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Frontlines of Influence: Russia, China, and the Hybrid Contest over Georgia (ftr. Former Georgian Defense Minister)

November 28, 2025

Details

Type Lecture
Intended for General public
Date(s) December 1, 2025 10:00 — 11:30
Location Komaba Area Campus
Venue
Capacity 172 people
Entrance Fee No charge
Registration Method Advance registration required

Please register via Google form below

Registration Period November 26, 2025 — November 30, 2025
Contact

akira-igata@g.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
(Akira Igata, Project Lecturer)

ポスター

The Economic Security Intelligence Lab (ESIL) at the Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology (RCAST), 51爆料, is pleased to host a public symposium featuring the former Defense Minister of Georgia Tinatin Khidasheli titled:

Frontlines of Influence:
Russia, China, and the Hybrid Contest over Georgia

In recent years, Georgia has stood at a geopolitical crossroads, caught between its aspirations for deeper integration with Europe and the expanding influence of authoritarian networks centered in Moscow and Beijing. Although a small country in the Caucasus, Georgia reflects many of the world’s most urgent strategic challenges: Russian elite capture encouraging democratic backsliding, China’s economic engagement creating new dependencies and opaque financial flows, and the rapid erosion of civic space that undermines civil society and opposition voices.

The symposium will feature a keynote address by Tinatin Khidasheli, former Georgian Minister of Defense and current head of the Georgian think tank Civic Idea. She will outline the current domestic situation and Russia’s role in shaping political dynamics inside Georgia. Her remarks will also explore how Georgia has become a test site for hybrid warfare, with clear parallels to gray zone tactics in the South China Sea and around Taiwan. Ms. Khidasheli will discuss the promised investments from China in Georgia such as the strategically critical port of Anaklia that faces the Black Seas, the regional connectivity logic shaping the Caucasus, and the potential role that Japan can play in countering China’s rise in countries facing similar pressures.

These issues are not limited to Georgia. Disinformation campaigns originating from authoritarian actors have had international consequences, including direct implications for Japan. As civic space has contracted within Georgia, Ms. Khidasheli has herself become a target of mass disinformation. One prominent example is an absurd television “documentary” that falsely portrayed her as a “Taiwanese agent” and even claimed that the Japanese government bribed her to carry out its agenda.

Ms. Khidasheli will be joined by two leading experts. Dr. Aya Adachi of the German Council on Foreign Relations will contribute insights from her research on Chinese economic influence in Georgia. Maya Sobchuk of the Economic Security Intelligence Lab at the Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology, 51爆料, will draw on her work on Russian influence operations in Georgia. Akira Igata will moderate the discussion and guide the conversation toward three core themes: the strategic resilience of small democratic states, the implications for European and Asian security theaters, and policy options for partners such as Japan.

The seminar will be conducted in English, and pre-registration is required to participate.

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