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Hi,
I've done some research on the network of interlanguage links as a whole, you can see the results here: http://wikitools.icm.edu.pl/
I wrote to this list earlier this year about incoherences in the interlanguage links, but two things have changed since then: the problem has got more serious, and I've developed a more usable tool to correct it.
A short introduction: let's say that two articles are connected if there is an interlanguage link from one to the other in at least one direction. Next, let's say that if A-B and B-C are connected, then A-C are too. Next, for each group of connected articles, let's check if it is coherent, ie. if there is at most one article from each language.
It turns out that about 5% of articles belong to incoherent groups. The largest such group is growing quite fast: it had 48'000 articles in March 2008, now it has over 76'000! With over 3'000'000 links to check, it has to be corrected semi-automatically. There are tens of thousands of other incoherent groups to fix, too.
Right now, you can find some really absurd connections using the interlanguage links alone, like "en:December" to "en:City", or "en:Alpine Ibex" to "en:Western culture". The site I've created let's you see a path connecting given two articles, and suggests a course of action. The suggestions are a result of a heuristic and should be taken with a grain of salt, but maybe you'll find them useful.
Regards, Lukasz Bolikowski
PS. Last time my replies were coming several days after I'd post them. If I don't respond it's probably because my response is still moderated. Anyway, I guess http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Interwiki_synchronization is the best place to discuss this matter.