Moscow Retains Influence Despite Armenian Election Setback

Newsfire

June 29 2026
Dimitris PapafotisEditor in Chief
JUNE 29, 2026 AT 8:05 PM

According to Washington Examiner, the June 7 vote represented far more than a routine domestic electoral contest. Following devastating military defeats at the hands of Azerbaijan in 2020 and 2023 over the contested Nagorno-Karabakh region, Pashinyan executed a dramatic pivot away from nominal ally Russia and toward Washington and Brussels while simultaneously pursuing reconciliation with Baku. The strategic shift reached its apex in August 2025 when Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders met at the White House to initial a framework agreement designed to resolve decades of hostilities.

Armenian voters opted to sustain that Western trajectory. Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party captured 49.81 percent of the vote, securing 64 seats in the 105-member National Assembly. Strong Armenia, the leading opposition faction backed by Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, finished second with 23.27 percent and 29 seats. The Armenia Alliance led by Robert Kocharyan, which likewise champions closer Moscow ties, claimed 12 seats.

Constitutional Arithmetic Blocks Peace Treaty Path

The election outcome presents Pashinyan with a critical parliamentary arithmetic problem. Baku has made clear that any final peace treaty hinges on Armenia amending its constitution to eliminate language asserting territorial claims over Nagorno-Karabakh. Constitutional amendments require approval by two-thirds of parliament before proceeding to a national referendum. Civil Contract’s 64 seats fall well short of that threshold, forcing Pashinyan to seek coalition partners among opposition factions that oppose his policies.

Even if the prime minister assembles the necessary votes for a referendum, Moscow stands ready to deploy its information warfare apparatus to influence the outcome. The Kremlin enjoys particularly favorable terrain for such interference given that many Armenians who support Western integration remain deeply reluctant to formally renounce constitutional claims to Karabakh.

Kremlin Information Warfare Escalates

The scale of Russian electoral interference provides a clear preview of potential referendum tactics. Kremlin information warfare units deployed unusually early to Armenia, generating tens of millions of views on content attacking Pashinyan. The Armenian Apostolic Church became entangled in the pressure campaign as opposition figures and pro-Kremlin networks weaponized Pashinyan’s disputes with senior clergy to portray his Western orientation as an assault on Armenian identity and national survival.

Russian state media moved swiftly after polls closed to cast the election results as illegitimate. Moscow characterized the vote as tainted by Western meddling and what it termed unprecedented pressure on opposition parties, while amplifying unverified allegations of repression and fraud. Strong Armenia has demanded annulment of the results while Kocharyan’s alliance pledged to mount legal challenges.

Economic Dependency Gives Moscow Leverage

Outside Belarus, few former Soviet republics remain as thoroughly integrated into Russia’s economic orbit as Armenia. This entanglement explains both why Yerevan’s Western pivot matters so profoundly to the Kremlin and why completing that transition will prove exceedingly difficult.

Despite bilateral trade declining from 12.4 billion dollars in 2024 to 7.7 billion dollars in 2025, Russia still accounts for roughly one-third of Armenia’s total foreign commerce. Russian state energy giant Gazprom controls Armenia’s gas transmission and distribution infrastructure while supplying 85 percent of the country’s natural gas and 62 percent of petroleum products. The Metsamor nuclear facility, which generates approximately 40 percent of Armenian electricity, depends on Russian state nuclear corporation Rosatom for life-extension work scheduled through 2036.

The Kremlin has already begun activating this economic leverage. Moscow imposed extensive restrictions on Armenian exports ahead of the June 7 vote and promptly expanded those measures following Pashinyan’s victory. Russia has additionally threatened to revoke Armenia’s preferential pricing for natural gas, noting that European market rates substantially exceed current Armenian payments.

Putin Issues Stark Warning

In May, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Armenia to decide as early as possible whether it intends to abandon the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union for the European Union, explicitly invoking Ukraine as an example of the consequences awaiting nations that make what Moscow considers the wrong choice.

Russia’s 102nd Military Base in Gyumri maintains approximately 3,500 troops at full strength. While Pashinyan has suspended Armenia’s participation in the Collective Security Treaty Organization, the base operates under a separate bilateral agreement that complicates any complete security decoupling from Moscow.

