June 1 2026
Putin Calls Pashinyan on His Birthday, Two Leaders Agree to Meet as Armenia Votes
Putin rang Pashinyan on his birthday Monday, and both sides confirmed they would meet in person — days before Armenia’s June 7 vote that could redefine the country’s geopolitical direction.
YEREVAN — The call came on his birthday. Russian President Vladimir Putin rang Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Monday to mark the occasion, but the readout from Yerevan left little doubt the conversation traveled well beyond pleasantries.
The two leaders agreed to continue their discussions at the earliest opportunity in the format of a face-to-face meeting, the Armenian government said in a statement. Pashinyan, who turns 51, also extended gratitude to Putin for what the Prime Minister’s Office described as his “balanced positions on a number of issues that have given rise to misinterpretations” — diplomatic phrasing that acknowledged, without naming, the turbulence that has defined Moscow-Yerevan relations in recent months.
The Kremlin’s readout added that the two leaders also discussed the outcome of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council session held on May 29 in Astana — a summit Pashinyan pointedly skipped, sending his deputy prime minister instead, citing the Armenian election campaign. That decision did not go unnoticed in Moscow.
The timing of Monday’s call is hard to separate from the calendar. Armenia goes to the polls on June 7 in a parliamentary election that has been cast, fairly or not, as a referendum on Yerevan’s geopolitical future. Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party has campaigned on deepening ties with the European Union. Russia and its EAEU partners — Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan — issued a joint statement at Astana formally calling for Armenia to hold a national referendum on whether to remain in the Russian-led trade bloc or pursue EU membership. The EAEU bodies were instructed to report by December 2026 on the consequences of a possible Armenian suspension.
For Pashinyan, navigating that pressure in the final week of a campaign has required visible equilibrium. His thank-you to Putin for a “friendly tone” reads less as gratitude and more as a public signal to Armenian voters: that Moscow’s temperature, at least for now, has not turned hostile to his continued leadership.
The agreement to meet in person carries its own weight. In April, when Pashinyan visited the Kremlin on April 1 for talks, the two leaders had already agreed on a meeting in the second half of June. That plan now appears to be holding, according to Monday’s readout. Whether it survives the election result is a separate question. Last week, the Kremlin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters that no contacts between Putin and Pashinyan were planned — a statement that has since been overtaken by the phone call itself.
The broader context is one of managed friction. Moscow has made no secret of its preference for a change of government in Yerevan, and the weeks before the election saw an unusual escalation of public pressure. Russia’s Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu publicly accused Armenia’s leadership of pursuing an “unfriendly policy” toward Russia while reminding Yerevan that it receives gas, grain, and fuel at prices far below market rates. Putin himself warned at a May 9 press conference that Armenia must resolve the EU-or-EAEU question before consequences resembling those seen in Ukraine become unavoidable.
Into this charged atmosphere, U.S. President Donald Trump inserted an unexpected endorsement on May 27, offering what he called his “COMPLETE and TOTAL” backing for Pashinyan’s reelection. The intervention drew immediate attention in both Yerevan and Moscow, and has complicated Russia’s framing of the election as a binary choice between Russian and Western alignment.
Trump’s endorsement of Pashinyan came days after Armenia’s EAEU partners issued their Astana ultimatum, and the sequencing has fueled speculation about coordination between Yerevan and Washington. Neither side has confirmed it.
Armenia’s relationship with the Eurasian Economic Union has been in a declared phase of what Pashinyan himself called “constructive transformation” since April. Yerevan insists its EU engagement does not, for now, contradict EAEU membership. Armenia reaffirmed its commitment to operate within the EAEU in good faith at the Astana summit through Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan, even as the bloc was demanding a referendum.
What remains unclear is what the “controversial issues” were for which Pashinyan thanked Putin. The readout does not specify. The April talks in Moscow had surfaced tensions over election eligibility rules for Russian passport holders — a dispute Putin made public in an unusually direct televised exchange. Whether Monday’s call resolved those grievances, deferred them, or simply papered over them ahead of June 7 is not yet known.
A face-to-face meeting in late June, if it proceeds, would take place after Armenian voters have already rendered their verdict. Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party, polling around 25 percent ahead of the vote, faces a fragmented opposition that includes pro-Russian factions backed by figures Moscow has signaled it supports. Whether Pashinyan arrives at that meeting as a reconfirmed premier or as a lame duck will determine, in no small part, what either side can actually offer the other.
—Inputs from Sputnik.
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