Following the collapse of the Ottoman and Russian Empires,
Armenia declared independence in 1918. However, the new republic faced immense challenges, including
refugees from the Armenian Genocide, and military threats from
Azerbaijan and
Turkey. By 1920, Soviet Russia was expanding its influence in the South Caucasus and viewed Armenia as strategically significant. The Armenian government, led by the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF, Dashnaktsutyun) sought to negotiate with Soviet leaders to secure recognition of its sovereignty, but these negotiations coincided with Soviet geopolitical strategies and the rise of Kemalist Turkey. The Sovietization of Armenia was influenced by Soviet support for
Turkish Nationalists under Mustafa Kemal. While the Kemalists aimed to annex
Western Armenia, the Soviets saw the opportunity to use their alliance with Turkey to counter Western powers and establish control over the South Caucasus. This led to coordinated Soviet-Turkish military campaigns, including the occupation of disputed territories like Nakhichevan, Karabakh, Syunik by the Red Army between May and July 1920. These incursions, coupled with internal unrest and the suppression of a
May 1920 Bolshevik uprising in Armenia, weakened the Armenian republic and left it isolated. Despite not offering to intervene, the
United Kingdom advised that Armenia not make any agreements with the Soviets or the Kemalists.
Simon Vratsian, the last prime minister of the First Republic of Armenia, described the crisis as being caught between the "Bolshevik hammer and the Turkish anvil." In September 1920,
Turkish forces launched an offensive, capturing Kars on 30 October and Alexandropol by 7 November 1920. == Invasion ==