When the gunfire finally fell silent in May 1994, the ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan seemed more like a desperate pause in a war that had destroyed lives, displaced more than a million people, and reshaped the map of the South Caucasus. Few expected that a fragile truce, concluded at the dusk of the post-Soviet collapse, would last for decades or lay the groundwork for one country to become a regional energy power. And yet that is ex...

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