However, he acknowledges, “expansion fatigue in the United States and especially Europe is breeding fatalism in Georgia, and incubating a political environment where pro-Russia factions’ anti-west crusades are gaining traction”.
The analyst then refers to polling data taken regularly in the country over the last several years, in particular the results of the Gilbreath’s Caucasus Research Resource Centers (CRRC) polls conducted for the National Democratic Institute (NDI) in 2013, 2014 and 2015.
“Those show steady growth in reported pro-EEU sentiment between 2013 and the present — from 11 percent in August 2013 to 20 percent in August 2014 to 31 percent in April 2015. That’s a marked increase,” he says.
“That roughly tracks with increasing political support for anti-West and pro-Russia political factions within Georgia,” the author suggests.
And then he provides an explanation why the existing tendency is so dangerous for the West:
“If Georgia turned away from the West, it would not only be a blow to the country’s nascent democracy, but it would also sew up the Eurasian interior for Moscow, give Russia a direct corridor to the Middle East, lop off Western access to Eurasian energy sources.”