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Showing Original Post only (View all)Russia bombs Azerbaijani embassies in a massive missile retaliation to jet transfers to Ukraine - RFU News [View all]
Today, the biggest news comes from the South Caucasus.
Here, Russias anger has erupted after Azerbaijan, long dismissed as a small neutral state, emerged as one of its most disputive rivals. From gas deals to arms shipments, Baku is quietly dismantling Russias regional leverage, and the Kremlins response has turned openly hostile, with a missile strike on the Azerbaijani embassy in Kyiv marking a dangerous new stage in their confrontation.
The attack happened during a nighttime bombardment on Ukrainian targets when an Iskander-type missile hit the Azerbaijani diplomatic compound. Moscow claimed it was an accident, but in Baku the strike was seen as deliberate. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry summoned Russias ambassador and handed him a formal protest, while President Ilham Aliyev called Ukraines Volodymyr Zelensky to condemn what he called a targeted strike. State media in Baku framed the incident as a direct assault on Azerbaijans sovereignty. For Moscow, this was an outburst, with frustration spilling into action against a country it once treated as a dependent partner.
What triggered that reaction runs deeper than a single embassy, as in recent weeks, reports have confirmed that Azerbaijan has quietly sent Su-22 fighter jets to Ukraine through a covert logistics chain running across Turkey, Sudan, and Germany. The aircraft originates from Cihaz, a defense enterprise under Azerbaijans Ministry of Defense industry, which produces weapons and munitions under Turkish license. Shipments are re-labeled as humanitarian aid in Gaziantep, shipped to Port Sudan, and then moved to Europe before reaching Ukraine. The same routes that once carried Wagner-linked arms now serve as Ukraines supply network. For Russia, the embarrassment is twofold, as it loses control over its African sphere and faces the reality that even its smaller neighbors are now contributing to Kyivs war effort.
The other reason for Moscows reaction lies in energy, as Ukraine has received its first Azerbaijani gas through the Trans-Balkan pipeline, a route once dominated by Gazprom. The volumes are small, but the symbolism is enormous. The deal between Naftogaz and Socar Energy Ukraine marks Kyivs first alternative source since cutting all Russian imports. Naftogaz chief Serhi Koretski described it as a strategic step in the start of a long-term cooperation. For Moscow, the move signals that the Turkic bloc of Turkey and Azerbaijan now provides what Russia once controlled, that being fuel for Europes east and resilience for Ukraines winter.
Across Europe, the pattern is repeating, as Serbia, historically close to Moscow, is preparing new gas contracts with Baku while U.S. sanctions push Gazprom out of local companies. The European Union has promoted Azerbaijani energy as a substitute for Russian supply, reinforcing a broader shift where Turkey acts as the intermediary and Azerbaijan as the new donor. Even limited contracts limit Russias influence in the Balkans, and every new pipeline strengthens the idea that Baku, not Moscow, now controls the regions energy future.
Back in the South Caucasus, the geopolitical reversal is almost complete, as the Zangezur Corridor, linking Azerbaijan through Armenia to Turkey, is reshaping trade routes between Europe and Asia without crossing Russian territory. The project followed Azerbaijans decisive offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh, which ended the war and exposed Moscows failure as a peacekeeper. Once seen as the regions stabilizing force, Russia now watches from the sidelines as former clients rewrite the map around it. The corridor is not just a road, it is the physical proof that Moscows monopoly over Eurasian transit is finished.
Overall, Azerbaijan has become the smallest state to inflict the deepest strategic damage on Russia. Through a combination of quiet arms deliveries, gas deals, and bold regional infrastructure, Baku is replacing Moscows role step by step, in Ukraines airspace, in Europes energy grid, and across the Caucasus. The strike on its embassy will not intimidate Azerbaijan, as it only exposes a desperate Russia lashing out as its influence crumbles from within its own neighborhood.
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