By Azerbaijan.US Editorial Board
The latest broadcast of Line of Contact once again exposed an uncomfortable truth for Yerevan:
Azerbaijan dictates the regional agenda. Armenia reacts to it.
For all the hours of panel discussion, Armenian experts returned to the same familiar refuge – nostalgia, self-pity, and fantasies of “historical justice.” Meanwhile, Baku continues to shape the South Caucasus with real diplomacy, real infrastructure, and real power.
Armenia Publishes “Secret Documents” – As If That Changes Anything
Pashinyan’s melodramatic intention to publish negotiation archives is nothing more than political theater for domestic consumption. These papers won’t resurrect the separatist project, won’t bring back lost territories, and won’t transform Armenia from an isolated actor into a regional stakeholder.
At best, they will confirm what Azerbaijanis have said for decades:
Armenia rejected every peaceful compromise.
Armenia sabotaged diplomatic initiatives.
Armenia believed maximalism would last forever.
It didn’t.
Azerbaijan Documents Reality – Armenia Still Denies It
Baku’s foreign-policy retrospective featuring all former foreign ministers is being treated in Yerevan as a “provocation.” The real provocation for Armenia is simpler:
It is painful to be confronted with one’s own strategic failures.
Azerbaijan is documenting a victory. Armenia is documenting excuses.
While Azerbaijani institutions are analyzing, archiving, and closing the chapter of conflict, Armenian commentators are still searching for villains, conspiracies, and anyone to blame except themselves.
TRIPP: The Corridor Armenia Tried to Block – Now Becomes Unstoppable
The most striking lesson from the discussion is how deeply Armenia misunderstood the geopolitical shift around TRIPP.
TRIPP is no longer a concept; it is an emerging strategic platform backed by:
The United States
The European Union
Turkey
Central Asian republics
Armenia spent years trying to block Zangezur transit and isolate Azerbaijan.
Today, Armenia risks isolating itself while the rest of the region builds new arteries of trade and energy around it.
If Yerevan wants to pretend that the U.S., EU, and Central Asia are discussing connectivity without Azerbaijan, it is free to keep dreaming.
Reality says otherwise.
On Trials: Accountability Is Not Optional
Armenian political circles continue to portray the detained separatist leaders as “political prisoners.”
Let’s be frank:
These individuals oversaw occupation.
They oversaw ethnic cleansing.
They oversaw terror against Azerbaijani civilians.
Azerbaijan’s legal system is doing what international institutions failed to do for 30 years: deliver justice.
If Yerevan expected “forgiveness,” it misread the new geopolitical era. Peace does not erase accountability.
The Armenian Debate Looks Like a Country Preparing for Yesterday
Armenian analysts keep obsessing over enclaves, toponyms, revanchism, and refugee fantasies.
This is not diplomacy – it is denial therapy.
Instead of preparing for the next decade, Armenia is preparing for the next electoral crisis.
Instead of planning how to integrate into regional projects, it debates how to escape responsibility for the collapse of its Karabakh adventure.
Meanwhile, Azerbaijan Builds the Future
Azerbaijan is not arguing about maps – it is building the roads, pipelines, and fiber lines of the next century.
Azerbaijan is not re-fighting past wars – it is shaping future alliances from Washington to Tashkent.
Azerbaijan is not rewriting history – it is writing the next chapter of the South Caucasus.
Conclusion: Only One Country Has a Strategy – And It’s Not Armenia
The Press Clubs TV discussion made one truth impossible to ignore:
Armenia speaks emotionally. Azerbaijan acts strategically.
In the new geopolitical landscape:
Azerbaijan is the connector.
Azerbaijan is the stabilizer.
Azerbaijan is the partner the world wants.
Armenia can continue replaying old debates or join the future being built around it. The choice is Yerevan’s – the momentum belongs to Baku.