Moscow still has leverage after Armenian election defeat

Washington Examiner

June 28 2026
By Keti Korkiya

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan survived Russia’s best efforts to influence this month’s election against him. That allows Pashinyan to continue guiding his small South Caucasus nation’s Westward turn. Still, he lacks the decisive mandate needed to finalize peace with longtime foe Azerbaijan, and Moscow retains multiple levers of power to keep Yerevan trapped in Russia’s sphere of influence.

The vote was always more than a domestic contest. After Azerbaijan trounced Armenian forces in the 2020 and 2023 conflicts over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Pashinyan charted a sharp break with Armenia’s nominal ally, Russia. Yerevan instead turned toward the United States and Europe while seeking to make peace with Baku. This culminated in a historic August 2025 meeting at the White House, where the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders initialed a framework agreement aimed at ending decades of conflict.

On June 7, Armenians voted to maintain that course. Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party secured 49.81% of the vote, giving it 64 seats in the 105-member National Assembly. The leading opposition party, Strong Armenia, backed by Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, came in second with 23.27% and 29 seats. Robert Kocharyan’s Armenia Alliance, which also favors close ties with Russia, took 12 seats.

Azerbaijan slams ally Israel’s recognition of Armenian genocide

The Hindu, India

June 29 2026

Azerbaijan and Israel are allies but Baku’s closest foreign partner is Turkey and the Caucasus country hinted the move by Israel could hit their bilateral relations

Published – June 29, 2026 11:08 pm IST – Baku

AFP

Azerbaijan on Monday (June 29, 2026) denounced a decision by its ally Israel to recognise the World War I massacres of Armenians as a genocide, a move widely seen as a rebuke by Israel to Turkey.

Azerbaijan and Israel are allies but Baku’s closest foreign partner is Turkey and the Caucasus country hinted the move by Israel could hit their bilateral relations.

The recognition by Israel — announced Sunday (June 28, 2026)— was of “serious concern”, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Armenia has long sought international recognition that the mass killings under the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1917 amounted to a genocide, saying 1.5 million people died.

Turkey strongly denies the accusation of genocide and says that both Armenians and Turks died as a result of World War I. It puts the death toll in the hundreds of thousands.

More than two dozen countries, including the United States, France and Germany, recognise the killings as a genocide.

“Such actions do not contribute to reconciliation or mutual understanding,” Azerbaijan said of Israel’s move.

“Instead, they deepen existing divisions and undermine efforts to achieve lasting peace and stability in the region. We call on the Israeli government to reconsider this decision,” the Foreign Ministry added.

Azerbaijan and Israel cooperate extensively on defence and security measures.

Successive Israeli governments had avoided formally recognising the Armenian genocide, in part to preserve relations with Turkey, once one of Israel’s closest strategic partners in the region.

But since the war in Gaza erupted, Turkey has regularly accused Israel of committing genocide in the Palestinian territory, an accusation Israel strongly denies.

Azerbaijan and Armenia, locked in conflict for decades over the status of Karabakh — an Azerbaijani exclave ruled for three decades by Armenian separatists — have started ratcheting down tensions and taken steps towards finalising a comprehensive peace deal.

Pashinyan: No comment on Israel’s Armenian genocide recognition

BAHA Breaking News

June 29 2026

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan refused to address Israel’s recent decision to recognize the Armenian genocide, Armenpress reported on Monday.

“We see no need to respond because we believe that refraining from entering into the issue of the weaponization of the Armenian Genocide is in the interests of the Republic of Armenia,” Pashinyan briefly noted while speaking at the Board of the Civil Contract Party.

The Armenian genocide was perpetrated by the forces of the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1917. It is estimated that around one million Armenians were murdered or Islamized during the period. As of 2026, 34 countries recognize the genocide, with Israel joining last week.

‘A message to Turkey and Armenian diaspora’: Opinion on Israel recognising Arm

JAM News

June 29 2026
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

The Israeli government has unanimously decided to recognise the Armenian Genocide. Foreign Minister Gideon Saar put forward the proposal. During the cabinet discussion, he said: “It is never too late to do the right thing.”

However, the Israeli parliament must also approve the decision. The Knesset has not yet announced when it will hold the debate.

