Last updated: May 29, 2026
The International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) is a multimodal trade route linking Russia to the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean through Iran, providing an alternative to the Suez Canal route for goods moving between South Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. The corridor combines rail, road, and sea links and has gained strategic relevance as Western sanctions on Russia and Iran have pushed both countries to deepen economic cooperation with non-Western partners.
For Armenia, the INSTC represents a potential economic opportunity and a strategic hedge. Armenia’s position between Russia to the north and Iran to the south makes it a natural transit country for north-south trade flows, and deeper integration with the corridor could reduce the economic costs of Armenia’s landlocked geography. The corridor is often discussed alongside the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP), a US-backed connectivity initiative that competes with the INSTC for defining the region’s economic architecture.
Groong covers the INSTC in the context of Armenia’s foreign policy choices, its relationship with Iran and Russia, and the broader competition between Western and non-Western connectivity frameworks in the South Caucasus. Episodes in this category address the corridor’s economic potential, the political conditions attached to participation, and what deepened INSTC involvement would mean for Armenia’s Western integration ambitions.
Below are all Groong episodes tagged with INSTC.
Episode 256 | Recorded: May 22, 2023
Armeniaâs Diplomacy and Corridor Politics
Episode 93 | Recorded: October 18, 2021
Armeniaâs Diplomacy and Corridor Politics
Episode 93 | Recorded: October 18, 2021