
ArmInfo. The prospects for launching the "Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity" (TRIPP) project are bleak amid the US-Iran conflict. Mikhail Kalugin, Director of the Fourth CIS Department at the Russian Foreign Ministry, stated this in an interview with TASS.
"A number of experts believe that, given the Iranian-American conflict, the prospects for launching the Trump Road are bleak. It is noted that, in addition to Iran's negative perception of the US presence on its northern borders, American control over the route from Central Asia to Europe, of which the Trump Road is intended to be a part, could also generate mistrust among Asian partners. And without Chinese and Russian cargo, it will be extremely difficult to recoup the investment in the project," he noted. According to Kalugin, there are a number of objective factors in this matter that must be taken into account. "These include the presence of Russian border guards on the Armenian-Iranian border, the need to lay a Russian- standard railway line for a seamless connection with the Azerbaijani one, the concession of South Caucasus Railways CJSC to manage the Armenian railway network, which is valid until 2038, and the inclusion of Armenia in the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) single customs space," the diplomat continued.
Overall, this project, as a transit route between mainland Azerbaijan and Nakhichevan through southern Armenia, did not arise out of nowhere, Kalugin emphasized. "Its creation was preceded by two years of painstaking work within the Russia-Azerbaijan-Armenia format, namely, a trilateral working group co- chaired by deputy prime ministers. By 2023, we were close to launching the so-called Meghri route, which was intended not only to ensure transit through southern Armenia to Nakhichevan but also, in essence, to connect the Armenian and Azerbaijani railways," he added.
According to him, this is precisely what Armenia is currently struggling to achieve, relying on the "Trump Road." "But the problem is that the Armenian-American initiative, unlike the "Meghri Route," does not automatically provide for a full-fledged connection of Armenian and Azerbaijani railway infrastructure. It is not our fault that Yerevan deliberately froze the work of the trilateral working group in 2023."
On January 14, the Armenian Foreign Ministry published the framework document signed with the American side in Washington for the implementation of the "Trump Road for International Peace and Prosperity" (TRIPP). The 12-page document presents the project's main objectives and operating mechanisms. Among other things, the document emphasizes Armenia's intention to sanction and support the establishment of the TRIPP Development Company. The company is expected to be responsible for the development of the TRIPP project, receiving an initial development right for a period of 49 years. Armenia intends to offer the United States a 74% stake in TRIPP Development Company, retaining 26%. This partnership is expected to be extended for another 50 years, with an additional ownership stake granted to the Armenian government, bringing its stake to 49%.
As a reminder, on August 8, 2025, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev signed a seven-point joint "Declaration of Peace" in Washington. It provides for a joint appeal to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to terminate the OSCE Minsk Process and related structures, as well as the creation of a transport corridor through Armenian territory that will connect Azerbaijan with its Nakhchivan exclave, surrounded by Armenia, Turkey, and Iran.