The Armenian Genocide refers to the mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915. About 2.5 million Armenians lived in the Ottoman Empire before the events. More than half died as a result of mass killings and deportations. Armenia, a number of Western countries and international organisations recognise the events as genocide. Turkey firmly rejects that characterisation.

The Armenian government has not yet commented on the Israeli cabinet’s decision. However, neighbouring Turkey and Azerbaijan have already criticised the move.

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry said Israel was trying to divert international attention from “its own crimes” and what it described as the genocide of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry called on Israel to reconsider its decision. The ministry said the move “does not contribute to reconciliation and mutual understanding, but deepens divisions and hinders the establishment of lasting peace in the region”.

Political analyst Ruben Mehrabyan said the Israeli government’s unanimous decision made it likely that the Knesset would also approve the measure. However, he did not rule out “debate” in parliament.

In his view, the decision to recognise the Armenian Genocide primarily sends a message to Turkey:

“And the message to Turkey is this: your position in no way constrains our calculations. And yes, we stand on the right side of history. Do not try to tell us what to do. Just take a look at yourselves.”

Asked whether the decision could affect the ongoing normalisation of relations with Ankara and Baku, Mehrabyan said:

“In essence, Israel’s decision cannot affect Armenian-Azerbaijani or Armenian-Turkish relations. Armenia will not deviate from its policy of normalising relations with its neighbours, because, despite everything, that policy reflects its existential interests.”


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Political analyst Ruben Mehrabyan notes that Israel is a state founded by and home to Holocaust survivors. He also points out that Jewish scholars played a central role in establishing genocide as a concept in international law. He refers in particular to lawyer Raphael Lemkin, who coined the term “genocide”, and to Franz Werfel, whose novel The Forty Days of Musa Dagh is based on the real-life 53-day defence of Armenian villagers on Musa Dagh during the 1915 genocide.

Mehrabyan argues that the Israeli government’s decision reflects a combination of the country’s moral and political interests, both long-term and short-term.

“This is Israel’s internal decision. Israel, as a state, has made a decision that it could not make before because of its existential interests. Now the country has concluded that it is influential enough to take this step.”

According to Mehrabyan, Israel found itself surrounded by hostile states when it was established.

He says Israeli national security policy has rested on the so-called Periphery Doctrine since the time of the country’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion.

The doctrine sought, among other things, to build positive relations with non-Arab Muslim countries in order to avoid political isolation.

“That is how Israel established relations with Kemalist Turkey and the Shah’s Iran. But today, neither that Turkey nor that Iran exists. Israel also has virtually no rivals left in the Arab world. And nothing remains of its relationship with Turkey,” he said.

Mehrabyan also notes that Israel has developed strategic partnerships with India, the United Arab Emirates, Greece and Cyprus, which he describes as “friendly countries for Armenia”, while relations with Armenia itself “have reached a dead end”.

“Israel has now decided to fulfil its moral duty and open up a broader field for manoeuvre, taking into account new arrangements both in its own region and in neighbouring ones, including our region.”

According to Mehrabyan, Jerusalem’s decision could provide a major boost to closer ties between the Armenian and Jewish diasporas.

“During the Cold War, and because of Israel’s existential interests, the United States, Israel and the Jewish diaspora shared a common position of not putting Turkey in an awkward position. They did not view Armenia as an independent state, but as a Russian outpost. Now the situation has changed,” he said.

Mehrabyan rejects the view that Armenian-Israeli relations face insurmountable tensions.

Supporters of that view often point to Azerbaijan’s use of Israeli-made offensive weapons during the 2020 44-day war. Israel continued supplying arms throughout the conflict. Media reports also claimed that either Israel or Ukraine had supplied Azerbaijan with white phosphorus munitions allegedly used in Nagorno-Karabakh. However, no official evidence has confirmed those claims.

“The Russians supplied the phosphorus. They also approved its use. Russian weapons and Russian political support played the decisive role in the war, as did Russia’s sabotage of Armenia’s entire defence system and subversive actions through its proxies,” he argued.

The analyst also dismisses suggestions that Armenia’s recognition of the State of Palestine in 2024 poses a problem for relations with Israel.

“There is no tension. More than 100 countries have recognised Palestine, and Israel maintains very good relations with many of them.”

He believes nothing now prevents Israel from building even a strategic partnership with Armenia.

