Become an OC Media MemberSupport independent journalism in the Caucasus:
Join Today
Media logo
NATO

NATO

14 Posts
0 Followers
Armenia and Azerbaijan’s foreign minister and the US Secretary of State meeting in Washington on Wednesday. Image: Armenian Foreign Ministry
Armenia

Russia criticises Armenia’s participation in NATO summit 

A

Russia has criticised Armenia for participating in a NATO summit in Washington, calling Armenia’s move to deepen ties with NATO and its member states ‘imprudent’.  Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin said on Thursday that Moscow ‘deeply regrets’ Armenia’s participation in the 9–11 July NATO summit in Washington DC. Galuzin additionally criticised Yerevan for choosing to increase cooperation with NATO and its member states, ‘especially in terms of implementing NATO standards, purc

The NATO Summit in Washington. Official photo.
European Union

NATO declaration cuts reference to Georgia’s membership prospects

O

The NATO declaration adopted at a Washington summit does not reference Georgia’s path towards membership, as Georgia’s rift with the West continues to deepen. In the declaration adopted on Wednesday, Georgia is mentioned only once, in a call on Russia to ‘withdraw all of its forces from the Republic of Moldova and Georgia, stationed there without their consent’. The 2008 Bucharest and 2018 Brussels Summit Declaration stated that NATO ‘welcomes Ukraine’s and Georgia’s Euro-Atlantic aspirat

The NATO headquarters. Image via NATO.
Armenia

Podcast | NATO’s stakes in the South Caucasus

O

Last week, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg toured the South Caucasus to visit the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia. This week, we speak to political analyst and head of the Regional Center for Democracy Tigran Grigoryan about the significance of a new partnership agreement between Armenia and NATO, to independent researcher Shujaat Ahmadzada about the importance of Azerbaijani gas after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and to Civic Idea’s Giorgi Shaishmelas

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan (right) receives NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg (left) in Yerevan. Image via primeminister.am.
Armenia

NATO and Armenia to finalise new agreement as Stoltenberg tours South Caucasus

A

Armenia and NATO have announced that a new partnership programme between them will be approved ‘soon’. The Individually Tailored Partnership Programme (ITPP) would coordinate ties between Yerevan and the security bloc, replacing an older agreement adopted in 2006. In Stoltenberg’s annual report for 2023, the NATO chief’s office described ITPP as a programme that ‘brings together all aspects of NATO’s collaboration into a strategic and goal-oriented framework’ in a process that spans a four-y

Tina Khidasheli, Bidzina Ivanishvili, and Khatuna Samnidze.
Bidzina Ivanishvili

Former coalition allies accuse Ivanishvili of apologising to Putin over Crimea criticism

S

Leading members of Georgia’s Republican Party have accused Georgian Dream founder Bidzina Ivanishvili of apologising to Vladimir Putin over their criticism of Russia’s annexation of Crimea. On Tuesday, the party’s head, MP Khatuna Samnidze, revealed that Ivanishvili had been angry with her party in 2014 for criticising the Russian annexation. The Republicans were original members of the Georgian Dream-led coalition that ousted the United National Movement (UNM) in 2012 — the first peaceful t

Photo: Yukai Du/via on.ge
Alliance of Patriots

A million voices for the Kremlin’s propaganda — the Alliance of Patriots’ ‘million-person poll’

V

Do you agree that Georgia should declare military neutrality while maintaining European integration? That would mean that Georgia will not be a member of any military alliance. The military bases of foreign countries will not be located in Georgia and military training with the participation of foreign countries will not be conducted. There are three possible answers: ‘yes’, ‘no’, or ‘I don’t know/I haven’t decided yet’. This is a question being used by one anti-Western party with several MPs

Head of the Georgian Orthodox Church, Ilia II. (Mari Nikuradze / OC Media)
Analysis

Analysis | What divides and what unites Georgian society?

C
by CRRC

With persistent and growing talk of ‘polarisation’ in Georgia, CRRC-Georgia examines the actors, issues, and institutions that people think divide society. The last year has seen a number of conversations about polarisation in Georgia. The President of the European Council, Donald Tusk, even commented on the issue in his Batumi speech.  One of the components of polarisation, though not the sole factor, is division in society over actors, issues, and institutions. While many things could d

Editor‘s Picks