The US-run 'Trump Route' through Armenia advances as Iran and Russia object
A 99-year US development lease over the Zangezur strip moves from framework to implementation, rewiring South Caucasus transit and alarming Tehran and Moscow
Summary
The Armenia Azerbaijan peace package routes connectivity through the Zangezur strip — the ~32km of Armenian land separating mainland Azerbaijan from its Nakhchivan exclave — under a US-developed scheme branded the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP). A January 2026 United States–Armenia implementation framework set out the restored rail line plus fibre, power and a gas pipeline; the route stays under Armenian law but Donald Trump's deal grants Washington an exclusive 99-year development right. About 12km of the broader Armenia-Azerbaijan border has been delimited, working north to south. Iran calls a US-operated corridor on its frontier an existential threat; Russia, swept aside in Karabakh in 2023, accepts a text but resists a long US footprint. Commercial detail — customs stamping, fee-sharing — remains unresolved.
By the numbers
- 99 years — US exclusive development right over the route.
- ~32 km — length of the Zangezur strip across Armenian territory.
- ~12 km — border already delimited.
- Jan 2026 — US-Armenia implementation framework published.
- 4 — link types planned: rail, fibre-optic, electricity, gas.
Why it matters
A US-operated transit lease on Iran's northern border and inside Russia's former sphere is a structural shift in South Caucasus geopolitics — Western connectivity replacing Russian brokerage. It hands Armenia revenue and an anchor, hands Tehran and Moscow a grievance, and leaves unresolved who actually controls the cargo, the customs and the fees.
What to watch
- Whether customs, fee-sharing and operating rules get pinned down or stall.
- Iranian and Russian counter-moves along the frontier.
- Physical works on the restored Nakhchivan rail line beginning.