Monday, January 26 2026 15:18
Marianna Mkrtchyan

Atlantic Council: TRIPP  to reduce  Russia and Iran`s economic  influence in South Caucasus

Atlantic Council: TRIPP  to reduce  Russia and Iran`s economic  influence in South Caucasus

ArmInfo.  According to  the Atlantic Council article on TRIPP, the successful implementation of TRIPP would make it cheaper and faster to ship products and  critical raw materials from Central Asia to Europe and beyond. "But  cheaper, faster, better connectivity also carries some risks."

The Center's analysts write that the South Caucasus has at times  swelled into a hotbed for sanctions evasion to both Russia and Iran,  and possibly even evasion schemes between Moscow and Tehran. "TRIPP  can be a success as regional trade route, but realizing its full  potential relies on demand for trade between Europe and Asia. High  transport costs along the Middle Corridor due to geopolitical  instability or project's economics-or an unexpected increase in  willingness to ship goods via Russia or Iran-could derail TRIPP's  prospects," the article states.

It also points out that the finalization of  TRIPP is not only an  achievement of the Trump administration, but also a new peak of   Nikol Pashinyan's shift away from Russia. "For thirty years, Armenia  relied solely on Moscow for security, leading to Russian domination  of the country's internal and foreign policies. When Russia failed to  intervene during the 2020 Karabakh War, Pashinyan made a change.  Understanding that a peace deal with Azerbaijan was the only way to  remove Russian leverage and, therefore, achieve true independence,  the Armenian prime minister staked his political future on such a  deal. At the same time, he inked major defense deals with India,  France, Greece, and Cyprus, among others," the Center's analysts  state.

The article also emphasizes that the United States is the only power  capable of truly offering Armenia an exit ramp from Russian  domination. "By conducting peace negotiations under US auspices and  placing US interests directly over TRIPP, Pashinyan and Aliyev have  protected the most sensitive part of the deal with a US deterrent.  But more than that, they tied the success of the peace process to  closer relations with Washington," the article continues.

At the same time, the Center's analysts write that Russia is not the  only neighbor disturbed by a growing US presence in the South  Caucasus. "Iran has consistently called any change of the status quo  to its northern border with Armenia a "red line." In 2022, Tehran  even staged large-scale military exercises on the Azerbaijani border  when it thought Baku may try to take over the area by force.  Recently, Ali Velayati, a senior advisor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,  threatened  to turn the South Caucasus into a "graveyard for the  mercenaries of Donald Trump." However, Iran is weaker than it has  been in decades, and Pashinyan has taken advantage,"  the article  continues.

The Center's analysts write that as protests threaten the stability  of the Iranian regime, Tehran weakly voiced concern that Washington  could use TRIPP "within the framework of its security policy," a far  cry from red lines, graveyards, and military exercises. 

"Last month, Pashinyan sent Deputy Foreign Minister Vahan Kostanyan,  responsible for TRIPP coordination with Washington, to Israel to  discuss the corridor. Kostanyan's visit showed that Pashinyan would  not make the same mistake with Iran as it did with Russia, instead  choosing to align with the US- backed regional order.  Such moves  come at a key time. With parliamentary elections set for 2026,  Pashinyan needs to show that his pursuit of peace and ties with the  West have been successful," the article continues. It emphasizes that  incoming stability and regional integration with Azerbaijan and  Turkey have the potential of transforming Armenia into a transit  country and providing easy access to the European market. It is also  argued that Russia has organized against Pashinyan ahead of the  elections in the way it knows best-information operations. 

"Nonetheless, the coming implementation of the TRIPP route looks like  a major success in the Trump administration's commercially focused  foreign policy, and it is a model of constructive partnership that  the White House should use elsewhere around the world. The project  promises openings for American companies to build a small but crucial  link to knitting the Middle Corridor together, a boon for the United  States, as well as its partners in the South Caucasus and Central  Asia. Sidelining Russia and Iran in the process may also decrease  their ability to exert economic pressure in the region, giving  leaders such as Pashinyan and Aliyev a freer hand to exercise their  sovereignty and pursue their countries' best interests," the Center's  analysts added.