Fate of Armenia-Azerbaijan Reconciliation
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- Social sphere
- 25 March 2026 13:59
Caucasus
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When Ilham Aliyev arrived in the Georgian capital on April 6, the symbolism was unmistakable: flags lining the central avenues, meticulously observed protocol, and a series of high-level meetings designed to demonstrate continuity in a region often characterized by uncertainty.
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For decades, the late Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia, Ilia II, remained one of the most influential figures in the country — a religious leader whose authority extended far beyond the church and into the fragile political and social architecture of the South Caucasus.
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In the early phase of the war between Iran, the United States and Israel, the countries of the South Caucasus have found themselves in a familiar but increasingly fragile position: close enough to feel the consequences of the conflict, yet too vulnerable to take sides.
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Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said the country’s new constitution should not contain a reference to the 1990 Declaration of Independence because the document’s call for the reunification of Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia is “built on the logic of conflict.”
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