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Iran, Armenia Find Solidarity In Isolation

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  • Iran, Armenia Find Solidarity In Isolation

    IRAN, ARMENIA FIND SOLIDARITY IN ISOLATION

    Voice of America
    March 12 2013

    By James Brooke
    12 March 2013

    YEREVAN - While the West seeks to isolate Iran over its disputed
    nuclear program, landlocked Armenia seeks to build relations with
    its neighbor -- without violating international sanctions.

    In all of Christian Armenia, there is only one mosque: "The Iranian
    Mosque," restored 15 years ago by Iran.

    The mosque offers classes in Persian and is an essential landmark for
    visiting Iranian VIPS, like Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. He
    came to Yerevan 15 months ago to meet with Armenia's President Serj
    Sarkisyan.

    The West seeks to isolate Iran, believing its nuclear program is being
    used to build a nuclear bomb. Iran denies the charge. But Armenia
    is positioned between two historic enemies -- Turkey to the west and
    Azerbaijan to the east. Armenia has no trade or diplomatic ties with
    the two nations. Instead, it trades north with its Christian neighbor,
    Georgia. Now it is trying to expand trade and investment to the south,
    with Iran.

    "Armenia is the only neighbor of Iran where the regime or the
    government in Iran feels quite comfortable, and is actually keen to
    increase relations," says Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional
    Studies Center, a Yerevan think tank. "From the Armenian perspective,
    there is a shared sense of isolation, where both Iran and Armenia feel
    surrounded by either hostile or rival states and feel under blockade
    or sanctions."

    Looking for alternatives

    Iran and Armenia are linked by a narrow border -- a 35-kilometer long
    stretch of the Aras River.

    A two lane mountain road links Armenia with Iran, a nation with an
    economy and a territory about 50 times the size of Armenia's.

    With the highway slow and often dangerous, Armenians look for
    alternatives.

    Iran expert Gohar Iskandaryan says a top priority is to extend
    Armenia's Soviet-era railroad south.

    "Once Armenia can find investments, we can connect our railway to
    the Iranian rail network and have access to the Indian Ocean and
    the Persian Gulf," says Iskandaryan, an Iran expert at the National
    Academy of Sciences of Armenia.

    One bright spot

    Six years ago, Armenians started to heat their homes with gas coming
    through a new pipeline from Iran. Now Armenia wants to build an oil
    pipeline from Iran and two hydroelectric power plants on their shared
    river border.

    But Iskandaryan says sanctions over Iran's nuclear program could
    block funding for these projects.

    "This is not only Armenia's choice," she says. "It's an issue for
    the big powers -- the United States and Russia."

    While sanctions have hurt Iran's economy and cut trade with Armenia,
    Giragosian sees one bright spot.

    "The Iranian government has actually banned the import of luxury
    items which includes laptops, makeup and cosmetic products, to even
    chocolate," said the think tank director. "Therefore, it will only
    encourage the rise or emergence of somewhat of a black market where
    Iranians coming to Armenia for tourism purposes begin to start to
    acquire these now-prohibited consumer items." Some Iranian tourists
    to Armenia are looking for more than lipstick.

    Arayik Vardanyan, executive director of Armenia's Chamber of Commerce
    and Industry, says they are buying apartments. "Many Iranians are
    coming," says Vardanyan. "And that could mean that they are searching
    in advance for places they can leave to if war breaks out."

    The ebb and flow between Iranians and Armenians goes back almost
    3,000 years to the construction of Erebuni, a hilltop fortress that
    gave its name to Yerevan. If modern-day leaders have their way,
    these two ancient neighbors will continue trading and visiting,
    paying little heed to the outside world.

    James Brooke A foreign correspondent who has reported from five
    continents, Brooke, known universally as Jim, is the Voice of America
    bureau chief for Russia and former Soviet Union countries. From his
    base in Moscow, Jim roams Russia and Russia's southern neighbors.

    http://www.voanews.com/content/iran-armenia-find-solidarity-in-isolation/1619833.html

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