EU-Armenia, ever closer

June 3 2026

Over the past three years, relations between Armenia and the EU have accelerated at an unprecedented pace. This rapprochement has affected the energy, economic, and security sectors

03/06/2026, Marilisa Lorusso Yerevan

Over the past three years, relations between Armenia and the European Union have undergone an unprecedented acceleration through the progressive institutionalisation of political, economic, and security cooperation. A key moment in this process was the two-day series of EU-Armenia events held in early May, beginning with the eighth summit of the European Political Community and followed by the first-ever EU-Armenia summit.

These major events took place within the broader framework of Armenia’s gradual rapprochement with the European Union, a process that gained further momentum in March 2025, when the Armenian parliament adopted legislation formally expressing the possibility of an eventual EU membership. A few months later, in December 2025, Brussels and Yerevan adopted a new Strategic Agenda for the EU-Armenia Partnership, setting out the priorities for bilateral cooperation in the years ahead.

The partnership is grounded in the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA), which entered into force in 2021, and in the European Union’s steadily expanding engagement in the South Caucasus country. Following the deployment of the civilian European Union Mission in Armenia (EUMA) in February 2023, the EU extended its mandate in February 2025 for an additional two years. In April 2026, Brussels also decided to deploy the European Union Partnership Mission (EUPM) to Armenia, with the aim of strengthening the country’s resilience against external threats.

On the economic front, as the web portal Eurologus wrote, cooperation is supported by the €270 million EU “Resilience and Growth” Plan announced in 2024, as well as by approximately €2.5 billion in investments expected under the Global Gateway strategy. Armenia has also been included in the European Peace Facility, from which it is expected to receive €30 million.

The Summit

The first EU-Armenia summit held on 5 May marked the most advanced stage reached so far in relations between Brussels and Yerevan. The meeting concluded with the official signing of a series of letters of intent and sectoral agreements, publicly signed by the officials responsible for overseeing their implementation in the presence, as witnesses, of European Council President António Costa, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. The political substance of the agreements was summarised by von der Leyen in her closing remarks and formalised in the Joint Declaration adopted at the end of the summit.

In her speech, von der Leyen described Armenia as part of the “broader European family,” calling the bilateral relationship a “unique partnership” entering a new phase. The summit outlined a more structured framework of cooperation across strategic sectors ranging from connectivity and security to energy and visa liberalisation.

One of the central pillars concerns regional connectivity. The parties announced new initiatives aimed at facilitating transit and infrastructure links, including the modernisation of border crossings and the strengthening of Armenia’s role as a regional hub. A high-level dialogue on transport was also launched to coordinate investments and integration with European networks.

On the energy front, the summit confirmed European support for the development of renewable energy in Armenia, particularly in the solar sector. Brussels views energy cooperation as an integral part of Armenia’s strategy to diversify and reduce external dependency, within a broader framework of integrated energy security extending across the Caucasus toward the Black Sea.

Another key chapter focused on digitalisation and innovation. The EU expressed interest in supporting both public and private investment in Armenia’s technology sector, including digital infrastructure and projects related to artificial intelligence. The Commission presented this field as one of the areas with the greatest long-term potential in future cooperation between Armenia and the European market.

Security also featured prominently. The Joint Declaration reaffirmed European support for peace and stability initiatives in the South Caucasus and highlighted growing cooperation in addressing hybrid threats.

One of the politically most significant issues concerns visa liberalisation. During the summit, the first progress report on Armenia’s path toward visa facilitation with the EU was presented, a topic that has acquired strong symbolic importance in Armenian public debate in recent years. In this context, the launch of forms of cooperation with Frontex were also presented.

Finally, the summit placed particular emphasis on the social and economic dimensions of the partnership. Among the projects mentioned were demining initiatives and housing programmes for displaced persons, especially those affected by the consequences of recent regional conflicts, with particular attention devoted to the situation of Karabakh Armenian refugees.

In the Ambassador’s Words, a Sense of Satisfaction

HVG, OBCT and TSN met with the European Union’s Ambassador to Armenia, Vassilis Maragos, for a joint interview in Yerevan on 7 May 2026.

Asked about his expectations for this intense three-day series of meetings between Armenia and the European Union, the ambassador described the meetings as an excellent event with outstanding results. In his view, the summit did not represent a starting point, but rather the maturation of a process that had already been underway for several years. The European approach, he explained, is based on concrete and sector-specific cooperation aimed at strengthening the country’s resilience across the economic, energy, social and infrastructure sectors. The main objective is to support Armenia’s diversification in terms of markets, partnerships and strategic choices.

The ambassador repeatedly returned to the key word that resonated throughout these days of intense exchanges: connectivity. The EU is already working on strengthening transport and border infrastructure, including projects involving Georgia and Iran, while also supporting broader regional interconnectivity initiatives linked to the Middle Corridor and Black Sea connectivity projects. In this context, he stressed that greater interdependence and regional opening could create new economic opportunities, strengthen energy security and contribute to long-term stability in the South Caucasus.

Overall, the picture that emerged reflects a European approach based on targeted and gradual measures combining infrastructure, digitalisation and economic support, with the aim of strengthening Armenia’s ability to integrate progressively into regional and transnational systems of transport, markets, energy, mobility and cultural exchange. It is a broad opening for a country whose development has long been constrained both by its landlocked geography and by a severe condition of regional isolation. It is therefore unsurprising that a sense of satisfaction is palpable around this possible opening, this forward step after three extremely difficult decades of independence that began and ended under the shadows of wars.

The trip to Armenia was organised by invitation of the EUNEIGHBOURS EAST programme, funded by the European Union.

https://www.balcanicaucaso.org/en/cp_article/eu-armenia-ever-closer/

Turkish President, Armenian Prime Minister discuss bilateral ties, regional is

Gulf Times, Qatar
June 3 2026
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed efforts to strengthen bilateral relations during a phone call on Tuesday.The two leaders also reviewed regional issues of mutual interest, according to a statement from the Turkish presidency’s Directorate of Communications.President Erdogan said that Turkiye was working to promote peace and stability in the region and emphasized that Ankara would continue to support all steps taken toward that goal.

https://www.gulf-times.com/article/726785/international/turkish-president-armenian-prime-minister-discuss-bilateral-ties-regional-issues

A strategic choice: Armenian voters between diversification and dependency

commonspace.eu
June 3 2026

This commentary was prepared by Ms. Varduhi Harutyunyan for the 10th issue of the Armenia Election Monitor 2026 newsletter.

