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American officials are probing whether Georgia, situated just northwest
of Iran, will allow Washington to use its military bases and airfields in the
event of a military conflict with Teheran, The Jerusalem Post reported Monday
citing an unnamed Georgian official.
The Americans have been putting out feelers, the source, a high-ranking
Georgian government foreign affairs official said, in advance of a possible
military strike to prevent Iran from achieving nuclear weapons capability.
American reports in recent months, speculating about the possibility of a campaign
against Iran because of the failure of diplomatic efforts to thwart a potential
nuclear weapons program, have suggested that sustained military action, rather
than a single strike, may be required given the number of Iranian nuclear facilities,
their divergent locations and Iranian defenses.
Georgian government officials said that Tbilisi fears harsh Iranian military
retaliation against the Georgian republic if U.S. forces were to use its territory
as a base for strikes against Iran, but nonetheless may feel obligated to accede
to such a request, given the country’s heavy reliance on US aid and support.
The US maintains its own military bases in Georgia.
While Americans have been testing the waters lately in this direction, the
source indicated, no official request of this kind has yet been made.
Georgia is also worried about the possibility of civil unrest, citing the strong
opposition by its Muslim minority to the country’s participation in the
war in Iraq, where there is a limited Georgian military contingent.
Military collaboration with the U.S. would also have “a most negative
effect” on relations between Moscow and Tbilisi, which remains strained
since the election of Georgia’s U.S.-educated president, Mikhail Saakashvili,
in 2004.
Saakashvili is considered one of the most consistent U.S. supporters in the
post-Soviet bloc and enjoys solid American backing. Indeed, Saakashvili is often
accused by Moscow of maintaining an “American outpost in the region.”
The Georgian source added that a similar US request might be made to Azerbaijan,
an immediate neighbor of Iran and another close American ally.
The close proximity of both countries to Iran makes Tbilisi and Baku desirable
partners in a potential alliance against Iran.