BAKU: Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev accused Iran of “terrorism” and threatened retaliation after drone attacks Thursday wounded four people — an incident that could drag yet another country into the Middle East war.
Tehran denied the allegation and blamed Israel, Azerbaijan’s ally, of trying to stage a provocation.
The midday attacks involved at least four drones that crossed from Iran into Azerbaijan’s exclave of Nakhichevan bordering Iran, Baku said.
“Today a terrorist act was carried out from the Iranian side against the territory of Azerbaijan,” Aliyev told a hastily convened security council meeting.
Azerbaijan’s military “have been instructed to prepare and carry out retaliatory measures ... placed on mobilization level number one, and must be ready to conduct any operation,” he said.

A drone explodes at the airport of Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan, in this screengrab obtained from a social media video released March 5, 2026. (via Reuters)
“Those dishonorable people who committed this terrorist act against us will regret it. Let them not test our strength... This stain will never be erased from their dirty and ugly face,” he added.
The Azerbaijani defense ministry said it had detected four drones launched by Iran’s army.
“One of them was disabled by the Azerbaijani army, while the others were directed at civilian infrastructure, including a secondary school building during class hours. Fortunately, the drone targeting the school did not reach its objective and instead fell and exploded near the school,” it said.
The Nakhichevan Airport terminal was damaged, the foreign ministry said, with video showing grey smoke rising above the building after the strike.
Four people were hospitalized with “traumatic brain injuries,” Sahib Abuzarov, head of emergency services at a hospital in Nakhichevan said later.

A school in Julfa damaged in a drone attack carried out by Iran, on its exclave of Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan, on Thursday. (AP)
The general staff of Iran’s armed forces said it did not carry out the attack and pointed the finger at Israel.
“Such actions by the Zionist regime, aimed at disrupting relations between Muslim countries in various ways, are not unprecedented,” it said in a statement.
Turkiye’s foreign ministry condemned strikes “which target third countries in the region and increase the risk of the war spreading,” adding it “will continue to stand by Azerbaijan, as it always has.”
Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry summoned the Iranian envoy in Baku to express “strong protest” over the attack, which it said “contradicts the norms and principles of international law and contributes to rising tensions in the region.”
“We demanded from the Islamic Republic of Iran to provide, within the shortest possible timeframe, a clear explanation regarding the case and conduct investigation,” Azerbaijani foreign ministry spokesman, Aykhan Hajjizada, told AFP.
Analysts have said Azerbaijan’s Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline — which runs through neighboring Georgia and Turkiye and carries around a third of Israel’s oil imports — could become a potential target for the Iranian military.
In 2024, Azerbaijan exported 2.37 million tons of oil to Israel via Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, director of the Baku-based Center for Oil Research, Ilham Shaban, told AFP.
“The pipeline is buried underground along most of its route, making it difficult to disable,” he said, adding that “above-ground facilities — such as terminals and pumping stations — could still be vulnerable to Iranian drone strikes.”
Iran has long expressed concern that Israel — a close ally of Azerbaijan and a key arms supplier — could use Azerbaijani territory to stage attacks.
Last June, Azerbaijan reassured Iran that it would not allow its territory to be used for attacks against Tehran after Israel launched a large-scale strike on Iranian targets.
Tehran has historically been wary of separatist sentiment among its ethnic Azerbaijani minority, which makes up around 10 million of Iran’s 83 million citizens.
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Arab News
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned what it described as an Iranian attempt to target the Republic of Turkey and the Republic of Azerbaijan, expressing its “strongest denunciation” of the act.
In a statement issued on Thursday, the Kingdom said such attempts and Iran’s repeated conduct toward countries in the region reflect a hostile approach that cannot be justified under any circumstances.
The statement added that the actions contradict international laws, established norms, and the principles of good neighborliness, warning that they risk pushing the region toward further escalation.
Riyadh also expressed full solidarity with Turkey and Azerbaijan, both their governments and their peoples. The Kingdom affirmed its support for the two countries’ right to protect their security, airspace, territorial integrity, and citizens, while commending their efforts to avoid escalation and maintain regional security and stability.











