A monument to the legendary Russian arms-designer, creator of the AK-rifle series, Mikhail Kalashnikov, has been erected in Armenia. The full-length statue of the man whose weapons came to epitomize Russian/Soviet military might was placed in the northern town of Gyuimri, the site of Russia’s lone military base in the South Caucasus.
The Kalashnikov monument will be unveiled officially and a museum will open on November 8, according to a press-release from the 102nd military base, cited by RIA Novosti. The base commander, Colonel Andrei Ruzinski, came up with the idea last year, when Kalashnikov passed away, leaving behind the legacy of what Russia says is the world’s most popular rifle.
“Vodka, matrioshkas, balalaikas, and commissars and Cossacks riding bears – all that kitsch can be dismissed as it has nothing to do with Russia,” RIA Novosti wrote in an obituary for Kalashnikov. “But the three-something kilograms of iron from Izhev [firearms manufacturer] put everything in its place, because that is the real Russia, from beginning to the end. This is a symbol that is immediately recognized everywhere, and no more explanations are needed.”
Russian guns are a controversial matter in the South Caucasus, but Armenia still is a willing host to the 102nd military base, seen as a deterrent against any possible assault from neighboring Azerbaijan, which has indicated it’s willing to retake breakaway, predominantly ethnic Armenian Nagorno Karabakh by force, if not by peace.
The Russian-Armenian ties go far beyond the base and its stone-made Kalashnikov., however. Armenia is also a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), a Russian-led counterweight to NATO.
But that doesn’t mean it doesn’t have its own ideas, too. With an eye to Armenian voters, President Serzh Sargsyan took the CSTO to task on October 6 for allegedly not helping Armenia resist Azerbaijan, The Bug Pit reported.
The dressing-down comes on the eve of October-10 opposition protests in Yerevan that will coincide with a Minsk get-together, where, ITAR-TASS has reported, Armenia is expected to sign an agreement that will lead to it finally joining the Moscow-centric Eurasian Economic Union in 2015.
If that plan goes through, look for even more Russia-inspired statues to be in store for Armenia.
Giorgi Lomsadze is a journalist based in Tbilisi, and author of Tamada Tales.
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