Azer News

Iran's saber-rattling or what message Iran’s freshest border provocatio­n carries

- By Fuad Muxtarli

Hardly a day goes by without Iran’s fresh p r o v o c a t i o n s against Azerbaijan and expectatio­ns are at the lowest ebb that the Tehran regime would give up harassment and disrespect for Azerbaijan's sovereignt­y.

Relations between Tehran and Baku have been severely strained following the 2020 victory of Azerbaijan over Armenia in the second Karabakh war which led to the de-occupation of the nation's lands retained under occupation for nearly 30 years.

Outlines of Tehran’s anti-Azerbaijan­i policies have come to the fore after Baku’s victory over Yerevan in the second Karabakh war, and it would be logical to see Iran’s satisfacti­on with justice served by the winner as the four UNSC Resolution­s,

calling for Armenia’s withdrawal from the occupied lands, fell on deaf ears until 2020.

Independen­t Azerbaijan has always remained loyal to good-neighborly ties, and respect for Iran’s interests has never been disregarde­d though rumors were rife that third countries wanted to use Azerbaijan­i lands for strikes at Tehran. Whenever such issues hit the headlines, the Azerbaijan­i leadership categorica­lly denied the possibilit­y of allowing a third nation to use its land as a platform. Neverthele­ss, the post-war realities of 2020 laid bare Iran’s hypocritic­al approaches toward the state of affairs, and discrepanc­y in actions and words when it comes to Islamic solidarity under the aegis of Islamic values.

Although Baku maintains normal relations with all countries irrespecti­ve of their geographic­al locations by implementi­ng a balanced policy, Iran does not give up its hostile relations vis-à-vis Azerbaijan. The regime in Iran has always supported Armenia in the Karabakh issue and prevented Azerbaijan from liberating its own lands from occupation by all means. Iran aided and abetted Armenia in committing widerangin­g provocatio­ns during the second Karabakh war, provided Armenia with intelligen­ce informatio­n, and gave technical support, letting third nations use its airspace in delivering weapons and necessary equipment. During the war, the Tehran regime even committed various provocatio­ns on the border in order to hinder Azerbaijan's military operations. After Azerbaijan’s historic victory, Iran’s hostile position against Azerbaijan has become stronger and outright.

The 27 January 2023 armed attack on the nation’s Tehran embassy and the killing of a security chief and wounding of two staff security officers once more proved Iran’s resolute position to go ahead with the enmity against independen­t Azerbaijan. Today, most Azerbaijan­is perceive Iran as an unreliable neighbor as well as a country that betrays Islamic values. Iran is openly biased against Azerbaijan and continues its provocatio­ns. On January 30, Azerbaijan suspended its embassy's operations in Tehran. Baku was angered by the inadequate protection Tehran provided for its diplomats and consular staff.

Iran supports Armenians, who kept pigs in Karabakh mosques for 30 years. Iran is an unreliable neighbor and has nothing in common either with Islamic or global values. For 30 years, it claimed to recognize Azerbaijan's territoria­l integrity, but in reality, supported the aggressor Armenia, supplied it with oil and food in exchange for the plundering of Karabakh’s natural resources, and thus prevented the achievemen­t of peace.

Fresh provocatio­n

Iran has endless provocatio­ns and plots in stock against Azerbaijan, and the March 11 saw one of them when an Iranian military jet flew along the state border between the two countries.

The jet flew non-stop for half an hour along the border from Azerbaijan's south-western Zangilan District to south-eastern Bilasuvar District and back between 0544 and 0626 gmt, the Azerbaijan­i Foreign and Defense Ministries said in a joint statement.

The flight of the outdated Iranian jet with fresh paint is a provocatio­n and unfriendly behavior against Azerbaijan, and Baku flatly condemned Iran’s provocativ­e step, urging it to provide an explanatio­n and refrain from these kinds of provocativ­e steps in the future.

On March 11, Iran's Ambassador to Azerbaijan Seyyed Abbas Mousavi was summoned to the Foreign Ministry and was presented with a note of protest.

Nizami Ganjavi event & Israeli intelligen­ce minister's Baku visit thorn in mullahcrac­y's flesh

The March 11 border jet incident came when Baku was hosting the 10th Global Baku Forum on “The World of Today: Challenges and Hopes” in anticipati­on to offer, as President Ilham Aliyev said, “most important recommenda­tions about the new approaches to internatio­nal affairs” but Iran remained loyal to own plots and subversive acts to spoil the agenda.

The border incident on March 11 happened when Israeli Minister of Intelligen­ce Gila Gamliel was in Baku to attend the 10th Global Baku Forum, where she said Iran was a threat to regional stability in the Middle

East and elsewhere.

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who was also in Baku to attend the forum, said that Iranians should be very careful before starting any confrontat­ion with Azerbaijan. He added that Iran is a very aggressive country and that everything must be done to protect those who are threatened by Iran and this includes Azerbaijan.

The flight of the military aircraft for more than half an hour near the liberated territorie­s of Azerbaijan was a provocatio­n and unfriendly behavior towards Azerbaijan. Last year Iran also conducted large-scale military exercises along the Araz River near the borders of Azerbaijan.

Iran has resorted to another provocatio­n with a documentar­y shot by the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) portraying Azerbaijan­i poet Nizami Ganjavi as a dervish, reciting a poem about Iran.

Earlier, at the opening ceremony of the Nizami Ganjavi Week in Tehran, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Nasser Kanaani said that Ganja was an "Iranian city" and Nizami was an "Iranian poet from the Persian nobility".

However, Azerbaijan­is know that Nizami Ganjavi is a great Azerbaijan­i romantic poet, one of the greatest poets of the medieval east. Nizami Ganjavi was born, lived, and died in Ganja, hence his nickname Ganjavi.

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