US Military Delays Training Exercise With Georgia Due to Tensions in Relations
The U.S. military has halted a set of training exercises with Georgia, while the Pentagon reviews its bilateral security partnership with the Eurasian country.
The U.S. Army was set to train with its Georgian counterparts from July 25 to Aug. 6 as part of the regular Noble Partner exercise, but the Pentagon announced on Friday that it had indefinitely postponed the event.
“The United States Government has determined that this is an inappropriate time to hold a large-scale military exercise in Georgia,” the Pentagon said in its Friday press statement.
Foreign Agent Law Strains US–Georgia Ties
Supporters of Georgia’s foreign agent law have cast it as a means of protecting the country from malign foreign interests operating as ostensibly neutral civil society organizations.
Some critics have argued the foreign agent law stifles freedoms of speech and association within Georgia and even reflects a pro-Russia bent. Critics have also argued the law conflicts with Georgia’s aspirations for membership in the European Union.
Government officials within the United States, Britain, France, and other EU nations had urged Georgia’s lawmakers to scrap the law. Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili vetoed the bill, but her effort was overridden by its supporters led by the Georgian Dream party.
State Department spokesman Vedant Patel recently said that the U.S. government is looking for ways to maintain ties with Georgia, despite disagreement over its foreign agent law.
The U.S. military also appears inclined to preserve a working relationship with Georgia.
The United States and Georgian militaries take part in other joint training events, including the biennial Agile Spirit exercise. The Pentagon said in its recent statement that the United States looks forward to the next Agile Spirit exercise in 2025, indicating that it plans to continue training exercises with Georgia’s military.