Exactly one month before the parliamentary elections in Armenia, Yerevan was transformed into the center of Europe, hosting the 8th European Political Community Summit, parallel to which the inaugural Armenia-European Union Summit and the state visit of French President Emmanuel Macron were also held. Such developments in Armenia-EU relations became possible after the National Assembly of Armenia adopted a law on March 26, 2025, initiating the process of Armenia’s accession to the EU. Yerevan and Brussels are also engaged in an active dialogue on visa liberalization. Cooperation in the fields of security and defence is deepening, and the EU has also expressed support for Armenia’s agenda on regional unblocking and the diversification of economic relations.

Just days before the elections, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio also arrived in Armenia for a brief visit. The Secretary’s visit was marked by the signing of three crucial documents. Through one of them, Armenia-US relations were effectively elevated to yet another level, reaching a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. Additionally, the framework agreement on the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP) was initialed, along with a framework memorandum on critical minerals and rare earths. Undoubtedly, Armenian-American relations are developing and deepening at an unprecedented pace. Specifically, the Republic of Armenia and the US transitioned from a strategic dialogue to a strategic partnership on January 14, 2025. It is noteworthy that while this initial document was signed under the US Democratic administration, the Republicans, led by Donald Trump, contrary to the assertions of many, did not ignore this partnership. Instead, they elevated it to a new level with lightning speed and infused it with strategic depth, demonstrating their consistency and active interest in Armenia, as well as in peace and stability in the South Caucasus.

The current authorities of the Republic of Armenia have announced a policy of foreign policy diversification. In addition to deepening relations with the West, this also means normalizing relations with Azerbaijan and Turkiye, as well as activating ties with the countries of Central Asia and the Middle East, among others. The diversification of the defense and economic sectors also forms an integral part of this policy.

The ruling Civil Contract party, for which 32 percent of respondents expressed support according to the IRI polls published on May 22, promises to continue this course upon re-election. The party proposes the institutionalization of peace, the implementation of a balanced foreign policy, the development of relations with all four neighbors, and the realization of a regionalization concept targeting the countries of Central Asia, the Middle East, and India. The Civil Contract also promises voters steps toward a European future. At the same time, as long as European Union membership remains a long-term prospect and current regulations do not hinder membership in the Eurasian Economic Union, the Republic will continue to remain an EAEU member and develop trade and economic relations with its member states. Regarding relations with Russia, the force led by Nikol Pashinyan reassures that Armenia will develop mutually beneficial, constructive relations with the Russian Federation while simultaneously reducing its dependency on it, emphasizing that bilateral relations are currently in a phase of constructive transformation. As for relations with the US, we can assume they will continue under the logic of the documents signed in May.

It is noteworthy that the opposition forces, which, according to opinion polls, are the most likely contenders to win seats in parliament, have negatively viewed both the European events and the advancements with the US. According to the latest IRI polls, these forces include Strong Armenia with 6 percent of the vote and the Armenia Alliance with 3 percent. Meanwhile, 2 percent of respondents expressed support for the Armenian Meritocratic Party. Supporters of the Prosperous Armenia Party, the I Am Against Everyone Party, the Wings of Unity Party, and the DOK Party accounted for 1 percent each.

The Strong Armenia party, founded by Russian-Armenian businessman and billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, generally criticizes the authorities’ foreign policy, from the peace agenda to relations with various power centers. The peace agenda is characterized as defeatism, to say the least, and the thesis is actively pushed that if the current government is re-elected, 300,000 Azerbaijanis will move to Armenia for permanent residence, a claim the ruling authorities have repeatedly denied.

In public speeches and interviews, representatives of the party have stated that Armenia must maintain a balanced policy among Russia, the EU, and the US, and build relations with all countries and organizations from which Armenia can benefit, without presenting a clear agenda for diversification. At the same time, they have sharply criticized the Armenian authorities’ policy toward Russia. Nonetheless, this force is perceived as pro-Russian, with its connections to Russian business and political circles frequently highlighted, and they face accusations of utilizing Russian narratives in the domestic political struggle and contributing to the preservation of Armenia’s dependency.

The Armenia Alliance, led by the second President of Armenia, Robert Kocharyan, puts forward a more well-defined agenda. In its electoral program, the political force also promises to build complementary relations with all power centers. At the same time, its foreign policy priority is a new quality of allied relations with Russia, including within the frameworks of the EAEU and the Collective Security Treaty Organization, where Armenia has currently frozen its membership. The program notes elevating the level of strategic partnership with Iran and China, as well as joining BRICS. It also speaks of developing partnership relations with the US and deepening ties with the EU, including visa liberalization. At the same time, the Armenia Alliance accuses the current authorities of ruining relations with Moscow. Its position is that while relations with the West are important, they must not come at the expense of Russia.

Although at first glance these political forces appear to offer engagement with all power centers without a pronounced foreign policy vector, the depth of the relationships they propose varies significantly. In the program and statements of the ruling party, the balancing act is more pronounced, backed by a clear plan to deepen relations with the EU and the US. Conversely, in the statements of the two main opposition forces, the balance is heavily tilted toward Russia and the preservation of membership in current integration blocs.

It is noteworthy that in the same IRI polls, 61 percent of respondents stated that Armenia is moving in the right direction, 28 percent said it is moving in the wrong direction, and 11 percent did not answer the question. It is important to note that in the February 2026 poll, 47 percent of people responded that the Republic of Armenia was moving in the right direction, while 41 percent said the wrong direction. The numerical gap between those selecting the right and wrong directions was also narrow in the 2024 and 2025 polls. However, in recent months, public opinion has effectively swung toward endorsing the current political course.

France was identified as the most important foreign policy partner by 39 percent of respondents, followed by Russia at 35 percent, the EU at 34 percent, Iran at 29 percent, and the US at 27 percent. Compared to the previous poll, the approval ratings for the EU and France have risen, while those for Russia and the US have declined. It is important to emphasize that this survey was conducted before Rubio’s visit and the signing of the latest agreements. Meanwhile, in the top political threats, Russia ranks third, immediately behind Azerbaijan and Turkiye. Finally, 58 percent of respondents expressed support for Armenia’s pro-European course.

In conclusion, we can emphasize that given the nature of the pre-election campaign, the 2026 parliamentary elections will be the most critical in the history of the Republic of Armenia from the perspective of the country’s vision and strategic choice. It can also be viewed as a referendum on whether to support or reject the course adopted by the current authorities. These elections will demonstrate the extent to which Armenian society is prepared to bear the cost of strategic sovereignty. Diversification is not just a beautiful slogan; it is hard, daily work that requires building alternative energy, logistics, and economic channels without exposing the country to new geopolitical shocks. The outcome of the vote will provide the answer to whether Armenia will succeed in forging a resilient and independent foreign policy.

Source: Ms. Varduhi Harutyunyan is an Armenian international relations specialist with expertise in foreign policy diversification, European integration, and information warfare. Her work focuses on navigating Armenia’s strategic realignments and media manipulation dynamics. Her LinkedIn can be found here.


