Winning: Georgia Resists Another Russian Invasion

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December 23, 2025: Russia has occupied 20 percent of Georgia’s territory since the 2008 invasion. Tiny Georgia, with a population of four million, continues the slow process of gaining NATO membership despite Russian threats and NATO reluctance to gain a member in the distant, from Europe, Caucasus. Georgia sees NATO membership as the key to its future survival. Russia is expected to revive its 2008 war with Georgia when it has extricated itself from the mess it made when it invaded Ukraine in 2022.

Now Russia is seeking to subdue, or even conquer, Georgia economically. This is a side effect of the Ukraine War. A million or more men have fled Russia to avoid getting mobilized into the army and sent to Ukraine. Over 100,000 Russians fled to Georgia, where most people back Ukraine. Most of these Russians want to do business in Georgia and invest in existing operations or start new businesses. The problem with that is that most of these new businesses do most of their business with Russians in Georgia or back in Russia.

Even the tourism businesses have been taken over by Russians. Georgians are annoyed by Russian companies that provide tours of Georgia rarely use Russian-speaking Georgian tour guides but employ Russian ones. These guides never mention the 2008 Russian invasion and continued occupation of one fifth of Georgian territory, or the continued animosity between Georgia and Russia.

What irks the Georgians the most is that Russian investors and entrepreneurs are starting to dominate the Georgian economy. Many Georgians suspect that this is a deliberate or accidental Russian plan to dominate Georgia and bring this tiny Caucasus nation back into the Russian World. The reality is that Georgia is still trying to join NATO and backs Ukraine in its war against Russian invaders.

In 2022 Russia invaded Ukraine to prevent it from joining NATO. That has not worked out well for Russia. The question is whether Russia will invade Georgia, in the Caucasus, for continuing its efforts to join NATO. Georgia was working on NATO membership since 1994, long before Ukraine considered it. The Georgians want nothing to do with Russia, which invaded Georgia in 2008 but did not get far. Technically, Georgia and Russia are still at war. That complicates, but does not rule out, gaining NATO membership.

The Caucasus is south of Russia and north of Turkey. Another Caucasus state, oil-rich Azerbaijan, has close ties with Russia. Although Russia has a military assistance treaty with Armenia, Russian officials recently pointed out that the treaty does not cover the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh area, which Azerbaijan conquered after Russia would not send troops to help the Armenians. Russia has several defense-related agreements with Armenia. The first is the 2002 CSTO/Collective Security Treaty Organization that included Russia, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. All these nations were once components of the Soviet Union, which dissolved in 1991. The CSTO restored some of the economic and military relationships these nations had before 1991. Georgia deliberately avoided CSTO.

Russia considers both Armenia and Azerbaijan essential buffer states. This is what Russia calls the near abroad and considers those relationships sacrosanct. The Russian paranoia over NATO is mainly about near-abroad nations in Eastern Europe joining or wanting to join NATO. That was not a problem with Armenia, which wanted protection from Turkey, plus Azerbaijan fears of Iranian aggression. Russia did not appreciate Turkey getting involved with the near-abroad states. Russia was diplomatic about the unwelcome Turkish presence and the Turks knew that being in Azerbaijan was seen as a rare victory over ancient foe Russia.

Both Azerbaijan and Armenia were formerly part of the Soviet Union and are quite different even though they were neighbors. Azerbaijan is majority Moslem while Armenia is Christian. Along with the smaller Georgia, these two are the only two nations in the Caucasus that are majority Christian. For over a thousand years Armenians and Georgians resisted efforts by Moslem neighbors to make them Moslem. Russia played a key role in preventing that and considers itself the protector of Armenia.

Georgia, unlike Armenia, wants nothing to do with Russia but Russia wants Georgia to be more submissive to Russia. That’s another reason for Georgia to seek NATO membership. Armenia wants good relationships with both Russia and NATO. This annoys Russia, which does not make a big deal out of it as long as Armenia does not defy its Russian patron. In light of that, Armenia backed away from early efforts to join NATO and returned to the Russian dominated CSTO.

Russia seems oblivious of how much its smaller neighbors fear being attacked by and absorbed into Russia. That’s what Russia is trying to do in Ukraine and has been at it since 2014 when Russia seized Crimea and parts of two eastern Ukrainian provinces. Georgia considers itself another potential victim of annexation by Russia. NATO was created to protect members from Russian aggression, which is what Georgia wants and needs to remain an independent and sovereign state.

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