The strategic chessboard of the South Caucasus has shifted decisively. Armenia’s pro-Western government, facing a critical electoral test this week, has openly signalled a pivot towards NATO, directly challenging Moscow’s long-standing hegemony. For the UK, this is not a humanitarian gesture but a hard-nosed geopolitical opportunity. We must shore up a vulnerable front-line state before the Kremlin can execute a counter-move.
My assessment from ex-Military Intelligence is clear. This vote is being held under a constant threat vector from Russia. Armenian border posts have seen increased probing by Russian ‘peacekeepers’ and intelligence assets tied to the FSB. The Kremlin views this democratic exercise as a direct insurgency against its sphere of influence. The pretext will be ‘protecting ethnic Russians’ or ‘stabilising the region’ — classic playbook moves. We saw it in Georgia in 2008. We see it now in Ukraine. Armenia is next on the list if we fail to act.
The hardware reality is bleak. Armenia’s military is still heavily dependent on Russian-supplied systems: S-300 air defence, Iskander-M missiles, and T-90 tanks. A rapid NATO integration would require a massive logistics overhaul. But the will is there. Yerevan has already frozen its CSTO membership and is hosting joint drills with US special forces. The strategic pivot is real.
For the UK, our response must be cold and calculated. First, we need to fast-track defensive aid: anti-drone systems, electronic warfare suites, and mobile air defence. The RAF should conduct immediate overflights of Armenian airspace to deter Russian incursions. Second, we must integrate Armenian intelligence sharing into Five Eyes channels. Russian GRU cells in Yerevan are mapping opposition networks now. We need to blind them.
The intelligence failures of 2014 in Crimea must not be repeated. The UK has a window of weeks, not months, to embed liaison officers and signal to Moscow that any further aggression will meet calibrated, lethal resistance. A loss of Armenia would capsize the entire Southern Gas Corridor and hand Putin a strategic depth he desperately needs.
This is not about moral support. This is about force posture. We must treat every ballot cast in Armenia as a bullet in a broader campaign against authoritarian expansion. The UK should announce a formal defence partnership before the polls close. Hesitation is a vulnerability the Kremlin will exploit.