Senior figure from Karapetyan’s Strong Armenia Alliance detained on money lau

OC Media
June 3 2026

A senior member of Russian–Armenian tycoon Samvel Karapetyan’s Strong Armenia Alliance, Alik Aleksanyan, has been arrested and remanded to pre-trial detention for two months on suspicion of money laundering and bribing people to attend political rallies.

If convicted, he could face up to 12 years in prison.

Aleksanyan, who has appeared prominently in the alliance’s election campaign but is not running for parliament, was reportedly excluded from the party list due to Armenia’s ban on dual citizens serving as MPs.

According to Armenia’s Investigative Committee, Aleksanyan used the Karapetyan-affiliated Preservation of National Values in Our Way NGO, which he headed, to ‘recruit participants’ for rallies linked to Karapetyan and the Strong Armenia Alliance between September 2025 and May 2026.

Investigators allege that the scheme was disguised as legitimate employment. Authorities claim Aleksanyan hired around 1,400 people through the organisation’s regional branches across Armenia.

Between October 2025 and March 2026, the organisation allegedly received ֏1.6 billion ($4.4 million), €230,000 ($260,000), and $75,000 from organisations affiliated with Karapetyan, including the Tashir Charitable Foundation. Investigators claim the funds, transferred as ‘donations’ and ‘loans’, were proceeds generated from criminal activity.

According to the Investigative Committee, ‘during the same period, in order to legitimise a particularly large amount of money of criminal origin under the pretext of legal activity’, Aleksanyan paid employees salaries and service fees while materially incentivising them to participate in demonstrations and rallies.

Authorities further allege that many of the employees either did not perform any work or visited the NGO’s offices only occasionally, without ‘realising the nature and purpose of their functions in the public organisation’.

Later, Aleksanyan reportedly dismissed the employees and, in total, allocated over ֏763 million ($2.1 million) as their salaries. Investigators have questioned around 500 people as part of the case.

His arrest comes days ahead of the 7 June parliamentary elections and amidst dozens of investigations launched by Armenian authorities in recent months into alleged vote-buying, prohibited charitable activity during the election campaign, and payments allegedly given to people for participation in rallies linked to Karapetyan and his political bloc.

‘They are committing another act of stupidity, another unlawful action. There isn’t a single person on our team who would even know how to launder money’, Karapetyan said in a press briefing after Aleksanyan’s arrest.

Explainer | Who is Samvel Karapetyan, the Russian–Armenian billionaire whose empire is under siege

Karapetyan himself was charged with money laundering in July 2025, which came on top of earlier charges of calling for the seizure of power from the state.

In a video message recorded before his arrest and published afterwards, Aleksanyan claimed the case stemmed from the government’s ‘fear, weakness, helplessness’.

Separately, Armenian authorities have announced several vote-buying investigations involving individuals affiliated with Strong Armenia, Prosperous Armenia, and Armenia Alliance — all major opposition groups.

Karapetyan’s alliance, according to polls, is expected to be the ruling Civil Contract’s main challenger in the upcoming elections.

Who’s who in Armenia’s 2026 parliamentary elections?

In late April, another senior Strong Armenia Alliance member, Artur Avanesyan, was arrested on suspicion of electoral bribery. Although not a candidate, Avanesyan is described by the alliance as the head of its security team, responsible for planning the party’s security policies.

Turkish Press: Türkiye, Armenia business leaders meet in Kars amid normalizat

Hurriyet, Turkey
June 3 2026

Türkiye, Armenia business leaders meet in Kars amid normalization efforts

Business leaders from Türkiye and Armenia gathered in the eastern border province of Kars on June 3 for a meeting aimed at strengthening economic cooperation and exploring new trade opportunities as the two countries continue efforts to normalize relations.

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Haberin Devamı

The event brought together representatives of chambers of commerce, business organizations and companies from both countries, focusing on trade, industry, logistics, tourism and regional connectivity. Following formal speeches, participants held bilateral business meetings to discuss potential partnerships and investment opportunities.

The gathering comes amid broader efforts by Türkiye and Armenia to improve ties, including recent discussions on reopening transportation links and restoring railway connections between the neighboring countries.

Meanwhile, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed bilateral ties and regional issues in a phone call, Türkiye’s Communications Directorate said on June 2.

During the call, Erdoğan said the normalization process between Ankara and Yerevan was continuing through steps aimed at launching direct trade between the two countries.

The conversation came days after Pashinyan pledged to complete Armenia’s normalization process with Türkiye if reelected in the country’s June 7 parliamentary elections.

Türkiye and Armenia have no formal diplomatic relations, and their shared border has been closed since 1993.

Armenia, Azerbaijan and the unfinished peace

Engelsberg Ideas
June 3 2026
Armenia, Azerbaijan and the unfinished peace
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  • June 3, 2026
  • Thomas de Waal
  • <ul class="gmail-flex gmail-

  • Themes: Geopolitics
  • After two military defeats and the loss of Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia is betting on peace with Azerbaijan and a future beyond Russia.

    The South Caucasus is beginning to shed some of the gloomy epithets that have clung to it over the years. It is no longer ‘conflict-wracked’ or ‘turbulent’ and sometimes nowadays even the opposite. Since the start of the Iran conflict at the end of February, flight maps have shown a narrow band of aeroplanes swarming across the mountainous region between the Black and Caspian Seas, as they avoid both Russia and Iran. This is now a region between other people’s conflicts and less defined by its own.

    The major reason for optimism is that Armenia and Azerbaijan are slowly moving towards a peace agreement that would see them normalise relations for the first time since they both became independent with the end of the Soviet Union. The conflict between them that dates back to 1988 is over. When the closed Armenia-Azerbaijan and Armenia-Turkey borders finally open, that will turn the South Caucasus from a roadblock into a hub, a through-route for East-West connectivity and transit.

    The picture is far from perfect. Russia is a diminished presence in the region but is still trying to flex the muscles of a hegemon, demanding that Armenia show loyalty or face economic punishment. The third country in the region, Georgia, is moving backwards, away from being an open, functioning, pro-European democracy towards being a closed one-party state led by a kleptocratic elite – although this self-isolation strangely also helps drive Armenia-Azerbaijan normalisation.

    The Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process came at great human cost, after renewed bouts of displacement and destruction in the last six years. The status quo was broken because Azerbaijan inflicted two heavy military defeats on the Armenian side, in the second of which, in 2023, it captured the Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing the flight of its 100,000 Armenian inhabitants. That physically erased the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which had been the main cause of contention between the two countries, now enabling them to recognise each other’s territorial integrity.

    Although a return to conflict now looks highly unlikely, full peace is not yet guaranteed. The immediate future of the process currently relies on the success or failure of one charismatic but erratic individual, Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan. He and his Civil Contract party face parliamentary elections on 7 June, which are also a plebiscite on his pursuit of a peace process with Armenia’s historic enemy.

