The people of Armenia have spoken, and Moscow is listening with a clenched jaw. In a landslide election result that has sent shockwaves through the Caucasus, voters have handed a decisive victory to a pro-Western coalition, rejecting decades of Russian patronage. For the worker in Yerevan, this is not just a geopolitical shift. It is a gamble on cheaper flour, lower heating bills, and a future no longer held hostage by the Kremlin’s gas taps.
Britain has been quick to capitalise. Foreign Office sources confirm that the Prime Minister has already spoken to the new Armenian leadership, pledging “deepened economic co-operation and energy security”. This is the language of realpolitik, but for the Armenian miner or textile worker, it must translate into something tangible: a job, a stable price for bread, a warm home.
The old ties to Russia were never warm for the average Armenian. Moscow’s influence kept energy prices artificially low for decades, but at a cost. Trade routes were controlled, exports funnelled through Russian intermediaries, and wages stagnated. The 2023 energy crisis, when Russia curtailed gas supplies to allies, exposed the fragility of that dependence. My sources in Yerevan tell me that families spent the winter burning furniture. That is the human price of geopolitical alignment.
Now, the new government has promised to pivot towards Europe and, crucially, the Gulf. A free trade deal with the EU is on the table. So is a direct gas pipeline from Azerbaijan, bypassing Russian territory. These are not abstract deals. They mean that an Armenian factory owner can sell to German buyers without the Moscow tariff. They mean that a baker in Gyumri can afford to keep his ovens running all winter.
But the victory is fragile. Russia still controls Armenia’s largest railway and its nuclear power plant. The country is landlocked, reliant on Georgia for its Western corridor. And Moscow has already signalled it will retaliate. In the past week, exports of Armenian brandy to Russia have been blocked at the border. This is the opening salvo. The Kremlin knows that economic pain is the quickest way to undermine a popular mandate.
Britain’s role here is not just about foreign policy. It is about showing that the West can offer a better deal. The new British ambassador to Armenia, a former Treasury economist, has been tasked with mapping “kitchen table priorities”. That means: can we get cheaper wheat onto Armenian markets? Can we support the renovation of Soviet-era housing stock? Can we help Armenia join the European electricity grid?
The comparison with Ukraine is inevitable, but Armenia is not Ukraine. It has no significant oil or gas reserves. Its strategic value lies in geography: it controls the only road into Iran. But the human story is the same. Workers want dignity, not slogans. They want their children to study engineering, not to queue for Russian visas.
In the streets of Yerevan last night, the victory celebrations were tempered by worry. One shopkeeper told me: “We have chosen the West. Now the West must choose us. We cannot fight Russia alone.” She is right. Britain’s commitment must go beyond diplomatic photo-ops. It must mean real investment in Armenian railways, in digital infrastructure, in agricultural co-operatives.
The next six months will be decisive. If the new government can stabilise prices and attract foreign capital, the pro-West tide will hold. If it fails, the Kremlin will be waiting. For the labourer, this is not about ideology. It is about whether the family meal is hot or cold. That is the test Britain must help them pass.











