India, Iran, and Armenia: Trilateral Cooperation and Geopolitics of Trade Routes
By Aditi Bhaduri Recently, on 20 April, the first trilateral political consultations between the Ministries
By Aditi Bhaduri Recently, on 20 April, the first trilateral political consultations between the Ministries
Dr. Mher Sahakyan is Director, China-Eurasia Council for Political and Strategic Research, Armenia. He was previously an AsiaGlobal Fellow, Asia Global Institute, University of Hong Kong. His most recent co-edited volume is China and Eurasia: Rethinking Cooperation and Contradictions in the Era of Changing World Order. Routledge, 2021.
A ceasefire was agreed through a joint statement by the President of Azerbaijan, Prime Minister of Armenia, and Russia’s President, on 9 November, leading to the deployment of several thousand Russian peacekeepers to the enclave and border regions.
By Reuters France wants international supervision to implement a ceasefire in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict amid
Turkey has accused Armenia of occupying Azeri lands and pledged solidarity with its ethnic Turkic kin in Azerbaijan.
The book flags an important issue that Indian policy makers will need to seriously reflect on and formulate policy for a complex region where new players –- Turkey, Iran, China — are entering the fray with increasing implications for India’s own defence, security and connectivity.
Situation in Karabakh indicates necessity of cooperation between Turkey, Russia, the Turkish leader said
Armenian PM says decision was based on combat realities, after six weeks of bloody fighting and Azerbaijani advance
“We are certainly worried about the internationalization of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and the involvement of militants from the Middle East,” Russian Foreign Minister said in an interview
The decision for a ceasefire was agreed upon after eleven grueling hours of talks between Lavrov and his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts – Z.G. Mnatsakanyan and D.A. Bairamov.