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INTO THE FRAY

Azerbaijan: Augmenting the Abraham Accords

Since the 1990s, Azerbaijan has played a considerable role in bolstering Israel’s security and enhancing its access to energy.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog meets with his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev in Baku on May 30, 2023. Credit: Haim Zach/GPO.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog meets with his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev in Baku on May 30, 2023. Credit: Haim Zach/GPO.
Martin Sherman
Martin Sherman
Martin Sherman spent seven years in operational capacities in the Israeli defense establishment. He is the founder of the Israel Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), a member of the Habithonistim-Israel Defense & Security Forum (IDSF) research team, and a participant in the Israel Victory Project.

The Abraham Accords were the greatest foreign policy accomplishment of Trump’s first administration; he has made it clear that his new administration will seek to expand them.”

— “Forbes,” March 8, 2025

Two recent media reports underscored the emerging international stature of the Caucasian republic of Azerbaijan and its ties to Israel.

The first relates to the growing involvement of Azerbaijan’s State Oil Company (SOCAR) in Israel’s energy sector, entailing SOCAR’s first drilling operations outside of Azerbaijan.

The second related to a visit by President Donald Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff in Azerbaijan. This took place after endorsement by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and a group of prominent rabbis. The rabbis, including the founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, urged including Azerbaijan in the Abraham Accords framework and for the bolstering of a trilateral alliance between Washington, Jerusalem and Baku.

Some months ago, the value of such an axis was raised in a previous column of mine, and recognition of its merits, then enumerated, appears to be growing.

Arguably, one of the most fundamental traits of international relations is its inherent uncertainty. Indeed, it is a field where today’s truth is often stranger than yesterday’s fiction.

To illustrate the point, consider anyone in the early 1980s suggesting that:

  • Within less than a decade and a half, the mighty USSR would disintegrate;
  • The Warsaw Pact, once a formidable alliance confronting NATO, would crumble, with some of its members even joining the ranks erstwhile foes as part of NATO;
  • Then-impoverished nations, such as China and India, would become industrial and commercial powerhouses, with the former beginning to challenge America’s global economic hegemony;
  • There would be a massive shift of industry and commerce to Asia from the West.

Undoubtedly, any such far-sighted prophet would have been dismissed as totally out of touch with reality, if not as borderline deranged.

But that is precisely what transpired, with the world today far closer to the predictions of some outcast eccentric than that of the adherents of the then-prevailing conventional wisdom.

Interestingly, the breakup of the Soviet Union gave rise to another unpredictable event of far-reaching strategic impact. This involves a burgeoning strategic axis between the former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan and Israel, which for decades was locked in bitter hostility with the USSR.

The relationship between Azerbaijan and Israel began in 1992, soon after Azerbaijan attained independence from the Soviet Union, when the two countries set up diplomatic ties. The relations continued to strengthen, and in March 2023, Baku opened its embassy in Israel, formalizing three decades of diplomatic ties between the countries.

Since the 1990s, Azerbaijan has played a considerable role in bolstering Israel’s security and enhancing its access to energy. Baku reportedly supplies up to 60% of Israel’s gasoline consumption. Additionally, both countries maintain strong cooperation in defense, intelligence and trade.

During the 2023 Israel-Hamas conflict, Azerbaijan was reportedly the only Muslim-majority country supporting Israel. Despite pressure from other Islamic nations, the Azerbaijani leadership maintained its strategic partnership with the Jewish state. After the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, Azerbaijan citizens gathered around the Israeli Embassy in Baku, expressing support and sympathy with flowers and memorial candles. 

Warm relations are mirrored in a generally benign relationship with its Jewish community in the country. Israel’s ambassador to Baku recently remarked: “Jews in Azerbaijan have lived in harmony and tolerance with the rest of society for centuries.” Indeed, at a recent special session of U.S. Congress, the rabbi of Baku’s Sephardic community declared that “Jews in Azerbaijan have never encountered antisemitism. The government considers any threat to Jews as a threat to national stability.” He went on to emphasize that in Azerbaijan, Jews can walk the streets freely, displaying their Jewishness without fear.

Just before the murderous Oct. 7 attack, an article, based on an earlier interview with Israel’s ambassador, noted that Azerbaijan is home to the largest Jewish community in the Muslim-majority world, and a bastion of safety for Jews with hardly any sign of antisemitism. As opposed to numerous other countries, even in the West, there is no need for security details at synagogues and Jewish schools.

In light of the foregoing analysis, it is hardly surprising that a growing number of voices are calling for widening the framework of the 2020 Abraham Accords to include Azerbaijan. Indeed, it is not easy to identify any persuasive argument to oppose such a proposal.

After all, as a recent Forbes article observed: “The Abraham Accords, the normalization of relations between Israel and several majority Muslim states, [were] the greatest foreign policy accomplishment of Donald J. Trump’s first administration. As his second term takes off, the president has made it clear that his administration will seek an expansion of this groundbreaking framework.”

It continues: “One Muslim-majority country that already has a longstanding partnership with Israel and is an obvious candidate to join the Accords framework is Azerbaijan.”

In a similar vein, an Atlantic Council piece urged adjoining Azerbaijan to the Abraham Accords, even proposing holding an Abraham Accords summit in Baku.

It concludes, “Should the United States take the same approach as Israel and deepen its diplomatic, economic and security ties with Azerbaijan, it may reap similar geopolitical rewards.”

Of course, should such an initiative bear fruit, it would comprise a daunting, even ominous development for Iran, which remains a menacing common adversary not only for the United States, Azerbaijan and Israel but for other members of the Abraham Accords, especially in the Perisan Gulf and the Arabian Peninsula.

In recent decades, it is fair to state that Israel’s foreign policy has (to be charitable) often been defective. But when it comes to the decision to initiate and cultivate the relationship with Azerbaijan, Israel’s policy-makers must be commended for laudable foresight and the formulation of what is emerging as an archetypal positive-sum game for all involved.

The opinions and facts presented in this article are those of the author, and neither JNS nor its partners assume any responsibility for them.
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