🇬🇪Sanctions are already working.
Bidzina Ivanishvili is petrified, and his panic proves it.
How do we know? By watching how he and Georgian Dream have reacted to the wave of sanctions over the past weeks.
🧵Let’s go through it ...
1/11
🇪🇪🇱🇻🇱🇹When the Baltic states imposed sanctions, Ivanishvili scoffed.
He ridiculed them, dismissing their actions as "only hurting the Baltic people". There was no retaliation, no panic.
Indifference was the message.
2/11
Then came the UK and US Magnitsky sanctions.
The tone shifted instantly. Ivanishvili slammed the panic button .
What is he so afraid of?
Two things:
1️⃣ Appearing weak.
2️⃣ Cracks and defections within his power structure.
3/11
Just hours after the sanctions hit, Ivanishvili scrambled to signal strength:
🔹Vakhtang Gomelauri (sanctioned) promoted to Vice PM.
🔹Medals of honor announced for him and other sanctioned loyalists.
🔹Compensation was promised: “The state will cover their financial losses.”
4/11
😱This isn’t confidence. This is fear.
When you have to reward loyalty with promotions, medals, and money—just to keep your circle intact—it’s not strength.
It’s desperation.
5/11
But here’s the problem for Ivanishvili and Georgian Dream:
They don’t understand how Magnitsky sanctions work.
Magnitsky sanctions aren’t just symbolic. They are isolating, consequential, and contagious.
6/11
Under Magnitsky sanctions, anyone who interacts with sanctioned individuals can be targeted next:
🔹Banks handling their accounts.
🔹Colleagues working with them.
🔹Businesses serving them (even pizza delivery companies, in theory).
No one is safe.
7/11
By doubling down to protect his loyalists, Ivanishvili is dragging everyone with him:
🔹The self-proclaimed government
🔹The election fraudsters of Georgian Dream
🔹The enablers, the corrupt financiers, the propagandists—all of them are now in the crosshairs
8/11
Ivanishvili knows defections are coming and he is freaking out.
No one wants to risk their future over a leader in panic mode.
Sanctions are a wedge. They create pressure. And under pressure, systems like Georgian Dream begin to crack.
9/11
The walls are closing in on Ivanishvili.
His fear is justified.
Sanctions are working, and his actions betray the desperation of a regime in freefall.
The only question is: Who will defect first?
10/11
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In 2024, Georgia's political landscape has dramatically shifted from 2020. The self-proclaimed ruling party, Georgian Dream (GD), faces unprecedented international pressure, signaling its potential downfall.
🧵Georgian Dream is about to go down ...
1/17
The Oct. 26 parliamentary elections were marred by fraud, including multiple voting, breaches of ballot secrecy, and violence against election observers and voters.
2/17
Unlike in 2020, when Western nations played a significant role in mediating post-election disputes and legitimizing the government, the current response is markedly different.
3/17
🇬🇪Sanctioned by Estonia🇪🇪—a nation unyielding in principle—you now live with a mark🎯.
Every border, every bank transfer, every trip raises a question: “Will this be the country that shuts the door?”
This isn’t just a list. It’s their new reality.
1/14
On December 13: Estonia expanded its sanctions list to include 14 individuals for human rights violations.
Some of these names also appear on Ukraine’s national sanctions list.
Estonia acted decisively, with input from its embassy in Tbilisi. Here is why they are sanctioned
/14
1️⃣ Irakli Kobakhidze, Prime Minister of Georgia.
Responsible for violent suppression of protests.
Praised police actions during mass demonstrations.
3/14
🇬🇪Sanctions. It is only a matter of time before the EU, individual countries, and the US impose sanctions—not just on Georgian officials attacking democracy and protesters, but also on business figures financing and sustaining Georgian Dream and 🇷🇺 grip on power.
🧵💰thread.
1/24
Sanctions must target those responsible for:
1️⃣ Rigging elections (GD leaders, judiciary, security services).
2️⃣ Crackdowns on protesters (MIA, police, security services).
3️⃣ Financing Georgian Dream through corrupt business ties.
2/24
Let’s examine the key business figures often discussed in relation to Georgia’s current political and economic landscape. These individuals are frequently tied to Bidzina Ivanishvili and the ruling Georgian Dream party.
3/24
🇬🇪The West’s hesitation in responding to the crisis in Georgia is a grave mistake. The dynamics on the ground are clear: Protesters are fighting against a regime that has captured every institution. They have no allies left within the system—only the hope of Western support.
1/4
The longer the West waits, the more time Georgian Dream has to crush resistance, consolidate power, and complete its state takeover. In this moment, cautious statements and delays amount to de facto support for the very regime the West claims to oppose.
Urgency is key. Pro-Western forces in Georgia cannot hold out indefinitely. They need targeted sanctions and unequivocal support now. If the West truly believes in democracy, it must act decisively—or risk losing Georgia to autocracy and Russian influence forever.
🇬🇪Vakhtang Gomelauri, Georgia’s Minister of Internal Affair, is emerging as a central figure in the violent crackdowns on peaceful protesters in Tbilisi. His role is not new—Gomelauri has long been a loyal enforcer for Bidzina Ivanishvili’s regime.
🧵Let’s dig into his history
/8
Gomelauri began his career as part of Ivanishvili’s personal security team. His loyalty earned him rapid promotions once Ivanishvili came to power, moving from the shadows of personal protection to the highest ranks of the Georgian state apparatus.
2/8
In 2015, Gomelauri became the head of the State Security Service, one of the most powerful institutions in Georgia. Under his leadership, the SSG was accused of wiretapping, surveillance, and targeting opposition figures—key tools in consolidating GD’s authoritarian grip.
3/8
🇬🇪Georgia is at a breaking point. The people are rising up against Georgian Dream (GD), an anti-European regime that has rigged elections, usurped power, and unleashed brutal violence against peaceful protesters.
🧵Here is how important the Wests actions are right now.
1/25
📷@OCMediaorg
Western politicians and decision-makers: your actions—or inaction—will directly influence the dynamics on the ground in Georgia.
This thread outlines what’s happening and the critical steps the West must take to support Georgia’s fight for freedom.
2/25
First, let’s clear up a misconception: The protests are not just about GD’s decision to suspend EU integration until 2028.
This is a revolt against a regime that is fundamentally illegitimate, corrupt, and anti-European at its core.
3/25