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Armenia-Russia High-Level Meeting Set for June
(MENAFN) Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced Thursday that he and Russian President Vladimir Putin have agreed to hold a high-level bilateral meeting in the second half of June, following what he described as a highly productive visit to Moscow earlier this month.
In remarks published by Armenian state news agency Armenpress, Pashinyan characterized his recent Moscow trip as "very successful" and confirmed the two leaders had already mapped out their upcoming engagements.
"Regarding the face-to-face meeting, we have already agreed on our upcoming meetings and events. We have agreed on a high-level meeting for the second half of June," Pashinyan was quoted as saying.
The Armenian leader framed the current state of Yerevan-Moscow relations as one of "constructive transformation" — a process he said he views positively and one Armenia intends to navigate on its own terms, without abandoning its core principles.
"We will not deviate from the logic of friendly dialogue and will continue along this path," Pashinyan added.
He also addressed Armenia's dual-track foreign policy balancing act, confirming that Yerevan intends to maintain its engagement with both the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and the European Union (EU) for as long as that remains viable. However, Pashinyan acknowledged that a moment of reckoning may eventually arrive.
"When the moment of incompatibility comes, we will make decisions together with the people," he said — a carefully calibrated remark signaling that any definitive geopolitical pivot would require public consensus rather than unilateral government action.
In remarks published by Armenian state news agency Armenpress, Pashinyan characterized his recent Moscow trip as "very successful" and confirmed the two leaders had already mapped out their upcoming engagements.
"Regarding the face-to-face meeting, we have already agreed on our upcoming meetings and events. We have agreed on a high-level meeting for the second half of June," Pashinyan was quoted as saying.
The Armenian leader framed the current state of Yerevan-Moscow relations as one of "constructive transformation" — a process he said he views positively and one Armenia intends to navigate on its own terms, without abandoning its core principles.
"We will not deviate from the logic of friendly dialogue and will continue along this path," Pashinyan added.
He also addressed Armenia's dual-track foreign policy balancing act, confirming that Yerevan intends to maintain its engagement with both the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and the European Union (EU) for as long as that remains viable. However, Pashinyan acknowledged that a moment of reckoning may eventually arrive.
"When the moment of incompatibility comes, we will make decisions together with the people," he said — a carefully calibrated remark signaling that any definitive geopolitical pivot would require public consensus rather than unilateral government action.
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