    In an age where multipolarity has replaced multilateralism, the region is a laboratory of sorts for a new kind of transactional politics exercised by small states. The idea that the region is bipolar, caught in a binary clash between Russia and the West, does not apply today – apart from in the minds of Kremlin strategists. Instead the South Caucasus is a geopolitical marketplace. The European Union, China, the Gulf States, India, Turkey and the United States are all present here. In this crowded field, Russia is now one among many.

    Each of the three South Caucasus nations is diversifying its options in its own way, having chosen a distinctive strategy.

    Pashinyan is seeking a diversification of Armenia’s foreign policy options, attempting an experiment of living without reliance on Russia. Prior to 2020, it was a very different country. Armenia was still the victor in its conflict with Azerbaijan, defending the territorial gains it made in the conflict of the 1990s, but at the cost of closed borders with both Azerbaijan and Turkey and a tight and almost suffocating alliance with Russia.

    Armenia is now learning that defeat can have benefits. Having struggled with successive semi-authoritarian regimes, it is now the most democratic of the three countries in the region, the place where you can breathe most freely. It can open up more if Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party wins the election, if he successfully completes the peace process with Azerbaijan and Turkey and if the closed borders re-open.

    Pashinyan’s pitch to voters promotes the idea of what he calls ‘Real Armenia’: one that prospers within its internationally recognised borders, makes no territorial claims against Azerbaijan and Turkey, diversifies its international partners, and loosens the grip Russia holds over the country’s economy, security sphere and energy provision.

    This is a repudiation of the doctrine that was orthodoxy among Armenian politicians and citizens for three decades: that Armenia must make sacrifices in order to ensure the secession of the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenian-populated but internationally recognised as being part of Azerbaijan.

    The corollary of that strategy was dependence on Russia. In a process that began in the 1990s and deepened in the 2000s, Armenian presidents struck a Faustian bargain with Moscow, which preserved their wins on the battlefield in return for military and economic support. Russia kept a military base, provided border-guards, supplied energy and took over almost all major economic assets in the country. In 2013, former president Serzh Sargsyan came close to signing an Association Agreement with the European Union, but abruptly changed his mind when Putin reminded him of the security implications of offending Russia. Overnight Sargsyan was persuaded to join Russia’s Eurasian Economic Union instead.

    That period has now ended. The fall of Karabakh heralded the end of the era of broader Russian influence in the region, as Moscow lost the biggest lever it had over both Armenia and Azerbaijan – the conflict between them.

    Pashinyan has exploited this moment and Russia’s distraction in Ukraine. He is building relationships not just with Europe, but with other partners, such as India. He has already frozen Armenia’s participation in the Russia-led security pact, the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO). He has met Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky and said publicly that he is not Russia’s ally when it comes to Ukraine.

    The Kremlin’s response to this has been belated and somewhat desperate. Asked about Armenia’s developing relationship with Europe by journalists on 9 May, Putin said that his problems with Ukraine had started because of Europe and warned the Armenians that they ‘should not take it to the extreme’.

    As in Moldova last year, Moscow is now trying to influence the June election. In a last-minute intervention, Russia, along with Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, issued a statement demanding that Armenia make a choice about whether it wants to be a member of the Eurasian Economic Union or the EU. Russia has found pretexts to halt imports of Armenian agricultural products and mineral water on sanitary grounds – weapons that Moscow has previously used against Georgia. It can also raise the price of gas

    These measures will be painful for Armenia, but the experience of Georgia and Moldova shows that these kind of tactics alienate more voters than they persuade. Since the loss of Karabakh and the inaction of Russian peacekeepers in defending it in 2023, Armenians have registered unprecedented levels of distrust in their former big patron.

    Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party is likely to win the elections, more or less by default, not because the prime minister is still popular – he isn’t – but because Armenia’s opposition is even less competent or impressive and too associated with Russia. One opposition party is associated with the discredited former president Robert Kocharyan. Another is led by the Russian-Armenian businessman Samvel Karapetyan, who is currently under house arrest, and has delegated his inexperienced son and nephew to conduct the campaign for him, with feeble results.

    Winning the election may be the easy part for Pashinyan, however.

    The 17-point agreement on normalising relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, negotiated bilaterally by the two sides, was initialled by Pashinyan and Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev in the White House last August. There are already positive effects: there have been no casualties reported on the borders of the two countries, where shooting incidents used to be frequent. A border demarcation commission has picked up momentum. Experts and academics have begun to visit each other’s countries.

    However, Azerbaijan still has terms. Before he puts his signature to the peace agreement and it goes for ratification and takes full effect, Aliyev insists that Armenia must have a new constitution, removing a reference to the 1990 Declaration of Independence, which affirms Armenia’s union with Nagorno-Karabakh. That, says Aliyev, constitutes a territorial claim over Azerbaijan and must not be present in Armenia’s constitution if peace is to be achieved.

    That means that, for full peace to be ratified, Pashinyan must first win two thirds of the seats in parliament in the June election, thereby gaining a majority that enables him to call a referendum on a new constitution. Then he must win the referendum as well. As any British person can tell you, when asked a binary question many voters will find reasons to vote No rather than Yes, some of which are only tangentially related to the actual question being asked. Most Armenian experts think that the vote will be a very close call.

    This gives the Russians a target to aim at. Moscow is trying to interfere by financing opposition parties and using social media to spread false rumours about the current government. Even if the ruling party wins, Russian efforts may depress turnout and give the impression of a victory that lacks full legitimacy, paving the way for a No vote in the constitutional referendum.

    The government’s new western friends are doing their best. The European Political Community summit in Yerevan in May, attended by the leaders of the European Union, France, Great Britain and Canada among others, followed by the first-ever EU-Armenia summit, signalled where Europe’s preference is, even if none of the leaders mentioned the election. Financial assistance for infrastructure projects and moves towards visa liberalisation are designed to reward Armenians for their new pro-European sentiments.

    US president Donald Trump was less circumspect. In a post on Truth Social on 28 May, he announced, ‘Nikol has my COMPLETE and TOTAL Endorsement for Re-Election on 7 June 2026.’

    The United States stepped in as the unexpected new broker last year. In contrast to some of the overblown claims about other successful peace agreements, Washington’s involvement in this process is substantial and more likely to deliver results.

    In early 2025 both Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders were coming to conclusions, separately, that Russia’s traditional claim to be the main broker must be rejected. US envoy Steve Witkoff’s offer to convene a top-level meeting was therefore warmly received.