“In our region, Israel is diversifying its relationships. It is also, to some extent, aligning them with the US strategy for the South Caucasus, Central Asia and the Middle Corridor.”

Asked whether Azerbaijan could obstruct closer Armenian-Israeli relations, Mehrabyan replied:

“If something reflects the common interests of Armenia and Israel, then no third country, whether Azerbaijan or any other state, will be able to prevent it. Israel has assessed the risks to its highly valuable relationship with Azerbaijan. It has concluded that, even if such a risk exists, it is justified and this step should be taken.”

Mehrabyan says Yerevan and Jerusalem could cooperate in a wide range of areas, from agriculture and water management to high technology. In his view, the two countries should build a strategic partnership gradually, beginning with official reciprocal visits. He stresses that cooperation between Armenia and Israel would not target any third party.

Turkish Press: Armenia declines to respond to Israel’s 1915 vote, Pashinyan wa

Turkey Today

June 29 2026

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said Monday that Yerevan would not respond to Israel’s recognition of the 1915 events as genocide, cautioning that avoiding the “weaponization” of the issue is in Armenia’s core interest.

Speaking at a briefing, Pashinyan said Armenia sees no need to engage with the Israeli Cabinet’s decision, which was approved unanimously on Sunday on a proposal by Foreign Minister Gideon Saar.

The move marked a sharp reversal of decades of Israeli policy that had deliberately withheld the designation, largely to preserve diplomatic ties with Türkiye.

Armenia steps back as regional tensions rise

Pashinyan’s call for restraint stands in contrast to the sharp reaction from Ankara. Türkiye’s Foreign Ministry said Monday that Israel was seeking “to cover up its own crimes” through what it called a politically motivated decision, pointing to Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Gaza and the genocide proceedings it faces at the International Court of Justice.

Türkiye rejects the genocide characterization of the 1915 events, describing them as a wartime tragedy in which both Armenians and Turks lost their lives.

Türkiye has long proposed the creation of a joint commission of historians from Türkiye, Armenia and the international community to examine the 1915 events, arguing that the matter should not be resolved through unilateral political decisions by foreign governments. That position remains unchanged following Israel’s vote.

Armenia avoids commenting on Israeli recognition of the genocide for its use a

Democrata, Spain

June 29 2026

Pashinyan refuses to comment on Israeli recognition of the Armenian genocide, denouncing its political use, while Turkey lashes out against the decision.

The Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinián, has opted this Monday not to publicly comment on the recent recognition of the Armenian genocide, attributed to the Ottoman Empire, approved by the Israeli authorities, considering that these historical events are being used “as a weapon” in the current political arena.

“We do not believe there is a need to respond because we believe that participating in its use as a weapon does not benefit the Republic of Armenia,” Pashinián stated, according to statements disseminated by the official Armenian agency Armenpress after a meeting of the Board of Directors of his party, Civil Contract.

On Sunday, the Israeli Government gave the green light to the proposal presented by its Foreign Minister, Gideon Saar, to officially recognize the Armenian genocide resulting from the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1918.

“It is never too late to do the right thing,” Saar stated before expressing his gratitude for the support received from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the rest of the cabinet. “As Jews, and especially as the nation-state of the Jewish people, I believe it is our moral duty to make this decision,” he declared.

The Turkish Executive reacted by harshly criticizing the measure and accused Israel of trying to “cover up its own crimes” through this “political decision,” while holding the Israeli authorities responsible for “systematically oppressing the Palestinian people before the eyes of the entire world.”

Ankara does not dispute that massacres of Armenian civilians occurred, but rejects that they fall into the category of genocide, and maintains that the deaths were not the result of a state plan for mass extermination by the Ottoman government, but rather a consequence of inter-ethnic clashes, epidemics, and famines in the turbulent context of World War I.

However, the academic community and numerous countries widely consider it the first systematic genocide of the Modern Age and the second most analyzed after the Jewish Holocaust. In parallel, Turkey and Armenia are currently undergoing a process of normalization of their bilateral relations, driven from Yerevan, which also includes the search for a peace agreement with Azerbaijan after the Armenian defeat in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2023.

Recognition of the Armenian Genocide does not absolve Israel of responsibility

Aysor, Armenia

June 29 2026

The recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the Israeli government does not absolve that country of responsibility for crimes committed against the Armenians of Artsakh, according to a statement issued by the ARF Dashnaktsutyun Hay Dat office.

