
Yerevan and Baku Now Have a Shared Enemy in Moscow
How did your country report this? Share your view in the comments.
Diverging Reports Breakdown
Yerevan and Baku Now Have a Shared Enemy in Moscow
Armenia and Azerbaijan have a shared target of hostility: the Kremlin. Recent days have seen the shaky Azerbaijan-Russia relationship engulfed in anger. Azerbaijani medical examiners have ruled that one of the deaths was caused by injuries inflicted in custody, while the other has been attributed to a heart attack due to post-traumatic shock. Baku’s State Prosecutor announced on July 1 that it had opened an investigation into what a statement described as the “torture and murder with extreme cruelty of citizens of the Republic of Azerbaijan and persons of Azerbaijanjani origin” Russia has in turn responded with more detentions, targeting the head of an Azerbaijan-Ural cultural organization. But core to understanding the current dynamic is that Armenia operates from a position of vulnerability, while Azerbaijan confronts Russia from a strength of strength, writes Huseyn Mikhaylova, an analyst with the Carnegie Foundation for International Studies in Washington, D.C. and a former Russian ambassador to the U.S.
Next door to Azerbaijan, Armenia-Russia ties have been declining since 2020, when Russia failed to effectively intervene in that year’s war between Yerevan and Baku despite a longstanding alliance with Armenia. Further offensives by Azerbaijan in the following years only fuelled Yerevan’s pivot away from Russia, with recent years seeing more outreach by Armenia to Europe and the United States. Meanwhile, in response, Russia ratcheted up media attacks on Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his government, leading Armenian elites to accuse Russia of waging “hybrid warfare.” Russia and Armenia’s government have squared off this June over the arrests of Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan and high-profile clergymen over accusations of fomenting a coup plot. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov publicly described the arrest of church officials as “unjustified attacks without any serious grounds,” while Russian propagandist Margarita Simonyan went as far as to describe Pashinyan as the “Antichrist’s anus.” Armenia’s Foreign Minister responded by encouraging Lavrov to “refrain from interfering in Armenia’s domestic affairs and internal politics.” Armenian officials are now openly advocating for blocking Russian television broadcasts into Armenia. Yet, core to understanding the current dynamic is that while Armenia operates from a position of vulnerability, Azerbaijan confronts Russia from a position of strength. Since 2020, Azerbaijan has seen a series of events hinting at a rise to becoming a regional power. Chief among these has been the re-acquisition by force of Nagorno-Karabakh by in September 2023, allowing Aliyev to present a total victory to his population in the decades-long conflict with Armenia. Russian peacekeepers stationed in Nagorno-Karabakh did nothing to deter the Azerbaijani offensive that put an end to the long-running Armenian separatist project. Yet it has not only been Baku’s victory against Armenia that has likely granted Aliyev greater confidence. In the last few years, Baku has dismantled what little independent media existed in the country, increased its role in global energy markets and trade routes and hosted COP 29 in 2024 in the face of accusations of rights abuses and ethnic cleansing. The years leading up to the airplane crash had seen working, even positive, relations between Baku and Moscow, with the Kremlin’s inaction over the Nagorno-Karabakh issue seemingly a recognition of Baku’s growing power.
Source: https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2025/07/04/yerevan-and-baku-now-have-a-shared-enemy-in-moscow-a89687