    The White House meeting on 8 August made the United States the guarantor of a new planned transit 43-km route connecting Azerbaijan with its exclave of Nakhchivan across southern Armenia. The route is named the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP). It was the main rail artery between the two countries shut down by the conflict more than 30 years ago, hurting both Armenia and Nakhchivan. Restoring it will give a major economic boost to both countries, begin to build economic inter-dependence between them, and also provide an alternative east-west railway route between Turkey and Central Asia.

    Will all this attention and effort be enough? There is still much that can undo it. The US effort is real, and has been followed by visits to the region by both Vice-President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio this year. Unusually for a foreign project under this administration, the US government has found financing for it and is collaborating with European governments. The naming of the route after himself should lengthen Trump’s attention span and drive the ambition to complete the railway before his presidential term ends in 2028.

    Unfortunately, the Trump White House has slowed down the implementation of TRIPP with its disastrous war in Iran. The projected railway is, after all, situated right on the Armenia-Iran border and it is not possible to put US technical experts on the ground at the moment. All sides want to make progress, but will have to do so within new constraints.

    The prime minister’s biggest immediate problem is not Russia or the attention of his new allies but probably himself. Ever since he came to power on a wave of street protests in 2018, he has made it all about him. His style of government is extremely personalised rather than institutionalised. His behaviour is erratic. Though more democratic than his Azerbaijani counterpart, he shares the same paternalistic assumption that the public must be told what to think and not engaged in dialogue.

    On the campaign trail Pashinyan has lashed out angrily at those who disagree with him, especially Armenian refugees from Karabakh. In one incident, he lambasted a Karabakhi who was later arrested on suspicion of hooliganism. ‘You should have gone and died in place of our children,’ Pashinyan shouted at the man. This will cost Pashinyan votes and augurs badly for his efforts to build a consensus in Armenian society about the peace process with Azerbaijan.

    Then there is Azerbaijan, which holds the keys to a successful peace process.

    Azerbaijan emerges from the tumult of the last five years as a victor, having recovered all the territory it lost to Armenian forces in the 1990s. It has also made itself the most powerful country in the region thanks to very successful multilateral diplomacy. Somehow, in the last six years President Aliyev has signed bilateral agreements not just with Turkey, its traditional ally, but with Russia, the European Union and the United States. In April, he hosted Ukrainian leader Zelensky.

    In February, Aliyev said that the war is over with Armenia ‘and it is a very good feeling’. Azerbaijan has started allowing wheat and fuel to be delivered to Armenia for the first time. Azerbaijani and Armenian experts have begun visiting the other side’s capitals, with the official blessing of the government.

    However, by insisting that Armenia must hold a constitutional referendum over a legal issue that few people had noticed, the Azerbaijani side is signalling that it is still very cautious, unsure if it is ready for this momentous step. Azerbaijan is still refraining from approving bigger confidence-building measures to support Armenia. In particular, Aliyev successfully uses all the resources he can to dissuade his close ally, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, from normalising relations with Armenia before Azerbaijan does. He does so even though most of the Turkish foreign establishment is keen to take advantage of the good fortune of having Pashinyan in power and Russia’s distraction in Ukraine to make a historic deal with Armenia.

    The paradox of Azerbaijan is that its foreign policy is a model of open diplomacy, while domestically the country has never been so closed. Six years after COVID, the pandemic is still used as an excuse to keep all land borders sealed. At a time when it badly needs international assistance to help rebuild and resettle the territories ravaged by Armenian forces and recovered by Azerbaijan in 2020, the Baku government has pushed almost all the UN agencies and the International Committee of the Red Cross out of the country. As it reaches out to the European Union, it keeps political prisoners who pose no threat to the authorities in jail.

    Most difficult of all for Azerbaijan’s leader is the challenge that, having spent more than 20 years attacking Armenian ‘aggressors’ and ‘occupiers’ in almost every speech he made, having driven out the occupiers, Aliyev has now begun to commit himself to a new script of partnership with the enemy. Azerbaijan can no longer be defined as a country that must mobilise against Armenia. It must find a new unifying national narrative – a task made more difficult by the fact that the oil-boom years are over and there is no longer a big cash surplus to spend on keeping the public happy.

    All this is making Azerbaijan temporise and take things slowly. Yet time is of the essence. The peace process still needs the commitment of Pashinyan, the active involvement of Washington and Europe and the non-interference of Russia, none of which can be taken for granted in the coming years. The forthcoming election in Armenia is only the next test of many before we can speak confidently not just of the end of conflict, but of full peace in the South Caucasus.


    https://engelsbergideas.com/essays/armenia-azerbaijan-and-the-unfinished-peace/

    Putin issues warning to Armenia over European ambitions ahead of election

    Independent, UK
    June 3 2026

    Putin issues warning to Armenia over European ambitions ahead of election

    The Russian leader issued the warning before a parliamentary election in Armenia on Sunday

    Andrew Osborn

    President Vladimir Putin has read long-term ally Armenia the riot act: persist in wanting to join the European Union and you can kiss goodbye to cheap Russian oil and gas.

    The Russian leader issued the warning before a parliamentary election in Armenia on Sunday, which polls suggest the party of Western-leaning Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan will win.

    It is not an empty threat. Armenia, a ⁠landlocked country of 3 million with centuries-old ties to Russia, is highly dependent on Moscow, which has imposed temporary bans on important Armenian exports before the vote.

    But Putin’s words also reflect an uncomfortable truth for Moscow. Waging war in Ukraine with no end in sight after more than four years of fighting, Russia is mounting an intensifying and increasingly complex rearguard action around the world to try to retain its geopolitical clout.

    While Moscow focuses resources on the war in Ukraine, the European Union and the United States have been courting ⁠and squeezing traditional Russian allies and interests, both in what Moscow sees as its own backyard and ⁠also further afield.

    From Havana and Caracas, from Belgrade to the steppes of Central Asia, and even in west Africa, where Moscow’s forces are helping fight Islamists, Russian influence is under pressure.

    Russian Concern

    Armenia, a longstanding recipient of Russian largesse and home to a Russian military base, signed ⁠a partnership agreement with the U.S. last month and Pashinyan won fulsome endorsement from President Donald Trump.

    Armenia, once part of the Soviet Union, also passed a ⁠law last year setting out a legal basis for it to ‌join the EU.

    “Of course we are deeply concerned about the Armenian authorities’ policy of rapprochement with the Euro-Atlantic community whose core policy is directed against Moscow,” Maria Zakharova, Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, told reporters.

    “The Anglo-Saxons are openly boasting about ‘detaching’ Armenia, as they say, from the bear hug of ‘authoritarian Russia'”.

    Russian war bloggers and analysts ‌say Russia is facing a concerted and largely Western attempt – as in other regions across the ‌world – to squeeze it out of the wider South Caucasus region, of which Armenia is part.

    “In such conditions, the question of adapting Russian strategy (to embrace soft power and economic levers) becomes key,” said Russian analytical Telegram channel “The Secret Chancery”, which has over 400,000 followers.

