Abstract

This article examines the political situation in the Transcaucasus that developed in the year of the end of the First World War. Based on the analysis of the documents of the foreign policy of the Transcaucasia, the author concludes, that the region, being in a war situation, strove for an early cessation of hostilities, which required it to make independent decisions, including the negotiation process. One of the states with which the Transcaucasia entered into peace negotiations was the Ottoman Empire. Discussion of the Brest-Litovsk peace treaty was at the center of the negotiations. The relevance of the article is due to the importance of the negotiation process in the context of gaining independence by the new state entity and in a conflict-prone region.

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