A US proposal to lease and manage the Zangezur Corridor—a strategic land route through Armenia connecting Azerbaijan to its Nakhchivan exclave—has been firmly rejected by the Armenian government over sovereignty concerns. The corridor has become a flashpoint in regional geopolitics, with competing interests from the US, Russia, Turkey, and Iran, each seeking influence in the South Caucasus. Reports of Armenia ceding control to the US have been denied by Armenian officials, but the rumors have fueled confusion and heightened tensions. Russia has accused the US of trying to usurp the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process, while Turkey and Azerbaijan continue to push for the corridor's opening. The situation underscores the corridor's significance as a potential new fault line in Eurasian geopolitics, with implications for regional alliances and security.
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