Borders

Last updated: June 10, 2026

Armenia’s land borders span approximately 1,570 kilometers and connect it to four neighboring countries: Azerbaijan (910 km to the east and north), Turkey (311 km to the west), Iran (910 km to the south and southeast), and Georgia (164 km to the north). The borders define Armenia’s access to regional markets, energy supplies, and transit options. Turkey has maintained a unilateral blockade of Armenia since 1993, closing its land border and airspace. Following the ceasefire agreements of 1994 and 2020, border demarcation and delimitation with Azerbaijan have remained contested, with disputes over enclaves, territorial control, and transit corridor status creating persistent tensions.

Armenia’s borders determine its survival as a sovereign state. The loss of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) in a 24-hour offensive on September 19–20, 2023, ethnically cleansed the enclave of its more than 150,000 Armenian inhabitants and reduced Armenian territorial control to the Republic proper. The primary obstacle to the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process is Azerbaijan’s precondition that Armenia amend its constitution to remove references to Artsakh and recognize Azerbaijani territorial claims. Border demarcation and delimitation, while technically complex and lengthy, is proceeding but Armenian opposition parties criticize the Pashinyan government for accepting Azerbaijan’s sequencing priorities in determining which areas are demarcated first. Beyond the constitutional demands and demarcation process, Azerbaijan demands implementation of transit arrangements that would connect mainland Azerbaijan to Nakhijevan across Armenian Syunik province. Armenia fears that such arrangements, marketed as TRIPP (Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity) by Washington, would cement Azerbaijani and Turkish control over Armenian territory and sever Armenia’s ability to maintain open transit with Iran through Syunik , a critical lifeline for trade and energy independent of hostile neighbors.

The Zangezur Corridor label itself reflects geopolitical competition over naming rights and intent. The United States frames the corridor as TRIPP, a transit project designed to connect Asia to Europe while bypassing Russia and Iran and serving American strategic interests in accessing critical minerals and limiting Chinese and Russian influence. Azerbaijan and Turkey call it the “Zangezur Corridor,” terminology rooted in pan-Turanic ambitions to integrate the region under Turkish-Azerbaijani leadership. This is not a semantic difference. Implementation would allow Turkey to link directly with Azerbaijan and Central Asia, completing a corridor that many Armenian analysts see as a threat to Armenian sovereignty rather than a neutral infrastructure project. The Iran War that erupted in early 2026 has frozen TRIPP’s implementation by making the corridor’s passage through Syunik strategically volatile, but it has not resolved the underlying question of whether Armenia will eventually be forced to accept transit arrangements that benefit Turkey and Azerbaijan more than Armenia itself.

Armenia’s border situation defines its options for trade, energy, and geopolitical alignment. With Turkey’s border closed since 1993, Armenia cannot access Europe overland and remains dependent on air and sea routes through Georgia and Iran. Armenia’s southern border with Iran remains open and functional, and the northern border with Georgia is also open. These two neighbors provide Armenia’s only reliable transit routes for goods and energy independent of hostile powers. Turkey’s continued closure of its border means that any corridor arrangement through Syunik that severs Armenia’s direct access to Iran would eliminate Armenia’s most critical independent trade pathway. In this context, border demarcation with Azerbaijan becomes more than a technical boundary matter: it determines whether Armenia can survive as a sovereign state or whether it will be economically strangled by hostile neighbors and forced into submission. Fyodor Lukyanov and Varuzhan Geghamyan have analyzed how the corridor question and border disputes shape Armenia’s choices between competing blocs, and how Armenia’s weakness in border negotiations reflects its broader loss of leverage in a region where Russia no longer guarantees its security and the West offers support without binding commitments.

Groong episodes that include this tag

Below are all Groong episodes tagged with Borders.

