-
- Daily Review
- 12 February 2026 23:49
Daily Review
-
March 11 in Azerbaijan was marked by a combination of fiscal resilience, institutional reform and active diplomacy. While previous days had focused mainly on managing regional tensions around Iran and the fallout from the drone attack on Nakhchivan, the agenda on March 11 reflected a broader range of developments — from macroeconomic performance and social-sector digitalisation to international contacts and diplomatic-service reform.
-
March 10 in Azerbaijan was marked by a gradual shift from crisis management to cautious diplomatic stabilization following the tensions triggered by the drone attack on Nakhchivan on March 5. While the previous days had been focused on security issues and diplomatic demarches, March 10 showed Baku’s attempts to move the situation into a framework of managed dialogue with Iran, while simultaneously strengthening institutional control over strategically important territories and adjusting the domestic legal system.
-
March 9 in Azerbaijan was marked by cautious de-escalation after the sharp military-political tension triggered by the drone strike on the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic on March 5. If the previous days had been defined by harsh rhetoric, the mobilization of security structures, and diplomatic demarches, March 9 became a day of gradual return to managed dialogue and the restoration of transport and economic links.
-
March 5 in Azerbaijan unfolded under the sign of a sharp military-political escalation on the southern front. While March 4 had been dominated by diplomatic signals and humanitarian developments amid the crisis surrounding Iran, March 5 became the day when conflict risks materialized in the form of a direct security incident — a drone strike on the territory of the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic. Against this backdrop, domestic themes such as economic modernization, investment regulations, tax reform and negotiations with Western partners did not disappear but moved to the background, overshadowed by questions of security, military readiness and the prospects of further escalation.
In Focus
Leave a review