In the restive South Caucasus, where grievances do well to simmer, a proposed new road can be much more than just another transport route. Such is the case in the Zangezur Corridor, a stretch of land in one of the world’s most contentious areas.
Located on the slopes of a mountain range, Zanzegur is a historical and geographical region of Eastern Armenia that Persians, Azeris, Armenians, Turks, Mongols, and Russians have fought over. Persia ceded it to the Tsars in 1813, but a century later, after Russia’s 1917 Revolution, disputes arose between the two newly created republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan as to ownership. This set an enduring trend.
Once considered part of Azerbaijan, the Soviet Union reassigned Zanzegur (also known as Syunik) to Armenia in 1920, cutting the land link between Azerbaijan and its exclave, Nakhchivan. An autonomous republic, Nakhchivan is an archetypal flashpoint. Today, it is bordered by Armenia to the east and north, Iran to the south, and Turkey to the west. In a place like this, a proposed road link can easily cause more than bristling.
The 40km road in question would link Azerbaijan to its landlocked but separated exclave Nakhchivan without passing through Armenian checkpoints, therefore creating an important new trade route connecting Asia, Europe and the Middle East. This would be to the benefit of Russia and Turkey, but to the detriment of Iran. With disagreements over the road also rooted in a previous territorial clash, it could yet prove to be a route into deeper conflict.
Azeri-Armenian animosity
Azerbaijan’s relations with Armenia are frosty at best. They have come to blows several times over the nearby disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory mainly populated by ethnic Armenians. The most recent military action was in 2020, which ended with Azerbaijan defeating Armenia.
Nagorno-Karabakh had effectively been out of Baku’s control since a bloody post-independence conflict, which was, in effect, frozen by the international response to it in 1994. In September 2020, Azerbaijan launched an offensive to retake control of the territory it has long claimed as its own.
The largely one-sided war lasted 44 days and ended in defeat for the Armenians. A trilateral statement was signed in November of that year by the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia. It consisted of nine points, which were mainly concessions made by Armenia to Azerbaijan.
The all-important final point stated that "all economic and transport links in the region shall be unblocked" and that Armenia "shall guarantee the safety of transport communication between the western regions of Azerbaijan and Nakhichevan". This was explicitly "with a view to... the unimpeded movement of citizens, vehicles and cargo in both directions," with Russian border guards exercising control over transport communication.