Aleksandr Khachaturyan on the 2021 Armenian Elections

Guest:

Aleksandr Khachaturyan who is a Managing Partner at TK & Partners, in Yerevan. In 2016 he served as an advisor to the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia, Karen Karapetyan, and was CEO of the Center for Strategic Initiatives, advising the government on key economic and public administration reforms and strategies. He serves as a board member at ID Bank and various non-profits, and lectures on corporate finance law at the French University of Armenia (FUA). He holds law degrees from Boston University, FUA, and Jean Moulin

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Aleksandr Khachaturyan on the 2021 Armenian Elections

Guest:

Aleksandr Khachaturyan who is a Managing Partner at TK & Partners, in Yerevan. In 2016 he served as an advisor to the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia, Karen Karapetyan, and was CEO of the Center for Strategic Initiatives, advising the government on key economic and public administration reforms and strategies. He serves as a board member at ID Bank and various non-profits, and lectures on corporate finance law at the French University of Armenia (FUA). He holds law degrees from Boston University, FUA, and Jean Moulin

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ANN/Groong Week in Review - June 13, 2021 Topics:

  • Meltdown at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Philip Reeker’s Visit to the Region
  • 15 POWs Return Home
  • Latest Election Poll Results

Guests:

  • Asbed Kotchikian
  • Tevan Poghosyan

Guest(s):

Hosts:

  • Hovik Manucharyan
  • Asbed Bedrossian

Episode 70 | Recorded: June 13, 2021 https://groong.org/podcasts/WiR-20210613.html

ANN/Groong Week in Review - June 13, 2021 Topics:

  • Meltdown at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Philip Reeker’s Visit to the Region
  • 15 POWs Return Home
  • Latest Election Poll Results

Guests:

  • Asbed Kotchikian
  • Tevan Poghosyan

Guest(s):

Hosts:

  • Hovik Manucharyan
  • Asbed Bedrossian

Episode 70 | Recorded: June 13, 2021 https://groong.org/podcasts/WiR-20210613.html

Guests:

Topic:

  • This Conversations on Groong episode is our first Live Show on Clubhouse and hopefully it will be an informative, as well as an enjoyable discussion for all. We will be talking about the politics of opening the paths of communication, lifting blockades, and the rumors, facts, and fallacies around so-called “corridors” through each other’s countries.

Episode 83 | Recorded: June 14, 2021

Guests:

Topic:

  • This Conversations on Groong episode is our first Live Show on Clubhouse and hopefully it will be an informative, as well as an enjoyable discussion for all. We will be talking about the politics of opening the paths of communication, lifting blockades, and the rumors, facts, and fallacies around so-called “corridors” through each other’s countries.

Episode 83 | Recorded: June 14, 2021

Armenia, Superpowers and The New Cold War

A Conversation with:

Guest:

  • Dr. Pietro Shakarian, who is a Cleveland-based historian of Russia and the Soviet Union, with a focus on Soviet Armenia and the Caucasus during the era of Nikita Khrushchev’s Thaw.

Topics

  • Democracy-building in the Post Soviet Space
  • NATO and expansion
  • Russia in the Caucasus
  • China and the New Silk Road through Iran and Georgia

Guest(s):

Hosts:

  • Hovik Manucharyan
  • Asbed Bedrossian

Episode 68 | Recorded: June 4, 2021 Website: https://groong.org/podcasts/CoG-20210608.html

Armenia, Superpowers and The New Cold War

A Conversation with:

Guest:

  • Dr. Pietro Shakarian, who is a Cleveland-based historian of Russia and the Soviet Union, with a focus on Soviet Armenia and the Caucasus during the era of Nikita Khrushchev’s Thaw.

Topics

  • Democracy-building in the Post Soviet Space
  • NATO and expansion
  • Russia in the Caucasus
  • China and the New Silk Road through Iran and Georgia

Guest(s):

Hosts:

  • Hovik Manucharyan
  • Asbed Bedrossian

Episode 68 | Recorded: June 4, 2021 Website: https://groong.org/podcasts/CoG-20210608.html

Guest(s):

Iran: Foreign Relations and Upcoming Elections A Conversation with Robert Markarian

The South Caucasus comprises Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia. The three regional powers surrounding them are Russia to the north, Turkey to the west, and Iran in the south.

Iran has been largely quiet about events on its northern border with Armenia and Azerbaijan, due largely to its marginalization on the world stage because of the Western economic sanctions but also because Iran is home to millions of ethnic Azeris and any perceived support for Armenia could result in additional

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