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Armenpress reports that the US has informed Armenia that it is prepared to manage a transport corridor with Azerbaijan.

The Armenpress reported that Nikol Pashinyan, Armenia's Prime Minister, said on Wednesday that the U.S. offered to manage an upcoming transport corridor connecting the majority of Azerbaijan with an Azerbaijani enclave through Armenian territory.

Baku wants to secure the potential corridor that would run approximately 32 km (20 miles), through Armenia's southern Syunik Province, connecting Azerbaijan's majority to Nakhchivan (an Azerbaijani enclave bordering Baku's Turkish ally).

Azerbaijan is concerned that Yerevan may revoke the access to the corridor too easily.

When asked at a press conference if Armenia received a specific offer from Washington in relation to the corridor proposal, Pashinyan replied: "Yes, the United States has made proposals," Armenpress reported.

The transit link is just one of many obstacles to a deal for peace between Azerbaijan, a neighbour in the South Caucasus who has fought wars with Armenia since the 1980s.

In March, the countries announced that they had finalised their a

draft peace deal

The timetable for signing the agreement is still uncertain.

Pashinyan made his comments just days after Tom Barrack, the U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, stated that Washington had proposed taking over the planned Transit Corridor.

It's not a joke that they are arguing about 32 kilometers of road. Barrack, according to the State Department's readout, told reporters last Friday in New York that this dispute has been ongoing for over a decade.

What happens then is that America says, "Okay, let's take it over." You can share the road if you give us 32 km of road for a 100-year lease. (Reporting and Writing by Lucy Papachristou, Editing by Andrew Osborn.)

(source: Reuters)