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Recently, Aram Ashotovich delivered yet another tearful
interview. Speaking with a predictably pro-Russian Armenian channel,
Gabrielyanov spent almost an hour and a half lamenting his grievances.
What was he crying about this time? The usual. He reminisced
about his “annual trips to Karabakh,” mourned the “lost lands,” and offered
embellished stories about how he supposedly wanted to “fight side by side with
Pashinyan” against Azerbaijan. According to him, their “greatness” has been
lost.
Come on, Aram… come on, Trump…
Nothing was “lost” — it was all squandered by them.
And that wasn’t the end of it. Gabrielyanov even managed to
take a swipe at Trump, claiming he shouldn’t have “signed anything in
Washington,” and so on.
Watching this whining is almost amusing: you can clearly see
how people who built their entire rhetoric around the conflict are now
desperately searching for a new point of reference. With the Karabakh issue
resolved, they have nothing left to lean on — no foundation for their self-proclaimed
“greatness.”
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