海角大神

In Armenia鈥檚 elections, a choice: Stay in Russia鈥檚 orbit or engage with the West

Supporters of Russian Armenian tycoon Samvel Karapetyan wave an Armenian flag during a rally against incumbent Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan at Republic Square in Yerevan, Armenia, June 3, 2026.

Anthony Pizzoferrato/AP/File

June 5, 2026

In 2020, Armenia suffered a huge military defeat at the hands of its historic rival Azerbaijan. Three years later, Azerbaijan compounded the indignity by overrunning the breakaway statelet of Nagorno-Karabakh, displacing its ethnically Armenian inhabitants.

For many Armenians, the losses were a deep humiliation, and they laid the blame at the feet of their prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan 鈥 all the more so because he signed a peace deal framework at the White House last August between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Now, Mr. Pashinyan is trying not just to realize peace, but to dramatically 鈥 and controversially 鈥 shift the foreign policy that has guided the Maryland-sized nation of 3 million since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. He is seeking a thaw with historic enemies Azerbaijan and Turkey while also reducing Armenia鈥檚 dependence on its traditional ally Russia, by building new links to the European Union and the United States.

Why We Wrote This

As Armenia goes to the polls Sunday, voters face a thorny dilemma. Do they back a prime minister who led them during embarrassing military defeats, but is seeking a brighter future? Or do they opt for pro-Russia parties supporting the status quo?

And on June 7, Armenians will get to vote in parliamentary elections that will decide whether Mr. Pashinyan, the man who lost the war, will get a chance to execute his vision of peace.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a choice between the current trajectory versus the possibility of a reversal,鈥 says Anna Ohanyan, an international relations professor at Stonehill College in Easton, Massachusetts.

In Trump鈥檚 second term, financial gain has become a defining feature

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan (left) takes a selfie with a voter during a campaign stop at the cultural center in Sevan, Armenia, June 2, 2026. Mr. Pashinyan has been promoting deepening ties with Europe and the United States and peace with Azerbaijan as he seeks reelection in Armenia鈥檚 June 7 parliamentary elections.
Alexander Thompson

A painful peace proposal

Mr. Pashinyan, a pugilistic former newspaper editor, came to power in 2018 after leading massive street protests against the rigid, authoritarian elite who had run Armenia since independence. He undertook a series of democratic reforms, but he stuck to Armenia鈥檚 alliance with Russia.

Then in 2020, Azerbaijan resoundingly defeated Armenian forces that had long occupied a swath of western Azerbaijan to protect nominally independent Nagorno-Karabakh. The Kremlin brokered an agreement to keep the enclave out of Azerbaijani control and deployed 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to guard it. Despite the Armenian defeat, Mr. Pashinyan won a comfortable victory in a 2021 snap election.

But much has changed since. In 2023, Azerbaijan launched a new offensive and quickly overwhelmed Nagorno-Karabakh with little resistance from the Russian peacekeepers or Moscow 鈥 a betrayal for many Armenians. Some 100,000 residents fled to Armenia. And Mr. Pashinyan has engaged in an ugly feud with the Armenian Apostolic Church, further driving down his popularity.

Nonetheless, showed his Civil Contract party with a wide lead of 32% of the vote against a divided and equally unpopular opposition, with many people, especially young people, still undecided.

At a campaign stop in the lakeside town of Sevan, an hour鈥檚 drive north of the capital, Yerevan, Mr. Pashinyan told a few hundred supporters that a peace deal with Azerbaijan, combined with promised U.S. support and investment, will bring peace and prosperity to Armenia.

One God, one prayer, and a promise

Some voters are amenable, if reluctantly.

鈥淚鈥檒l put it this way: I don鈥檛 love one or the other, [but] we鈥檝e got to choose so that Armenia develops,鈥 says Aram Sargisan, a jeweler from Yerevan who indicated he鈥檒l vote for Civil Contract.

Mr. Pashinyan is pushing to finalize the peace deal and to normalize relations with Turkey by dropping historical territorial claims and accepting what he calls 鈥淩eal Armenia鈥 鈥 the 11,500 square miles within its internationally recognized borders. Reopening trade with Turkey and Azerbaijan will allow the economy to flourish, Mr. Pashinyan argues.

But it is a tough pitch. The Ottoman government in Turkey killed around 1 million Armenians in events widely considered to be a genocide during World War I, and the very recent military humiliation against Azerbaijan still stings.

