By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Azemedia new logo
  • Home
  • COP29
  • Opinion
  • News
    • Economy
    • Energy
    • Climate and Ecology
  • Culture
  • Diaspora
  • Interview
  • Science
  • Logistics-Transport
  • Gender
  • History
  • Defense
  • Karabakh
Aze.MediaAze.Media
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
  • Economy
  • Climate and Ecology
  • Energy
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Gender
  • Interview
  • Science
  • Logistics-Transport
  • History
  • Defense
  • Karabakh
  • Diaspora
  • Who we are
Follow US
© 2021 Aze.Media – Daily Digest
Aze.Media > Opinion > In the Caucasus, Donald Trump has an opportunity
Opinion

In the Caucasus, Donald Trump has an opportunity

With Azerbaijan defying Russia, the region has the opportunity to clinch a historic peace deal.

AzeMedia
By AzeMedia Published July 26, 2025 882 Views 7 Min Read
391894
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan (L) meets with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (R), Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (UAE), July 10, 2025. (Azerbaijan President Press Service Handout via EPA Photo)

Russia’s declining influence in its own backyard offers President Donald Trump a major opportunity to burnish his peacemaking credentials. Peace talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia have been ongoing for years. Both countries might now be coming to a “successful conclusion,” President Trump said on July 15.

By facilitating a final settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the United States could deal a blow to Russia’s influence activities in the South Caucasus, a major corridor for Western energy and trade links.

Since 2020, Azerbaijan has launched two successful military operations to take disputed territories from neighboring Armenia. In September 2023, Baku’s “lightning offensive” recaptured the contested region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

During both rounds of fighting, the Kremlin declined to intervene on Armenia’s behalf despite the presence of a reported 10,000 Russian soldiers in the country and its membership in Russia’s alternative to NATO, the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

With his country outmatched on the battlefield, Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan is determined to prevent further loss of territory. His concern is not unfounded. On May 21, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned Congress, “There’s a real risk there of a conflict that we’re trying to prevent from happening.”

Secretary Rubio and President Trump may be able to do exactly that.

What has changed? Russia’s influence in the region is on the decline. Moscow can no longer carry out its preferred role as powerbroker and mediator between Yerevan and Baku.

The war in Ukraine has drawn the Kremlin’s attention away from the South Caucasus and weakened its ability to pressure governments along its wider borders. The Kremlin now appears keen to reverse this decline by targeting Azerbaijan’s diaspora community.

On June 27, Russia’s security service, the FSB, arrested about 50 ethnic Azerbaijanis (some of whom were Russian citizens) in Yekaterinburg and other cities. The FSB claimed the arrests were due to reopened murder cases from the early 2000s. While in custody, detainees were reportedly beaten and tortured with electric shocks. Two elderly Azerbaijani brothers caught up in the FSB raid, Huseyn and Ziyaddin Safarov, died in custody. According to Russian authorities, Ziyaddin died of a heart attack, but they gave no reason for Huseyn’s death.

Azerbaijan retaliated with arrests of Russian citizens, publicizing videos of prisoners with visible signs of mistreatment.

Standing up to Russia in this way is a new development for Azerbaijan and underscores the significance of the reciprocal crackdown in Baku. While Russia has focused on its invasion of Ukraine, Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev has been cultivating ties with regional powers like Turkey and Israel, while also making overtures to the United States and the European Union. The EU is a major customer of Azerbaijan’s energy exports.

Importantly, tensions with Moscow have been rising since December 25, when a Russian missile fired from Chechnya hit an Azerbaijani airliner, killing 38 passengers and crew. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s half-hearted apology for the “tragic incident in Russian airspace” fueled ill will in Azerbaijan.

Conditions are now ideal for a low-cost, high-reward expenditure of US diplomacy. At his most recent cabinet meeting with Trump, Secretary Rubio expressed optimism that Azerbaijan and Armenia could sign a deal, “[h]opefully, pretty soon.”

While he declined to elaborate on America’s role in peace talks, Baku and Yerevan face two main stumbling blocks: the return of Armenian detainees held by Azerbaijan, and Azerbaijan’s demand for customs-free access to its exclave of Nakhchivan, which sits to Azerbaijan’s west between Armenia and Iran.

Washington has reportedly proposed that a private US company replace the Russian border guards who currently patrol the border between Armenia and the exclave. By assuming a more public-facing role as a mediator, the United States could resolve the remaining sticking points and demonstrate that both Azerbaijan and Armenia would benefit from closer alignment with the United States as Russia’s influence wanes.

