State Security Service Reports on Internal, External Threats of 2020
The State Security Service, Georgiaâs domestic intelligence agency, has issued its annual report for 2020, outlining key challenges faced by the country, as well as measures employed to protect it from threats.
The agency says the Russian occupation of Abkhazia and Tskhinvali region/South Ossetia remained the main threat in 2020, while âactivities by intelligence services of foreign countries to the detriment of Georgiaâs national interestsâ constituted another key challenge.
Russian Occupation
The report says the continued militarization by Russian forces in the occupied regions, which “damages security environment on the ground,” amounts to âregional threat and international challenge.â Moscow âfully controlledâ and engaged in all processes of military, social-political, and social-economic areas in occupied territories, the SSG adds.
According to the SSG, Russia made further steps towards the annexation of occupied regions, which included the signing of the âCommon Social-Economic Spaceâ Programâ between Moscow and Sokhumi in November 2020, the reemergence of Russian territorial claims on Aibga village that lies at the Abkhaz-controlled Georgian state border with the Russian Federation, and simplified âcustoms control proceduresâ between Moscow and Tskhinvali introduced in December last year.
Noting continued unlawful detentions of Georgian citizens and âborderizationâ processes at dividing lines separating Georgia proper from Abkhazia and Tskhinvali region, the report points at long prison sentences of two Georgian citizens – Zaza Gakheladze and Irakli Bebua.
As part of the occupation, Russia employed hybrid warfare tools aimed at âdiscrediting Georgian state institutions, fueling nihilism and pessimist attitudes in the society, and creating hurdles on the countryâs path to Euro-Atlantic integration,â which was also accompanied by disinformation campaigns and fake news, SSG says.
The report notes that closure of so-called “crossing points” âsignificantly worsenedâ daily lives for residents behind dividing lives, particularly in Gali district of Abkhazia and Akhalgori district of Tskhinvali, restricting their freedom of movement, access to quality healthcare and education, as well as pensions and social assistance for residents of occupied Tskhinvali.
Ethnic Georgian residents of occupied regions also faced âdeliberate discriminationâ problems, including restricted education in their native language and limited property rights. The policy designed by the occupation regimes is directed at the change of “ethnic identity and assimilation,â the document stresses.
Counterintelligence Â
The SSG said foreign intelligence services attempted âdirect or indirectâ interference with domestic political processes and social life of Georgia, âto breach constitutional order, create disorder, shake state foundations and governance forms, hamper the functioning of the countryâs institutional systems and limit their development.â
There were âactive attemptsâ of influencing important processes through âmanipulating public opinion, dividing and polarizing the population,â the report adds. Using various âdisinformation and propagandaâ tools, foreign intelligence services continued âsowing distrustâ among the public towards Western partners, diminishing democratic values and spreading in turn “views suiting interests of particular countries.â
According to the annual report, particular countries and âgroups under their influenceâ aimed at limiting NATO activities in the Black Sea region and Georgia. There were reportedly also attempts to portray Georgia as an âunreliable, unstable partnerâ internationally.
Regional Challenges
The document names as a particular regional challenge in 2020 the military conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, when âinterested groupsâ attempted to âstrain the situationâ between the country’s ethnic Azeri and Armenian citizens and spill the conflict into the territory of certain Georgian municipalities.
SSG says malign actors were spreading false information regarding Georgian engagement in the Nagorno Karabakh developments and encouraging attitudes that were harmful to Georgian-Azerbaijani and Georgian-Armenian relations.
âBy deploying military forces in Nagorno-Karabakh, Russia tries to consolidate military-political and economic levers of influence over the region,â the agency warns, noting that this can âsignificantly affect security environment of the region.â
Hybrid Warfare, Disinformation
âHybrid threatsâ coming from foreign countries and their intelligence services, using disinformation and âsoft powerâ and clandestine operations, exerted âessentially negative influenceâ on the security environment, State Security Service says.
According to the report, foreign states âperiodically attempt fueling discords among various ethnic, religious or social groups,â while âcertain groupsâ spread radical viewsâ towards ethnic and religious minorities by appealing on âpatriotic motives.”
There were âactive attemptsâ throughout the last year to influence âvarious groups of Georgian public,â as well as significant processes through âcoordinated and joint useâ of clandestine activities and disinformation tools,â SSG says.
Cybersecurity & Terrorism
Numerous cyber attacks have been carried out against âcritical public information systemsâ of the Georgian state, the report says, recalling the September 2020 attack on the Health Ministry that led to the leak of documents related to COVID-19 pandemic management. The attack was preceded by âintensified disinformation campaigns and destructive processesâ alongside the pandemic, including statements by Russian occupation forces and representatives of de-facto regimes of occupied territories, SSG adds.
As for the terrorist threats, the report says there were no identified hotspots of spreading terrorist ideology. Neither were there any recorded cases of Georgian citizenâs departure to Syria or Iraq in 2020, it concludes.
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