Region

South Caucasus

The South Caucasus – a region encompassing Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia - is one of strategic importance, not only for adjacent countries, such as Turkiye, Russia, Iran and the Central Asian states, but also for neighbours such as the European Union and the GCC states, and globally for the United States, India, China, Pakistan and Japan.

commonspace.eu team brings decades of experience of working in the South Caucasus and we are pleased to share our insights with our loyal readers through the website, and the sister newsletter, Caucasus Concise.

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Monday Commentary
Monday Commentary: 2025 was a momentous year for the South Caucasus

Monday Commentary: 2025 was a momentous year for the South Caucasus

The year 2025 has ended up being a momentous year for the South Caucasus, writes Dennis Sammut in his Monday Commentary. Armenia-Azerbaijan relations have been redefined, with consequences for the whole region and beyond. That huge development overshadowed key moments in the domestic trajectory of the two countries, which however have deep consequences for the two countries, and even beyond. It has also been a tumultuous year for Georgia too. The country has been gripped in a political crisis throughout 2025, with no obvious end in sight. Whatever the domestic arguments, on the international stage Georgia is today a shadow of what it used to be until recently. It not only has lost the chance of joining the European Union any time soon, but it has also lost its position as the leading South Caucasus country. Today, in the new reality of the region, it lags as a tired third. Important as 2025 was, it ended with a lot of unfinished business. So 2026 will also be crucial for the three countries. Since regaining its statehood in 1991 after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Armenia-Azerbaijan relations have been defined by war. The two fought open wars, wars of attrition, and propaganda wars, incessantly. Tens of thousands of people lost their lives, and hundreds of thousands were displaced. Many had lost hope that the two could try the alternative – i.e. peaceful co-existence. Yet in 2025 they were proven wrong.
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Opinion
Opinion: A sustainable peace requires consistent long-term European involvement

Opinion: A sustainable peace requires consistent long-term European involvement

There is no denying that the EU, especially key member states acting in support, helped bring Baku and Yerevan closer to the Washington Declaration of August 8, 2025. But a declaration is not a treaty. Turning principles into a peace deal and eventually to a sustainable peace requires consistent long-term European involvement, writes Yalchin Mammadov in this-op-ed for commonspace.eu Before facilitating trust between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the EU is first expected to address its own credibility gap with Baku. A more balanced approach—such as including Azerbaijan, alongside Armenia, in the European Peace Facility—could be a useful first step. Diplomats can negotiate peace; societies must build peace. In this context, the EU can do what it does the best: long-term societal engagement. By expanding youth and academic exchange programmes, investing in cross-border civil society initiatives, and fostering people-to-people cooperation, Brussels can help shape a new generation equipped to sustain peace beyond political cycles. Such tools are slow and unglamorous, but if ignored, even the strongest treaty risks collapse. And obviously, these aspects require two-way engagement and genuine willingness by both governments to facilitate contact. If Brussels wants to remain influential, it needs to replace outdated one-size-fits-all policies with ambitious, interest-driven and differentiated approaches. Without a clear regional strategy, which appears to be the current situation, the South Caucasus will continue to sit at the margins of Europe’s security architecture—leaving space for other powers to take the lead. (You can read the op-ed in full by clicking the image.)

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Armenian FM: Exercise of the NKR people's right to self-determination is the basis of the talks on Karabakh peace process
Armenian FM: Exercise of the NKR people's right to self-determination is the basis of the talks on Karabakh peace process

Armenian FM: Exercise of the NKR people's right to self-determination is the basis of the talks on Karabakh peace process

The international community fully understands Yerevan's stance on the Karabakh peace process, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said in Parliament when replying to Head of Heritage Faction Rouben Hakobyan's question.
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Erdogan: "Ankara will continue to be on the side of Azerbaijan in Karabakh issue"
Erdogan: "Ankara will continue to be on the side of Azerbaijan in Karabakh issue"

Erdogan: "Ankara will continue to be on the side of Azerbaijan in Karabakh issue"

"Our stance on Upper Karabakh will continue as in the past. As an intervener in the process, we will continue to be on the side of Azerbaijan," Erdogan said at a joint press conference with the Azerbaijani President Ilham Alivey at the end of a meeting of the Turkey-Azerbaijan High Level Strategic Cooperation Council in Qabala, Sondakika reports.
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NKR President: "Azerbaijani officer's crime is a serious blow upon mediation efforts of the OSCE MG co- chair-states"
NKR President: "Azerbaijani officer's crime is a serious blow upon mediation efforts of the OSCE MG co- chair-states"

NKR President: "Azerbaijani officer's crime is a serious blow upon mediation efforts of the OSCE MG co- chair-states"

On 11 September Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan met personal representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk, NKR President's press-service reports.
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Leaked foreign affairs report of Budapest suggests Azeri president misled Hungary
Leaked foreign affairs report of Budapest suggests Azeri president misled Hungary

Leaked foreign affairs report of Budapest suggests Azeri president misled Hungary

A restricted document issued by the Hungarian Institute of International Affairs (MKI), leaked by news website nol.hu on Friday, indicates that Hungarian authorities were misled by Azerbaijan in connection with the handover of the Azeri officer who killed an Armenian officer in Hungary eight years ago.
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The New York Times: Ambassador Morningstar's far from empty gesture sent two wrong signals
The New York Times: Ambassador Morningstar's far from empty gesture sent two wrong signals

The New York Times: Ambassador Morningstar's far from empty gesture sent two wrong signals

Apart from the fact that such step (extradition, pardoning and glorification of an Azerbaijani officer, who killed Armenian officer in Budapest) is an affront to basic notions of justice and the rule of law, even more troubling is the message that it sends to the rest of the world: that the Azerbaijani government thinks it is acceptable to kill Armenians, New York Times rights.
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U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan: It is important that Azerbaijan and Armenia continue working through OSCE Minsk Group to find solution to Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan: It is important that Azerbaijan and Armenia continue working through OSCE Minsk Group to find solution to Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan: It is important that Azerbaijan and Armenia continue working through OSCE Minsk Group to find solution to Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

"It is important that Azerbaijan and Armenia continue working through the OSCE Minsk Group to find solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. As a co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, the U.S. will work with other co-chairs, Azerbaijan and Armenia in this regard," U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan Richard Morningstar said in Baku on Monday.
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Armenian community of Switzerland holds a protest action in Switzerland
Armenian community of Switzerland holds a protest action in Switzerland

Armenian community of Switzerland holds a protest action in Switzerland

The representatives of the Armenian community of Switzerland held a protest action in Bern near Hungary's Embassy in Switzerland against the extradition and pardoning of the Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov, who killed sleeping Armenian officer Gourgen Margaryan in 2004.
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ASALA has not threatened to Azerbaijani Embassy in Budapest
ASALA has not threatened to Azerbaijani Embassy in Budapest

ASALA has not threatened to Azerbaijani Embassy in Budapest

"We categorically deny the misinformation spread by the Azerbaijani authorities that our organization has sent threatening letters to their embassy in Budapest," says the Refutation Statement disseminated by The Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) on September 11, 2012.