    One source close to the Russian government said Moscow could see that countries such as Armenia were “all waiting to see how the war (in Ukraine) ends” ⁠and some were already building new ties while Moscow was largely distracted elsewhere.

    For Moscow, Armenia’s hosting a meeting of European leaders including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy last month was the last straw.

    Since then, Russia has temporarily banned the import of many Armenian goods, warned it might cut off cheap oil, gas and rough diamond exports, suggested Armenia could be expelled from the Eurasian Economic Union, a Russian-led trade bloc, and recalled its envoy to Armenia for consultations.

    Dmitry Medvedev, the outspoken deputy chairman of Russia’s powerful Security Council, also hinted that Armenia’s prime minister could, if not careful, suffer the fate of Bolshevik revolutionary Leon Trotsky whom Josef Stalin had killed with an ice pick.

    Russia Under Pressure

    Meanwhile, Trump, who Moscow hoped would have strong-armed Ukraine into suing for peace by now, has instead targeted three traditional ‌Russia-friendly countries – Iran, Venezuela and Cuba.

    His actions have lifted oil prices, offering some respite to the war-battered Russian economy, but they have also exposed Moscow’s inability to meaningfully help old friends. Havana has received only one shipment of Russian oil so far.

    In Europe, Moscow complains it ‌faces an increasingly hostile continent that is re-arming while holding out ⁠the prospect of EU membership to countries where Russia once held sway.

    Putin ally Viktor Orban lost power in Hungary in April, leading to ⁠the unlocking of billions of euros in EU funding for Budapest. Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, another Russian ally, is under pressure, with moves under way to abolish visa-free entry for Russians as Belgrade seeks ‌EU membership.

    Russia is also feeling the heat in Transdniestria, a Russian-garrisoned separatist enclave which is internationally recognised as part of Moldova, whose ‌current political leadership wants to join the EU.

    Russia is also worried about what it casts as encroaching Western influence in Central Asia, while in the South Caucasus Putin is trying to move past a rocky period in relations with oil-producing Azerbaijan, which has strengthened ties with the West in recent years. (Editing by Timothy Heritage)

    Initiation of prosecution against the former commanders of the corps in the case of March 1

    June: 2, 2026

    Before the elections, Nikol Pashinyan calls for “sensitivity” to the army

    About two weeks ago, during one of the pre-election meetings, Nikol Pashinyan once again announced that the case of March 1 was revealed, and the second president of the Republic of Armenia, Robert Kocharyan, should “sit down”.

    It should be noted that former high-ranking officials of Armenia, including the second president Robert Kocharian, former Minister of Defense Seyran Ohanyan and former Secretary General of the CSTO and former head of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces Yuri Khachaturov are involved in this case.

    In the criminal case of March 1, accusations were also brought against former police chief of RA Valeriy Osipyan, former deputy police chief of Yerevan Robert Melkonyan and others.

    Read also

    • Have the additions for the Su-30s promised by Suren Papikyan arrived?
    • How was the army on the ruins? I do not agree with that assessment. David Tonoyan
    • One day they will remove the song “Eraz im yerkir htori” declared the anthem of the army by the initiative of Vazgen Sargsyan. Gegham Manukyan

    RA General Prosecutor’s Office on June 1 message spread, where it is reported that in the case of March 1, public criminal prosecutions were initiated against the former commanders of 4 army corps: Levon Yeranosyan, who at that time was the commander of the 3rd Army Corps of the RA Armed Forces and his in the testimony noted that the army was used to protect the most important facilities, Haykaz Baghmanyan, who was the commander of the 2nd Army Corps, Valery Grigoryan: as commander of the 4th Army Corps, Poghos Poghosyan, who was the commander of the first army corps in 2008, moreover, the latter has been dead for 2 years.

    Days before the elections, the initiation of criminal prosecution against the generals in the case of March 1 is not a pressure on the military and the army, no matter how retired they are?

    ՀՀ ԱԺ «Հայաստան» խմբակցության անդամ Գեղամ Մանուկյանը 168.am-ի հետ զրույցում նշեց.

    «Ամեն ինչ ծիծաղելի կլիներ, եթե այսքան ողբերգական չլիներ: Այս 8 տարիներին իշխանությունն ամեն իրեն հարմար պահի հայացքն ուղղում է Մարտի մեկի դեպքերին և շարունակում շինծու քրեական գործեր հարուցել: Հետո դրանք մնում են դարակներում՝ փոշիների տակ, և սա մինչև փրկօղակ մի առիթով իշխանությունները դարձյալ կհիշեն այդ իրադարձությունները: Ինչ վերաբերում է բանակային 4 կորպուսների նախկին հրամանատարների դեմ հարուցված քրեական գործերին, բարոյական բոլոր սահմաններն անցնող գործողություն է, որովհետև առնվազն Պողոս Պողոսյանի դեպքում գործ ունենք հանգուցյալ գեներալի հետ, ուստի տրամաբանական որևէ բացատրություն չունի քրեական հետապնդում հարուցելը: Բայց իշխանությունը շարունակում է բանակի դեմ իր արշավը, և զինվորականների դեմ այս 4 գործը նաև մեսիջ է ընտրություններից առաջ մնացյալ զինվորականներին, որոնք այդ տարիներին տարբեր մակարդակի ծառայություն են իրականացրել կամ պաշտոն զբաղեցրել, որ ամեն պահի իշխանությունը կարող է սլաքներն ուղղել նաև իրենց դեմ և նորանոր քրեական գործեր հարուցել»:

    Հավելենք, որ 2018 թվականի իշխանափոխությունից հետո այդ ժամանակ դեռ ՀՀ պաշտպանության նախարար Դավիթ Տոնոյանը հայտարարել էր, որ բանակը ներգրավված է եղել մարտիմեկյան գործողություններին, բայց արտակարգ դրության շրջանակներում իրենց պարտականությունները կատարելու համար:

    ՀՀ ԶՈՒ ԳՇ նախկին պետ Արտակ Դավթյանն էլ, ով 2008-ին եղել է ՀՀ ԶՈՒ ԳՇ օպերատիվ վարչության պետը, վստահեցրել էր, որ բանակին կրակելու հրաման չի տրվել։

    Մարտի 1-ի գործով իր in the testimony the general noted that the department he headed did not receive information about the use of weapons by the units of the RA Armed Forces, moreover, he noted that he did not remember the involvement of the Armed Forces units.

    During the events of March 2008, former chief of the General Staff of the RA Armed Forces Onik Gasparyan He held the position of Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the 4th Army Corps of the RA Armed Forces and in the case of March 1, he was substantive, worthy of an officer and truthful. gave a sigh including clearly presented the grounds for the use of the Armed Forces, on the basis of which the protection of special objects was assigned, including the concern that there could be provocations under the guise of political processes.

