
ArmInfo. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan dismissed suggestions that the brief visit of US Secretary of State Marco Rubio to Yerevan was intended to signal Washington's support for the ruling "Civil Contract" party, asserting that the incumbent authorities face no issues regarding their public approval ratings.
During a press conference in Yerevan on May 26, journalists questioned whether Rubio's arrival was timed to coincide with the ongoing election campaign, to which Mirzoyan responded in the negative. Mirzoyan claimed that the ruling party's ratings are so substantial that, were it not for constitutional mandates requiring a minimum of three political forces in parliament, his party would form the legislature entirely on its own. "However, we are legally required to tolerate the 'deadweight,'" Mirzoyan noted, referring to the opposition.. When asked why Rubio had not met with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the Armenian minister stated that the head of government was on vacation and busy with the election campaign. Moreover, he said, it's not the format of the meetings that matters, but their effectiveness. He said that three important agreements, in his opinion, were signed during Rubio's visit.
Responding to queries about why the Secretary of State flew in for only a single hour, Mirzoyan stated that the finalized documents were of such immense strategic importance that both sides wished to implement them without delay. Regarding the document signed today regarding the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP), Mirzoyan expressed confidence that the document initialed today regarding Trump's route would be officially signed within a few weeks.
He noted that while the text is fully finalized, minor technical and bureaucratic procedures remain. According to the minister, the signing of the core TRIPP agreement will be followed by the finalization of secondary documents, including the operating company's charter, after which physical work on the ground will commence. The Foreign Minister also revealed that several countries and international corporations have already expressed commercial interest in the project, though he declined to name them at this stage. "This project encompasses far more than just a railway infrastructure; it involves power transmission lines, pipelines, construction contracts, industrial supplies such as steel rails, and specialized software systems," he explained.
When asked whether an agreement had been reached regarding the management of front-office and back- office operations (customs checkpoints), the minister answered in the negative. Addressing the geopolitical stances of regional powers Iran and Russia, Mirzoyan stated that Tehran has officially expressed interest in the initiative, despite lingering security anxieties voiced by some Iranian analysts. The minister assured that Iranian officials have been fully satisfied that there are no grounds for concern, as all transport infrastructure will remain strictly under Armenian state sovereignty, completely ruling out foreign control or the deployment of third-party personnel. "On the contrary, this will grant Iran direct access to the Black Sea. We are witnessing something that will shift macro-geopolitics," Mirzoyan declared.
He concluded by applying a similar logic to the Russian Federation. "Moscow recognizes new economic opportunities here; they have officially expressed interest in the project and desire to participate," the Foreign Minister concluded.