Right now, there is not an isolated “South Azerbaijan and Iran War,” but rather a rapidly escalating geopolitical crisis. As of early March 2026, the situation regarding South Azerbaijan is deeply entangled in the massive, ongoing U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran.
Here is exactly what is happening on the ground between Iran, Azerbaijan, and the ethnic Azerbaijani population in Iran.
The Broader Conflict: Operation Epic Fury
On February 28, 2026, the U.S. and Israel launched Operation Epic Fury, a massive joint military campaign that killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and targeted Iranian military infrastructure. This has triggered a regional war, with Iran launching retaliatory drone and missile strikes across the Middle East.
The March 5 Drone Strikes on Azerbaijan
The broader war spilled over into Azerbaijani territory on March 5, 2026, bringing Baku and Tehran to the brink of direct military engagement.
The Incident: Four kamikaze drones struck the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic (an Azerbaijani exclave bordering Iran, Turkey, and Armenia). The strikes hit the terminal at Nakhchivan International Airport and a nearby village school, injuring four civilians.
Azerbaijan’s Reaction: President Ilham Aliyev condemned the strikes as an “act of terror,” put the military on high alert, and suspended cross-border truck traffic. Baku has also evacuated its embassy staff from Tehran and its consulate in Tabriz, and over 2,000 people have been evacuated from Iran to Azerbaijan.
Iran’s Denial: Tehran firmly denied launching the drones. Iranian officials suggested the attack was an Israeli “false flag” operation designed to goad Azerbaijan—which supplies Israel with nearly half of its oil in exchange for advanced weaponry—into opening a northern military front against Iran.
The “South Azerbaijan” Dimension
“South Azerbaijan” refers to the northwestern provinces of Iran, which are home to an estimated 15 to 20 million ethnic Azerbaijanis—a population significantly larger than that of the Republic of Azerbaijan itself. This demographic is currently a major strategic flashpoint:
Separatist Movements: Amid the chaos of the U.S.-Israeli strikes and severe internal economic protests that began in late 2025, Azerbaijani separatist groups inside Iran (such as the South Azerbaijan Liberation Party) have become highly active, demanding autonomy, justice, or a transition to an independent state.
Foreign Strategic Interests: Various U.S. and Israeli strategists have openly discussed leveraging the South Azerbaijani population to trigger a localized uprising and effectively “balkanize” or fracture the Iranian state from within.
Baku’s Rhetoric: While Azerbaijan historically maintains a pragmatic but deeply suspicious relationship with Tehran, President Aliyev recently escalated his rhetoric by referring to Iranian Azerbaijanis as his “compatriots” for whom Baku provides a “beacon of hope.”
Is it a Full-Scale War?
As of today, it is not a full-scale, declared war between Iran and Azerbaijan, but it is a severe militarized standoff.
Azerbaijan has largely kept its immediate response diplomatic and defensive rather than launching retaliatory strikes into Iran. Both sides are aware that a direct, conventional war would be devastating: Azerbaijan’s energy infrastructure (which funds its economy) is highly vulnerable to Iranian missiles, and Iran cannot afford to fight a multi-front war while simultaneously absorbing heavy U.S. and Israeli bombardment.
Would you like me to break down the specific intelligence and military assets Azerbaijan currently has positioned near the Iranian border, or dive deeper into the history of the South Azerbaijani separatist movement?
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