Anna, a design student at Yerevan State University who declined to give her last name, isn鈥檛 sure for whom she will cast her ballot. But she is certain of one thing: It won鈥檛 be for Mr. Pashinyan. Reconciliation with Turkey and Azerbaijan isn鈥檛 possible, says Anna, who lost great-grandparents in the genocide. 鈥淚 cannot forget what they did to Armenia,鈥 she says.

U.S. President Donald Trump (center) shakes hands with Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev (left) and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan during a trilateral signing ceremony in the State Dining Room of the White House, Aug. 8, 2025, in Washington.
Mark Schiefelbein/AP/File

Reshaping Armenia鈥檚 relations

Sunday鈥檚 elections have earned unprecedented attention from the White House and the Kremlin, since the prime minister鈥檚 international plans would significantly shift the balance of power at the crossroads of Europe and Asia.

Mr. Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev signed a peace deal framework at the White House Aug. 9 with U.S. President Donald Trump sitting between them. Key to the peace is the 鈥淭rump Route for International Peace and Prosperity,鈥 a trade corridor that will run through southern Armenia, connect Azerbaijan鈥檚 mainland to its exclave of Nakhchivan, and then continue on to Turkey.

The corridor will be developed by the United States, representing a bridgehead for American influence in a region Russia considers well within its sphere of influence.

The Trump administration views the peace deal framework as one of its key foreign policy achievements and is squarely behind Mr. Pashinyan.

Vice President JD Vance came to Armenia in February, the highest-level American official to ever visit the country, and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio jetted into Yerevan May 26 to hype the deal. On May 28, Mr. Trump posted a social media endorsement of Mr. Pashinyan, calling him a 鈥済reat friend and Leader.鈥

Russian President Vladimir Putin, meanwhile, has dialed up pressure on Mr. Pashinyan as he has made overtures westward.

In recent weeks, Russia has of discounted gas to Armenia, from the country, and whether it wants to join the EU or stay in a Russia-led customs union 鈥渁s soon as possible.鈥

Russia is also conducting an influence campaign against Mr. Pashinyan, and mulled a plan to fly thousands of Russian Armenians back to the country to vote against him, , citing Western intelligence officials.

Yet, despite talk of a pivot to Europe and the U.S., Armenia鈥檚 economy remains intertwined with Russia鈥檚, and Russia has a military base in Armenia.

鈥淎rmenia does not want to abandon relations with Russia,鈥 says Sargis Khandanyan, a Civil Contract member of Parliament. 鈥淥ur foreign policy is a foreign policy of balances.鈥

鈥淚 think the voters are already experiencing the positive benefits. ... We鈥檝e seen developments we couldn鈥檛 imagine,鈥 says Sargis Khandanyan, an Armenian member of Parliament, of the peace deal framework signed at the White House.
Alexander Thompson

Russian gravity

Mr. Pashinyan鈥檚 principal opponents in the election, who are closely aligned with Russia, vehemently oppose the prime minister鈥檚 peace plans with Azerbaijan.

Armenian Russian oligarch Samvel Karapetyan, leader of the Strong Armenia party, has emerged as Mr. Pashinyan鈥檚 main challenger. He wants to scrap the peace framework with Azerbaijan in favor of retaining firm ties with Russia.

Mr. Pashinyan is ruining the alliance with Russia, said Karen, a veteran of the Karabakh conflict who declined to give his last name, as he waited for a Strong Armenia rally to begin on June 3. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been friends with the Russians for so many years.鈥

Though thousands of his supporters marched at the rally, Mr. Karapetyan did not; he was under house arrest, and appeared only by video link. Authorities on charges of calling for the overthrow of the government. Mr. Karapetyan has called the allegations politically motivated.

Yet neither former President Robert Kocharyan, Mr. Pashinyan鈥檚 other pro-Russia challenger who is widely viewed as a relic of a previous era, nor Mr. Karapetyan have offered a concrete alternative to Mr. Pashinyan鈥檚 peace plan, says Yevgenya Paturyan, a political science professor at the American University of Armenia in Yerevan. 鈥淥nly those who really hate Pashinyan and want him out at any cost are willing to follow these guys,鈥 she says.

So, the unpopular prime minister and his 鈥淩eal Armenia鈥 vision may come away with victory on Sunday.

鈥淲e want peace, to be friends with everyone, to open the borders, to trade,鈥 Pashinyan supporter Aida Navasardyan said as the prime minister鈥檚 campaign bus pulled out of Sevan. 鈥淣o one wants war anymore.鈥