
TBILISI, DFWatch–Georgian Dream (GD) hailed a congratulatory letter from U.S. President Donald Trump to President Mikheil Kavelashvili, interpreting it as the definitibve answer to which side of the political divide he supports after months of uncertainty.
The letter, released on May 26 to mark Georgia’s Independence Day, expressed Washington’s commitment to “peaceful and productive relations” and voiced hopes for expanded trade and bilateral cooperation. It arrived amid widespread speculation and diplomatic ambiguity surrounding the Trump administration’s stance toward the South Caucasus republic.
While some analysts noted that Trump’s message may simply be an attempt to keep all options open as the president has been known to do, the letter was taken by GD officials as a sign of recognition. Parliamentary majority member Davit Matikashvili declared it marks a “reset” in U.S.-Georgia relations, suggesting the message signaled an end to what GD sees as unfair criticism from the U.S. State Department and other U.S. institutions.
But others were not convinced. Days before Trump’s letter, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, answering a question about Georgia, warned that “anti-American governments” around the world could face consequences. Although Rubio didn’t specifically mention Georgia in his answer, the opposition took his answer as a veiled warning to GD. Meanwhile, the U.S. ambassador to Georgia, Robin Dunnigan, notably skipped the May 26 ceremony, a move which Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze claimed was due to pressure from the “Deep State”.
A Black Sea nation bordering Russia, Turkey and Armenia, the small nation has a strategic location and has occasionally been a flashpoint during the last decades, notably the Russian invasion in 2008.
Since the October 2024 parliamentary elections, the country has been in political crisis, with the opposition completely rejecting the results, citing widespread fraud, and foreign partners including the previous U.S. administration, as well as the European Union, sharply criticizing the ruling party’s perceived democratic backsliding.
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