    At the same time, Onik Gasparyan expressed an opinion that the process of controlling internal political grievances should have been entirely entrusted to the military police, that is, the army should not have been involved at all.

    In this context, we cannot ignore the former Minister of Defense of the Republic of Armenia Arshak Karapetyan In the case of March 1 the testimonywho headed military intelligence in 2008. In particular, in his testimony, he claimed that Serzh Sargsyan also proposed to create a separate military administration headed by Yuri Khachaturov. He also considered unacceptable the arrival of border corps and Defense Forces units to Yerevan, etc. After some time, Arshak Karapetyan was appointed Nikol Pashinyan’s adviser, and much later, RA Defense Minister. On one occasion, Pashinyan noted that he appointed him as the head of the defense department, taking into account his Russian connections. Recently, Vilen Gabrielyan, a member of the Communist Party of Ukraine, considered it a mistake to appoint both Arshak Karapetyan and The appointment of Vagharshak Harutyunyan.

    And Arshak Karapetyan decided to publish the correspondence between him and Nikol Pashinyan related to the 44-day war. But this is a separate topic for discussion. And Nikol Pashinyan, it is not excluded, to pressurize the military with a new 44-day curfew. to think about cases, although those who made noise have not yet reached the finish line and some accusations, they say, “collapsed” during the trial.

    Armenia’s election could steer the country away from its EU path

    Polskie Radio, Poland
    June 3 2026
     03.06.2026 14:00

    As early as the first Sunday in June, Armenians will vote for a new parliament. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is seeking to stay in power after recently taking action against his political opponents. Among them are a former president who “failed to resolve the Karabakh conflict constructively” and an Armenian-Russian magnate linked to the FSB.

    “In previous elections, we saw that voters critical of Pashinyan ultimately voted for him because, in the end, any other alternative was even worse for them,” says political geographer Vincenc Kopeček.

    Although the situation around Nagorno-Karabakh calmed down after last year’s declaration between Yerevan and Baku, the issue has re-emerged in Armenia’s election campaign.

    “Opposition parties first claim that they are not against peace, but then say that if they come to power, they will begin to reassess the peace process. I want to say quite openly and without mincing words that this would mean war – with consequences for Armenia not only in the form of territorial losses, but also the loss of sovereignty,” stated the current Armenian Prime Minister Pashinyan in March.

    The enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh had been largely controlled by ethnic Armenians since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. In 2023, however, neighbouring Azerbaijan violated the previous ceasefire and launched a lightning offensive. Russia brokered a new ceasefire, which nevertheless strongly favoured Azerbaijan, and 120,000 ethnic Armenians were forcibly displaced from their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Facts: The war over Nagorno-Karabakh

    In the early 1990s, Nagorno-Karabakh, then predominantly inhabited by Armenians, broke away from Azerbaijan with Yerevan’s support and declared the internationally unrecognised Republic of Artsakh. The First Nagorno-Karabakh War ended with a ceasefire in 1994.

    Azerbaijan managed to regain much of Nagorno-Karabakh after the second war in 2020. The conflict continued at a lower intensity in the following years, and after another successful offensive in 2023, Azerbaijan brought the entire region back under its control.

    Last August, Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev signed a declaration at the White House, in the presence of US President Donald Trump, in which they committed to peace. Since meeting Trump, Yerevan and Baku have taken steps to end the conflict, which has lasted for almost four decades, although they have not yet signed a formal peace agreement, Reuters noted. The Foreign Policy (FP) also points out that the agreement would grant Azerbaijan unrestricted trade access through Armenian territory – in Armenia, this concession is widely seen as a reward for Azerbaijan’s military actions, adds FP.

    Peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan could be scuppered by a condition that isn’t even in the agreement (in Czech)

    Pashinyan’s opponents

    “Those responsible for the deaths of thousands of our heroes and for the surrender of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) must also be held to account,” stated former Armenian President Robert Kocharyan on this matter, as part of his criticism of the current government. And he is not stopping there; in March, Kocharyan announced his candidacy with his Alliance of Armenia.

    However, Vincenc Kopeček, a political geographer from the Department of Social Geography and Regional Development at the Faculty of Science, University of Ostrava, points out that it is Kocharyan, who served as head of state from 1998 to 2008, who bears a significant share of the blame for Armenia’s failure to resolve the Karabakh conflict constructively, and, according to the expert, also drove the country into Russia’s embrace.

    Kocharyan claims that his bloc “supports peace with Azerbaijan”, but he also says that it “must be based on genuine security guarantees”.

    In the elections, Pashinyan will also face competition from the Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, who owns Electric Networks, Armenia’s leading energy company.

    Karapetyan was arrested last year shortly after expressing his support for clergy of the Armenian Apostolic Church. At the end of June last year, a number of clergymen, led by Archbishop Bagrat Galstanyan, were arrested – Pashinyan announced at the time that the security forces had foiled an attempted coup. The clergy had openly called for a “change to Pashinyan’s regime”. It was whilst in custody that Karapetyan founded his party, Strong Armenia.

    The crisis between the government and the church in Armenia is escalating. A Russian billionaire has also been arrested (in Czech)

    “Pashinyan’s voters have accepted the crackdown on the Church, and the question after the election will be whether, in the event of a Pashinyan victory, the Armenian Apostolic Church will undergo a process of renewal, or whether the Church will become a pro-Russian conservative stronghold,” noted Kopeček.

    Pashinyan’s crackdowns on opponents

    FP notes that Pashinyan is doing everything he can to prevent his party’s defeat and is using “tactics from an autocratic system” to do so — under his rule, opposition members have been arrested and critical journalists detained. The prime minister is also undermining the independence of the judiciary, FP adds, while also pointing to interference in the functioning of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

    The Caucasus-based website OC Media highlighted Pashinyan’s campaign in Yerevan, during which an altercation took place between the Prime Minister and a participant at the meeting, a refugee from Nagorno-Karabakh. The man was reportedly later arrested on suspicion of hooliganism.

    According to Foreign Policy, one might expect the EU to oppose “Pashinyan’s electoral manipulation” as a violation of its principles. However, the Armenian prime minister claims he is fighting against Russian influence, a claim European leaders believe, and they pay little attention to Pashinyan’s attacks on democracy, FP reports.

    However, the EU has repeatedly stressed the need for judicial reform, the fight against corruption, greater accountability of the Armenian government to its citizens, and transparency.

    Pashinyan has repeatedly labelled his opponents, including Karapetyan, as “foreign agents”. This month, the Russian independent website The Insider (TI) published an investigation alleging that Karapetyan had links to the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB).

    The investigation cited leaked databases which are said to show that when Karapetyan was issued with an international passport in Russia in 1999, his place of work was listed as the FSB Information Centre.

    Following the publication of the investigation, Karapetyan claimed that Pashinyan was behind it – Pashinyan himself shared The Insider’s report on his social media accounts.

    Russia’s role

    The Euronews website also reports that Armenia has been the target of a Russian disinformation campaign for several months. Analysts from the Russian-language project of Polish broadcaster TVP, Vottak, have calculated that a total of 343 fake videos had been published by the beginning of May, describing this Russian operation as one of the most extensive in recent years – second only to the campaign recorded during last year’s Moldovan elections.

    According to researchers, the campaign began in early March and was part of the so-called ‘Matryoshka’ – a pro-Kremlin disinformation operation that is increasingly making use of artificial intelligence.

    The central narrative of the fake videos claims that Pashinyan’s victory – whose campaign focuses on a pro-European stance – could trigger a war between Armenia and Russia.

    Armenia has rejected Russian ‘humanitarian aid’ ahead of the elections. The EU is to send a mission to the country (in Czech)

    The Swedish media outlet Blankspot also reported on the acquisition of a Russian document outlining a plan to undermine the popularity of the Armenian government by amplifying pro-Russian narratives and increasing the number of pro-Russian individuals influencing public opinion in the Caucasian country.

    Reuters reports that Russian officials have in recent months discussed sending Armenians living in Russia to the South Caucasus country to vote for Pashinyan’s opponents, according to five sources cited by the agency. According to Reuters, the Russian authorities estimated the cost of transporting 100,000 voters at approximately 50 million US dollars.

    Is Armenia heading for the EU?

    Meanwhile, the growing cooperation between the European Union and Armenia was demonstrated in Yerevan at the first EU–Armenia summit held in May demonstrated the growing cooperation between the European Union and Armenia. It was attended by, for example, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, European Council President António Costa and French President Emmanuel Macron.

    The meeting was characterised by a shared commitment on both sides to strengthening bilateral relations, according to Euronews. Armenia’s actual accession to the EU is not currently expected, commented political geographer Kopeček, adding that it is more a matter of a mental rapprochement. However, a European orientation is evident.

    According to Kopeček, a shift away from the path towards the EU could occur if a member of the Karapetyan family were to take the prime minister’s seat. “It probably wouldn’t be a complete U-turn; even under Kocharyan, Armenia sought constructive, pragmatic relations with the EU, but it would certainly put a stop to any potential EU integration or closer cooperation. Above all, it would mean a strengthening of Russian influence in the energy sector,” says Kopeček.

    Armenia has come closer to joining the European Union only ‘in spirit’ (in Czech)

    The absence of a dominant leader from the opposition

    Pashinyan came to power in 2018 – yet, according to Foreign Policy, his future as prime minister is uncertain. Although a February poll predicted that his Civil Contract party would win between 20 and 30 per cent of the vote, a further 30 per cent of voters were still undecided, according to the poll at the time.

    If no party secures a stable parliamentary majority, either on its own or in a coalition, the vote will proceed to a second round. In that case, the opposition parties could join forces and defeat Pashinyan, writes FP. Karapetyan’s Strong Armenia is said to be the strongest challenger to Pashinyan’s party.

    A strong Armenia is seeking to strengthen ties with the Kremlin, highlighting Russia’s important role in the Armenian economy and the traditional military relations between the two countries, reports FP. Kocharyan’s Alliance of Armenia is also seeking closer ties with Moscow, the website adds.

    Kopeček also counts Karapetyan’s relative Narek among the prominent figures in the opposition. And Gagik Tsarukyan – an oligarch and former boxer from the Prosperous Armenia Party – is a “long-standing populist figure in Armenian politics”.

    “But there isn’t a single dominant leader. However, if the opposition were to win, these three (Karapetyan, Kocharyan and Tsarukyan, ed.) would probably manage to come to some sort of agreement,” Kopeček also believes.

    Armenia is expanding trade with Azerbaijan and risks becoming dependent on it (in Czech)

    “The latest polls show that undecided voters are shifting towards Pashinyan, who looks set to win. But this may not be enough for him to secure a majority in parliament, as the pro-European opposition is unlikely to make it into parliament. Robert Kocharyan’s party may not make it in either, which would then pave the way for the formation of a single-party pro-European government led by Pashinyan,” says Kopeček.

    “In the last election, however, we saw that undecided voters – even those critical of Pashinyan – ultimately voted for him because any other alternative was, in the end, even worse for them. That could happen again now. I can also imagine a minority government tolerated by the pragmatic Tsarukyan, but that would probably not last long,” adds Kopeček.

    An article written by Klára Machková (CT), initially published on 1 June 2026 at 07:02 (CEST)

    From Cognac to Apricots: These Armenian Products Are Now Off-Limits in Russia

    The Moscow Times
    June 3 2026

    Russia has restricted sales or imports of Armenian produce, flowers, mineral water and alcoholic products over the past month, ramping up economic pressure on the South Caucasus country as it pursues closer European integration.

    Ostensibly imposed over alleged health and safety violations, the restrictions come ahead of parliamentary elections in Armenia, where Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party is up against an array of Russia-friendly opposition groups. 

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has invoked what he called the “Ukrainian scenario” to warn Armenia against pursuing closer ties with the EU, and said it is “impossible” to be in both the EU and the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union.

    Here is a running list of all the products that Russia has banned:

    Flowers: On May 22, Russia’s agriculture watchdog Rosselkhoznadzor restricted the import of flower products from Armenia.

    Wine and cognac: On May 25, consumer safety watchdog Rospotrebnadzor suspended the sale of several Armenian alcoholic products made by Armenian producers Vedi-Alco, the Abovyan Brandy Factory and the Shakhnazaryan Wine and Brandy House.

    Produce: On May 28, Rosselkhoznadzor restricted the import of “fresh tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, fresh herbs and strawberries originating in or shipped from Armenia.” This list was later expanded to include cherries, apricots, plums, peaches, nectarines and fresh grapes. The ban also includes the transit of these products to other Eurasian Economic Union countries. On Wednesday, Rosselkhoznadzor banned the import of pome fruits — apples, pears, quince and other fleshy fruits — eggplants, potatoes and dried fruits.

    Mineral water: On May 29, Rospotrebnadzor blocked the sale of Jermuk, a popular Armenian mineral water brand, citing “excessive levels of bicarbonate ions, chlorides and sulfates.”

    Fish: Rosselkhoznadzor on Monday suspended seafood imports from all but two of Armenia’s processing plants. Following a week of field inspections of fish processing facilities in Armenia and of aquaculture farms specializing in trout breeding and rearing, which half of the companies refused to undergo, the agency said: “Armenia must suspend all veterinary certification for shipments of live fish and seafood products bound for Russian recipients from all Armenian companies.”