Where We Live
The South Caucasus is one of the world’s most complex regions — geographically small, but politically overloaded.
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Three countries: Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan
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Four unresolved conflicts
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Five competing external powers
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Endless historical wounds
Our geography is both a gift and a curse.
We are a corridor — for trade, pipelines, ideas. But also a target — for militarization, propaganda, and control.
Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh): After the Silence
The 2020 war changed everything.
The 2023 ethnic exodus from Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) changed even more.
We now face not just military trauma, but:
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Demographic shock,
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Psychological fatigue,
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Political uncertainty.
Armenia’s security architecture has collapsed — and no new one has replaced it yet.
Influence Wars
The region is a chessboard for:
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Russia, seeking post-imperial leverage
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Türkiye, projecting power through soft and hard means
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Iran, guarding its border identity
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The West, torn between principle and pragmatism
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China, watching silently but steadily expanding
This is not a Cold War redux. It’s worse — because rules are blurred and alliances are shallow.
What Can Armenia Do?
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Rebuild Security Doctrine
Armenia must formulate a defense and security strategy based on real threats — not old loyalties. -
Reclaim Moral Leadership
Armenia’s global narrative — genocide, democracy, justice — must be renewed, not recycled. -
Invest in Diplomacy 2.0
We need new diplomats, new formats, new messages — not just embassies, but people-to-people bridges. -
Human Security First
Security isn’t just about borders. It’s about human dignity, safe cities, education, and the rule of law.
Beyond Survival
For years, we’ve lived in “survival mode”. That’s no longer enough.
Armenia must imagine a post-crisis future — not just for itself, but for the whole region.
What if the South Caucasus could become a space for cooperation — not competition?
What if memory and trauma could lead to reconciliation, not revanchism?
Final Word
We are not just a region of the past.
We are a region of unrealized futures.
To shape them, we must stop asking who controls us —
And start asking what future we are willing to create, together.
By Lida Nalbandyan, Founder and CEO of Octopus Media Group