დავიძინე საქართველოში და გავიღვიძე "სამხრეთ ოსეთში"

Russian expansion: 'I went to bed in Georgia – and woke up in South Ossetia'
A slow-motion plan to absorb territory has left Georgians cut off in a foreign land, or exiled from their homes. But, all the while, pro-Kremlin voices are gaining traction in Tbilisi
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/may/...a-south-ossetiaსაინტერესოა, წაიკითხეთ, გიორგი კანდელაკი შემთხვევას არ უშვებს, რომ მოქმედ ხელისუფლებას პრორუსული უწოდოს
ეკლესიაზე ვეთანხმები
მაგრამ, მართლა თქვა თედო ჯაფარიძემ ეს?
სად და როდის?
The language has changed towards Nato, too. Officially, the government still supports membership, but it is markedly less enthusiastic. “We are not overwhelmed by the idea of joining like the previous government was,” said senior Georgian Dream MP Tedo Japaridze.
ან სად ნახეთ ოფიციალური ხელისუფლების სეცვლილი ენა ნატოსთან მიმართებაში?
Pro-western figures in Georgia fear it is losing ground to Russian soft power too, with pro-Kremlin voices being heard far more than in the past. Most powerful is the Georgian Orthodox church, which has close ties to its Russian counterpart. Critics dub its priests “Moscow’s fifth column”.
Most Georgians detest their former imperial master and see Nato and EU membership as the only way to protect their sovereignty. Georgia has gone out of its way to win Nato over, sending hundreds of soldiers to serve alongside British and US forces in Helmand. It is now the second largest troop contributor to the continuing US-led mission in Afghanistan.
But the current Georgian Dream ruling coalition has taken a more accommodating stance towards Russia, and the atmosphere and language has changed.
As Russians were erecting posters of Stalin in Moscow to commemorate victory in the second world war, his birthplace in the Georgian town of Gori saw an unusual demonstration. Protesters gathered to denounce plans to join the European Union. Among other things, they said the EU would undermine Georgian culture by encouraging homosexuality – a common refrain of pro-Russia forces in Ukraine as well.
“There’s a real risk of the west losing Georgia,” warned opposition MP Giorgi Kandelaki, a senior figure in the previous, avowedly pro-western, administration.
In a gesture of support, the US is holding exercises here with Georgian troops supposedly aimed at helping it to join Nato. But just a few hundred Americans are involved, and Kandelaki dismissed it as “paying lip-service” to Georgia’s hopes.
With Georgia’s once robust economy also suffering from the fallout the Ukraine crisis, these are nervous times.