Trump is keen to be a peacemaker. An additional push by Washington at this point could result in a historic peace between Baku and Yerevan. With Russia on the back foot, a deal could expand America’s influence in this energy-rich region of the world.

Peter Doran is an adjunct senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focused on national security and foreign policy.

Dmitriy Shapiro is a research analyst at FDD. 

national

You Might Also Like

How an incident on the Azerbaijan-Iran border became a test for diplomacy in the region

Iranian ultimatum from the rubble: Baku rejects blackmail and threats

Azerbaijan between Türkiye, Iran, and Israel: strategic balance in a changing regional environment

The price of a strategic miscalculation: Tehran is forcing its neighbors to unite against it

What the attack on Nakhchivan airport revealed

AzeMedia July 26, 2025 July 26, 2025

New articles

GettyImages 2147784914 scaled
How an incident on the Azerbaijan-Iran border became a test for diplomacy in the region
Opinion March 9, 2026
17727126852611137167 1200x630
Iranian ultimatum from the rubble: Baku rejects blackmail and threats
Opinion March 9, 2026
IRGC And Basij Forces Hold Military Maneuvers In Tehran
Baku’s response to the strike on Nakhchivan: why Azerbaijan took a hard line
Defense March 8, 2026
F641cc3e ee8f 4ec0 be97 73cf3910fcb2
Azerbaijan between Türkiye, Iran, and Israel: strategic balance in a changing regional environment
Opinion March 7, 2026
Photo 2026 03 06 21 43
Azerbaijan says it foiled Iranian terror attacks on synagogue, Israeli embassy
News March 7, 2026
Iran war us israel
The price of a strategic miscalculation: Tehran is forcing its neighbors to unite against it
Opinion March 6, 2026
Posolstvo AZ
Azerbaijan recalls its diplomats from Iran
News March 6, 2026
Pua 1024x683
What the attack on Nakhchivan airport revealed
Opinion March 6, 2026
GettyImages 2147784914 scaled
Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry: Iran sent four drones toward Nakhchivan
Defense March 5, 2026
17727126852740152815 1200x630
Aliyev: Azerbaijan puts armed forces on combat readiness No.1
News March 5, 2026

You Might Also Like

GettyImages 2147784914 scaled

How an incident on the Azerbaijan-Iran border became a test for diplomacy in the region

March 9, 2026 11 Min Read
17727126852611137167 1200x630

Iranian ultimatum from the rubble: Baku rejects blackmail and threats

March 9, 2026 14 Min Read
F641cc3e ee8f 4ec0 be97 73cf3910fcb2

Azerbaijan between Türkiye, Iran, and Israel: strategic balance in a changing regional environment

March 7, 2026 13 Min Read
Iran war us israel

The price of a strategic miscalculation: Tehran is forcing its neighbors to unite against it

March 6, 2026 7 Min Read
Pua 1024x683

What the attack on Nakhchivan airport revealed

March 6, 2026 8 Min Read
GettyImages 2147784914 scaled

Drones over Nakhchivan: an incident or a dangerous signal?

March 5, 2026 6 Min Read
Photo 2025 06 25 09.47.40

Iranian strike on Azerbaijan… what next?

March 5, 2026 4 Min Read
416955141 0 0 2000 1130 2072x0 60 0 0 b43c7384a10e7ffb76ad7ba8db50304c

Rasim Musabayov: they are trying to push Iran toward actions against Azerbaijan

March 5, 2026 5 Min Read

Useful links

426082d1 a9e4 4ac5 95d4 4e84024eb314 pojkz91103g6zqfh8kiacu662b2tn9znit7ssu9ekg
Ab65ed96 2f4a 4220 91ac f70a6daaf659 pojkz67iflcc0wjkp1aencvsa5gq06ogif9cd0dl34
96e40a2b 5fed 4332 83c6 60e4a89fd4d0 pojkz836t9ewo4gue23nscepgx7gfkvx6okbbkasqo
759bde00 a375 4fa1 bedc f8e9580ceeca pq8mvb9kwubqf6bcadpkq5mz16nayr162k3j2084cg
aze-media-logo-ag1

We are a unique political and socio-cultural digest offering exclusive materials, translations from Azerbaijani media, and reprints of articles from around the world about Azerbaijan.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Cookies Policy

Email: editor@aze.media

© 2021 Aze.Media – Daily Digest
aze-media-logo1 aze-media-logo-ag1
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?