁布,欧盟暂停了格鲁吉亚的欧盟成员资格程序,冻结了计划中的 3000 万欧元(3240 万美元)的军事支持。 此外,对被指控破坏民主的多位格鲁吉亚政府官员实施了签证禁令。 格鲁吉亚与美国的联合军演也被搁置,美国宣布全面审查美格关系。 格鲁吉亚官员对这些事态发展做出了消极反应,一名官员称其为对格鲁吉亚独立的公然限制。 尽管遭到批评和金融制裁,美国仍承诺支持格鲁吉亚的民主、法治、独立媒体和经济发展。 自 1991 年实现独立以来,美国已向格鲁吉亚提供了总计超过 $6.2B 的援助。 格鲁吉亚领导人现在呼吁恢复其国家与美国之间的外交关系。

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原文

Authored by Adam Morrow via The Epoch Times,

The United States is pausing more than $95 million in aid to Georgia, a small country in the South Caucasus region, over the latter’s recent adoption of legislation aimed at combating perceived foreign influence.

“After anti-democratic actions by the Georgian government, I announced a comprehensive review of bilateral cooperation between the United States and Georgia,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a July 31 statement.

“As a result of that review, the United States is pausing more than $95 million in assistance that directly benefits the Government of Georgia,” he added.

The punitive move by Washington comes two months after Georgia’s parliament passed an anti-foreign influence law, which officially took effect on Aug. 1.

The law requires organizations that receive more than 20 percent of their funding from abroad to register as “organizations pursuing foreign interests.”

It was championed by the ruling Georgian Dream party, which says such legislation is needed to protect the country from malign foreign influences operating under the guise of “civil society.”

Proponents of the law also say it’s necessary to safeguard Georgia’s national sovereignty and combat “pseudo-liberal values” imposed by foreign—particularly Western—entities.

Blinken said in the statement that “The Georgian government’s anti-democratic actions and false statements are incompatible with membership norms in the EU and NATO.”

In the weeks leading up to its ratification, large demonstrations erupted in Tbilisi, Georgia’s capital, where protesters who opposed the law often clashed with police.

Meanwhile, several Western institutions and countries—including the EU, the United States, Britain, and France—had urged Georgia’s leadership to scrap the legislation.

In May, Josep Borrell, the EU’s foreign policy chief, warned that the law’s ratification would “negatively impact” Georgia’s EU membership bid.

Critics of the law have derisively termed it the “Russian law,” comparing it to legislation allegedly used by Moscow to suppress dissent.

Moscow, for its part, denies any association with Georgia’s “foreign agents” law or its recent ratification by the country’s parliament.

In past remarks, Georgian Dream founder Bidzina Ivanishvili has claimed that a U.S.-led “global war party” was seeking to draw Georgia into a conflict with Russia.

In 2008, Russia won a brief war with Georgia—initiated by the latter—over the small but strategically vital regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Washington, meanwhile, has warned Georgia’s ruling party that its “anti-Western rhetoric” risked setting the country “on a precarious trajectory.”

Georgian pro-democracy activists protest against a "foreign influence" bill outside the parliament in Tbilisi on April 15, 2024. (Vano Shlamov / AFP)

After the law’s ratification, Washington imposed visa restrictions on several ruling party officials, claiming they were “complicit in undermining democracy.”

In June, the State Department unveiled a first tranche of restrictions on ruling party officials, lawmakers, police officers, and certain private individuals.

It also announced plans to conduct a “full review of our relationship with the government of Georgia.”

Not long afterward, the Pentagon “indefinitely postponed” scheduled U.S.-Georgia joint military drills, which had been initially slated for June.

Georgian Dream responded by accusing Washington of engaging in “threats and blackmail,” describing the raft of U.S. restrictions as a “gross attempt to restrict Georgia’s independence and sovereignty.”

Brussels, meanwhile, responded to the law’s ratification by suspending Georgia’s EU membership bid.

“The adoption of this [anti-foreign influence] law … froze Georgia’s integration in the European Union,” Pawel Herczynski, the EU’s envoy to Georgia, said in remarks to the local press.

He further announced that Brussels had frozen 30 million euros of military aid (roughly $32.4 million) previously earmarked for Georgia’s armed forces.

In his July 31 statement, Blinken condemned Georgian Dream’s “anti-democratic actions and false statements,” which, he said, were “incompatible with membership norms in the EU and NATO.”

He added, however, that the United States would continue funding assistance programs aimed at “strengthening democracy, rule of law, independent media, and economic development” in Georgia.

“We will remain committed to the Georgian people and their Euro-Atlantic aspirations,” Blinken said.

According to the secretary of state, Washington has provided Georgia with over $6.2 billion in aid since the country achieved independence after the Soviet Union fell in 1991.

Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze described the latest punitive measures by Washington as “counterproductive.”

“Instead of blackmailing and threatening, we should have a healthy conversation about improving relations,” he told the Georgian press on Aug. 1.

But Kobakhidze also struck a conciliatory note, calling for a “reset” in relations between Tbilisi and Washington.

“The relationship needs a reset,” he said. “We are absolutely ready for it.”

He added: “The main thing is to see the next steps.”

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