Georgian leader praises army in Independence Day speech

Georgian leader praises army in Independence Day speech

Rustavi-2 TV, Tbilisi
26 May 06

President Mikheil Saakashvili has praised the Georgian army during a
military parade to mark Independence Day on 26 May. Saakashvili said
that the “ramshackle, miserable” army of two years ago was now
“well-disciplined and battle-ready”. He added that Georgia’s armed
forces “threaten no-one” apart from those who “want chaos in Georgia
and an end to its independence”. “I wish to tell our Abkhaz and
Ossetian brothers and sisters that we want peace,” he added.

The following is the text of Saakashvili’s speech broadcast live by
Georgian TV station Rustavi-2:

[Saakashvili] Today we are giving a military salute to a
well-disciplined and battle-ready Georgian army. We have great
traditions, but two years ago, just over two years ago, we inherited –
the officers remember this well – a ramshackle, miserable Georgian
army. Over these past few years, together with you, we have done
everything possible to create armed forces of which you, your families
and the whole of Georgia can be proud, armed forces which threaten
no-one apart from those people who are prepared to attack freedom and
the security of its citizens, those people who want chaos in Georgia
and an end to its independence.

We salute those soldiers, officers and sergeants who received medals
today, including one of the highest honours awarded by the United
States of America, which is extremely rarely given to foreign officers
and soldiers. That is the fate and tradition of the Georgians, not
just to stand in our own country’s watchtower, but also to fight for
freedom and Georgia’s interests throughout the world. That is how it
has been for centuries and that is how it is today, because we,
Georgians, exist not just for our own sake but for the whole
freedom-loving world.

We are setting an example of successful development amidst freedom, an
example which many people fighting for freedom, independence and
success need.

In saluting our army we are saluting a new Georgia. We are saluting a
Georgia of which every Georgian should be proud, a Georgia which will
never bow down to its enemy, a Georgia which can defend itself and its
national interests.

With our military salute we hail each one of our citizens,
irrespective of ethnic origin, because Georgia belongs to each of
them. People of various nations have lived in Georgia for centuries
and millennia – Jews, Ossetians, Armenians, Azerbaijanis, Greeks,
Russians, Ukrainians, Kurds and others. All of them are Georgian
patriots in the service of Georgia.

We salute all those who care about Georgia’s fate, whose purpose in
life is to fight for Georgia’s success. Georgia’s citizens have shown
everyone that they are capable of building a state which is developed,
civilized and befits them.

It is thanks to each of you that today Georgia is known throughout the
world as one of the most quickly developing democratic states, which
constantly fights to defend its interests and freedom.

Today we also salute all Georgia’s young people, including members of
the patriot movement, students and school pupils. We salute all of the
patriotic political forces. Naturally, we can argue until we are
hoarse, but we must remember one thing. Regardless of the length of
the argument and the difference of opinion, we are not each other’s
enemies. We are each other’s opponents. We are opponents who should
be capable of uniting in the face of the big challenges which exist
today and which pose a threat to Georgia, its freedom, its
independence and its future.

We should not repeat the same mistake we have been making over the
centuries when petty political infighting, envy and bitterness led us
to hand our opponents our main assets, our country and our future. No
Georgian politician should ever allow this to happen again.

Today we salute all of Georgia’s friends. Georgia is returning to the
European family where it belongs.

We give a military salute to all freedom-loving peoples and
nations. The time will soon come when the Abkhaz and Ossetians will
again be celebrating this day just as all Georgian citizens are
celebrating today. I wish to tell our Abkhaz and Ossetian brothers and
sisters that we want peace and we want us to build our small but
beautiful and strong country together.

The achievements we have made would have been more valuable if the
Abkhaz and Ossetians had all taken part in this process. The time of
destruction and confrontation in Georgia is over. It would be best if
we continued with construction together and, after a certain time, we
all lived in a single state happily, well and safely.

To the people who want to dismember Georgia, I want to say that
Georgia no longer has any land to give away. Georgia is no longer able
to cede even an inch of its territory. It is a small country but it is
beautiful and we proud of it and we are not going to agree to any
compromises that concern our territorial integrity.

I would also like to salute all teachers and scientists. They are
intellectual pool, which is well known in the world. Education is our
main priority.

What we are doing today will produce results in three, five, fifty or
a hundred years later. We should all continue doing this. We cannot
afford to squander talent. We cannot afford to lose scientists or
teachers. They should all be used in the construction of a new
Georgia.

We salute our citizens who live in the countryside. The fact that the
Georgian nation has survived and we have reached where we are today is
thanks to our countryside being Georgia’s backbone. The people who
live in Georgia’s rural areas have provided for our country and saved
it from death by starvation and saved it from destruction. Their work
is particularly valuable and we see this as a special priority.

I wish to greet our wine growers and tell them not to fear
anything. No-one will be able to destroy this industry in Georgia. On
the contrary, it will develop even faster. I wish to salute other
agricultural workers. We are starting a large-scale programme of
irrigation canal restoration and school and out-patient clinic
construction. This is not just a promise. This is reality because
these facilities have already been built in hundreds of villages. In
the future 10 or 15 times as much should be done.

We give a military salute to our soldiers, soldiers who are proud to
serve their motherland, soldiers who have the blood of the heroes of
our history flowing in their veins, our real men who have today
emerged as symbols of Georgia’s future and strength.

We give a military salute to all Georgian heroes who throughout
history have given their lives to Georgia’s independence. We are
indeed a small country but we have many heroes.

We salute all generations of Georgians. We give a military salute to
Georgians living abroad. We salute hundreds of representatives of the
Georgian diaspora abroad who have been visiting Georgia recently. I
would like to say that we are proud of your successes. A Georgian
person or a person of any other ethnic origin who leaves Georgia is
especially talented and especially successful in other countries, but
our task if to bring you back to us, our task is to use your potential
for Georgia’s benefit, to build our common future.

We salute people of every generation, we salute our pensioners,
because an appreciation of kindness, a feeling of justice,
battle-capability, integrity and decency, have been handed to us by
our elders and we should pass them on to our future generations.

Two years ago, during the revolution, we were gathered together on
this spot [in front of parliament] by our hope of building a strong
Georgia. Today the situation has changed. Today we brought together by
the strength that we have already found and those great aims will soon
be achieved, strengthening and uniting the country.

May God product our homeland, Georgia, and each and every one of you.

Congratulations on Georgia’s Independence Day.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS