Nothing endangers the stably warm Armenian-Georgian relations, Giorgi Kanashvili, Executive Director of the Tbilisi-based Caucasian House Center, said at Caucasus-2015 international conference in Yerevan on May 30.
"Our relations are quite stable and I do not think they can undergo any changes. Moreover, I am sure that their economic component will shortly strengthen. Armenia, like Kazakhstan and Belarus, is an ally of Russia, and Georgia has friendly relations will all these countries," he said.
Director of the Yerevan-based Caucasus Institute Alexander Iskandaryan supported the Georgian expert's confidence, noting that even if the foreign actors wish to involve Georgia and Armenia in different integration projects and camps, nevertheless, the Armenian-Georgian relations are firm and stable.
The expert thinks that the mutual dependence of Yerevan and Tbilisi contains rather serious risks, which make the destruction of these relations impossible. "Certainly, the foreign actors are less than thrilled about this, but the prospects for the Armenian-Georgian relations do not change," he said.
The two-day event covers the political trends in the Caucasus, the regional security and international policy problems. On May 31 a two-hour roundtable will be held to cover the political consequences and results of Azerbaijan's aggression against Karabakh in April.