Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Azerbaijan and Israel discuss bilateral ties and regional developments

The top-level meeting comes amid burgeoning ties between the Jewish state and the predominantly Shi’ite Muslim country.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev meet in Munich, Feb. 17, 2024. Source: Isaac Herzog/X.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev meet in Munich, Feb. 17, 2024. Source: Isaac Herzog/X.

A senior Azerbaijani official met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem to discuss furthering bilateral ties and regional developments, Azerbaijan’s Embassy in Tel Aviv said on Wednesday.

The top-level meeting comes amid burgeoning ties between the Jewish State and the predominantly Shi’ite Muslim country.

Netanyahu’s tête-à-tête Tuesday with the Assistant to the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Hikmet Hajiyev, who is on his second mission to Israel in the last three months, comes amid a regional shakeup in the wake of the 15-month-long war against Hamas in Gaza, and the weakening of Iran’s terror proxies.

JNS has learned that Hajiyev’s previous visit to Israel in December, during which he met Israeli President Isaac Herzog, Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar and Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, was followed by a stop in Azerbaijan’s longtime ally Turkey, which has been a vociferous critic of Israel during the war.

For Israel, ties with Azerbaijan—which shares a 428-mile border with Iran, a country that is home to tens of millions of Azerbaijanis—are of strategic importance, both as a conduit for reconnaissance and because it supplies over a third of the Jewish state’s oil.

At the same time, Azerbaijan is a leading purchaser of Israeli military hardware, which helped Baku in its 2020 war with archrival Armenia.

Etgar Lefkovits is an award-winning international journalist who is an Israel correspondent and feature news writer at JNS. A native of Chicago, he has two decades of experience in journalism having served as Jerusalem correspondent in one of the world’s most demanding positions. He is now based in Tel Aviv.
Kenneth Marcus, founder and chairman of the Brandeis Center, told JNS that “we understand that those who characterize us that way, rather than as the civil rights organization we are, generally aim to marginalize us or undermine our efforts.”
Michael Specht, Ramapo Town Council supervisor, called the incident “very disturbing.”
The head of the Iranian parliament spoke after U.S. President Donald Trump warned he will destroy the Islamic Republic’s energy sites if it doesn’t open the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours.
The latest attacks “show us what a cruel regime it is and what kind of danger it is,” the Israeli president said.
Hundreds of phone calls are being made by Israel’s foreign intelligence agency, along with targeted assassinations of top regime leaders.