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Armenia, Turkey And The Mountain Of Discord

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  • Armenia, Turkey And The Mountain Of Discord

    ARMENIA, TURKEY AND THE MOUNTAIN OF DISCORD
    Giorgi Lomsadze

    EurasiaNet.org
    July 29, 2011
    NY

    A pile of rocks is once again straining the already rocky relations
    between Armenia and Turkey.

    The pile in question, Turkey's Mt. Ararat, is a stumbling block hard
    to miss, no matter which side of the border you are on. Height:
    up to 5,137 meters tall; massif: some 40 kilometers in diameter;
    symbolic value: immeasurable.

    For Armenians, Ararat is what Mount Olympus is for the Greeks and
    more. Here, per legend, Noah anchored his cruising zoo after the
    biblical deluge. Armenians claim they adopted Christianity in the
    mountain's foothills, and Ararat holds pride of place in Armenia's
    coat of arms.

    With that glorious history in mind, an Armenian youngster the other
    day asked Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan about the chances that
    Armenia one day would get the mountain back. Armenia lost control
    over Mt. Ararat under the 1922 Treaty of Kars with Turkey.

    Sargsyan said he'd leave that question for a future generation of
    Armenians to handle.

    Before long, Turkey was foaming with anger. For Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan's take on the matter, check out The Turko-file.

    Erdogan and his ministers were quick to demand an apology from
    Sargsyan, but odds are they will never get it.

    Irredentist claims -- even to a mountain -- can go a long way in the
    Caucasus. The danger , though, lies in always interpreting literally
    the national symbolism with which politicians throughout the region
    love to lace their remarks.

    Particularly in the run-up to an election. Armenia's ruling Republican
    Party, headed by Sargsyan, faces a parliamentary vote early next year
    for which maneuvering has already begun.

    In an implied reference to his own past as the head of breakaway
    Nagorno Karabakh's military forces, Sargsyan reminded the assembled
    that his generation did its share of restoring Armenia's former glory
    by driving the Azerbaijanis out of Karabakh.

    "If you and your peers spare no efforts and energy... we will have one
    of the best countries of the world," Sargsyan told the aforementioned
    boy. He might as well have kissed a baby.

    Sargsyan's press office maintains, though, that the president added
    something else that critics in Turkey should have noticed as well: "In
    many ways, the weight of a country is not measured by its size. It must
    be modern, safe and prosperous . . . .which will allow any nation to
    sit next to the famous, strong and established countries of the world."

    But amidst the mood of the moment, don't expect Ankara to notice.

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