The organization thereby refers to Tel Aviv’s military and military-technical support to Azerbaijan during the Artsakh war.

ARF Dashnaktsutyun also cites numerous testimonies regarding genocide in Gaza committed by the Israeli state. At the same time, it emphasizes that the recognition of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire remains an important step in the fight against denial of this crime against humanity, the statement notes.

The decision was also commented on by the leader of the Armenian community of Jerusalem, Hakob Jernazyan, who stated that Israel had the opportunity to recognize the Armenian Genocide earlier on moral grounds but failed to do so.

Azerbaijani Press: Russian Foreign Ministry: We do not understand Armenia

modern. Azerbaijan

June 29 2026

Russian Foreign Ministry: We do not understand Armenia

World

 

29 June 2026, 15:21

Russia has once again criticized Armenia’s policy of rapprochement with the European Union.

Modern.az reports that Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin, in an interview with RTVI, called it incomprehensible that the Armenian leadership does not consult the country’s citizens on this issue.

“To be honest, we do not understand why the Armenian leadership is not in a hurry to ask the population’s opinion on such an important issue for the country,” he said.

Galuzin also emphasized that Moscow does not accept Armenia taking steps towards integration with the European Union on the one hand, and benefiting from the economic advantages provided by the Eurasian Economic Union, of which it is a member, on the other.

“It is unacceptable for us that Armenia establishes a European-oriented policy at the legislative level and at the same time uses all the opportunities of the Eurasian Economic Union,” the Russian official said.

It should be noted that Armenia’s recent steps to expand relations with the European Union have drawn criticism from Moscow. Russia has repeatedly stated that Yerevan’s attempts to both integrate into the European Union and remain a member of the Eurasian Economic Union are contradictory.

Why Israel recognised the Armenian genocide but still does not recognise the H

European Pravda

June 29 2026
Monday, 29 June 2026 — 

The Israeli government has officially recognised the Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire.

For decades, Israel kept the Armenian tragedy in the category of a diplomatic taboo in order to avoid damaging relations with Ankara. It has now decided to take a different course.

Read more about how historical memory has become a geopolitical instrument in the column by Ihor Semivolos of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies: The Armenian genocide, but not the Ukrainian one: How the Israeli government uses history as a political tool.

According to the author, the principal beneficiary, and driving force, behind the decision is Israel itself, which seeks to deliver an asymmetric political blow to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

“After Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, the Turkish leader, in Tel Aviv’s view, crossed every red line with his anti-Israeli rhetoric. Since the bridges with Türkiye had already been burned, Benjamin Netanyahu’s government decided to raise the stakes to the highest level, demonstrating domestic unity while punishing Ankara for its regional position,” Semivolos writes.

In his view, Türkiye may respond by completely severing diplomatic relations with Israel, but it will certainly appeal to Washington for support.

Baku, while issuing a formal diplomatic protest in solidarity with Türkiye, is operating within a new regional reality.

“With greater room for maneuver, Azerbaijan will not overreact. Instead, it will use its oil leverage and the new geopolitical balance, together with Turkish lobbyists, to dilute and delay the final passage of the bill in the Knesset as much as possible,” the Executive Director of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies argues.

Armenia, meanwhile, finds itself in a difficult position. Its prime minister is dismantling long-standing historical narratives at home in pursuit of a painful reconciliation with Türkiye, making it impossible for Yerevan to express enthusiastic gratitude to Israel.

“Doing so would risk damaging relations with Iran, which remains Armenia’s critical logistical gateway to the outside world,” the expert explains.

According to Semivolos, another major dimension of this debate concerns the recognition of the Holodomor of 1932-1933 as genocide – a step that the Knesset has consistently refused to take.

He argues that Israel’s position rests on two pillars: the determined defense of the concept of the absolute uniqueness of the Shoah (the Holocaust) and pragmatic relations with the Kremlin.

“As long as Israel approaches international affairs primarily through the prism of immediate tactical threats, the historical tragedies of other nations, whether Armenian or Ukrainian will continue to be viewed in Tel Aviv not through the lens of universal morality, but as either assets or liabilities on the current geopolitical chessboard,” the author concludes.