By Neil Hauer in Yerevan For proponents of Armenia’s ongoing move towards the West, it’s been a big couple of weeks. On January 9, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced that his government ...
The geopolitical chessboard of the South Caucasus is being reshaped as Armenia boldly shifts its orientation toward the West. January has witnessed a flurry of strategic moves: Yerevan approved a bill ...
Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan stated that Azerbaijanis left Armenia voluntarily during the Soviet Union's ...
The Armenian army enriches itself with Western equipment Armenia's shift in approach is already evident in the military sphere. Efforts are underway that confirm plans to move away from Soviet-era ...
However, Galuzin emphasized that Armenia's rapprochement with the EU is incompatible with its EAEU membership.
January 2025 may go down as Armenia’s geopolitical inflection point, a time when Yerevan decisively moved to shun its longtime protector Russia and pin its political and economic future on integration ...
And now, apparently, Pashinyan has decided to deceive the West and the [Armenian] pro-Westerners.
On February 27, 2025, the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, under the auspices of His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan ...
The findings reveal stark contradictions to the Armenian Foreign Minister's statements, affirming that Western Azerbaijanis were victims of forced expulsion and violence, not voluntary migration.
Russia has always looked out for Armenia, unlike the West, so trying to "play both sides of the fence" is counterproductive, as evidenced by the loss of Karabakh, an Armenian public activist said.