Washington blames Moscow every time it does not like the voting outcome anywhere in the world, Russia’s foreign minister has said
Washington and its allies are simply projecting their own actions on Russia when they accuse Moscow of election interference in the south Caucasian nation of Georgia or elsewhere, the Foreign Minister of Russia Sergey Lavrov said in an interview published on Tuesday. The US and other Western nations are ready to blame Russia for virtually any election outcome anywhere in the world they deem undesirable, he stated.
The minister was commenting on the latest parliamentary elections in Georgia, where several opposition parties and the nation’s French-born president are refusing to recognize the voting results. The pro-Western opposition accused the winning Georgian Dream party of staging a “constitutional coup,” while President Salome Zourabichvili claimed that her nation had become a “victim of a Russian special operation.”
The US and the EU quickly responded to the situation by sounding the alarm about alleged voting irregularities, and called on Tbilisi to launch a probe into reports of violations.
“Washington continues to actively exploit the myth of Russian election interference it had created itself,” Lavrov said, commenting on the situation. “If elections are won by those the US sees as undesirable, the blame over the voters’ ‘wrong’ choice is immediately pinned on Russia.”
The minister denied Moscow’s involvement in elections in the neighboring country. “The people of Georgia have made their choice. We treat that with respect,” he said, adding that Moscow “is ready to move on with the process of normalization of bilateral relations.”
According to the minister, “the Americans are just trying to ascribe to themselves something that they do to Russia.” Washington and Brussels actually exerted “brazen pressure on the authorities and voters” in Georgia, he pointed out. The US and its allies seek to frame the elections in this post-Soviet state as some sort of a choice between the West and Russia, he stated, adding that it is “in fact a choice between sovereign development … and external control.”
Earlier, the Kremlin had accused Western nations of “unprecedented interference” in the Georgian elections. The US and its allies “are trying not only to twist Tbilisi’s arm but also to impose their terms,” the Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said at that time.
The Georgian Dream party, which seeks to build pragmatic relations with Russia, secured 54% of the votes in the elections held late last month. Various opposition forces garnered between 11% and 3% each, according to the country’s Central Electoral Commission.
In the wake of the voting, European Council President Charles Michel stated that Georgia must “prove its commitment” to the EU.
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