By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Azemedia new logo
  • Home
  • COP29
  • Opinion
  • News
    • Economy
    • Energy
    • Climate and Ecology
  • Culture
  • Diaspora
  • Interview
  • Science
  • Logistics-Transport
  • Gender
  • History
  • Defense
  • Karabakh
Aze.MediaAze.Media
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
  • Economy
  • Climate and Ecology
  • Energy
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Gender
  • Interview
  • Science
  • Logistics-Transport
  • History
  • Defense
  • Karabakh
  • Diaspora
  • Who we are
Follow US
© 2021 Aze.Media – Daily Digest
Aze.Media > Opinion > Gaza, Iran, and America’s strategic reset
Opinion

Gaza, Iran, and America’s strategic reset

Azerbaijan could play a critical role in ongoing peace efforts in the Middle East—particularly in engagement with neighboring Iran.

AzeMedia
By AzeMedia Published February 20, 2026 296 Views 8 Min Read
0x0
WASHINGTON, DC - AUGUST 08: U.S. President Donald Trump (L) welcomes Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (R) to the White House on August 8, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump is scheduled to hold a trilateral signing ceremony with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijani to end decades of conflict. (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

At the inaugural session of the Board of Peace on February 19, US president Donald Trump is expected to outline a Gaza reconstruction plan and a UN-mandated stabilization force to secure the enclave. Representatives from at least 20 states, including several national leaders, are expected in Washington. A key focus will be the establishment of a multi-billion-dollar fund that pools member contributions for post-conflict recovery. US officials say Trump will also announce which states have pledged thousands of troops for the multinational force in Gaza.

One month into President Trump’s second term, I argued in “The US Geostrategy and the Old World Order” that the United States had begun a historic recalibration of its foreign-policy doctrine. This transformation was long in the making, shaped by three decades of geopolitical realities since the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991. I noted that shifts of this magnitude rarely proceed smoothly, producing a turbulent transition as institutions, alliances, and assumptions resist change. While instability is inherent to systemic realignment, addressing new threats with outdated frameworks is increasingly untenable and risky.

America’s Burden-Sharing Approach to Middle East Diplomacy

For the United States to pursue a geostrategy of global management through burden-sharing and burden-shifting, Washington must first resolve legacy conflicts that limit flexibility. The Middle East remains the most complex, with the Trump Administration focusing on the Board of Peace approach centered on Gaza. The initiative aims to end a regional war and build a coalition to assume long-term security, stabilization, and reconstruction responsibilities. Yet developments within and about Iran could complicate the plan, potentially requiring support from states beyond the region—most notably Azerbaijan.

Operationalizing this approach requires careful diplomacy with key regional players, particularly Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Israel, as well as the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Egypt, and Jordan. Resolving conflicts among them helps align allies capable of assuming most security and stabilization responsibilities. Turkey and Saudi Arabia are central to this approach, ideally coordinated with Israel. Yet diverging Turkish and Israeli interests, Saudi Arabia’s retreat from normalization efforts with Israel, and Saudi-UAE divergence complicate a coherent regional strategy.

The regional calculus is further complicated by Iran’s geopolitical fragility. Ongoing American diplomacy faces mounting strains as factional divisions in Tehran deepen, reflected in the weakening of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the growing influence of the Artesh. These dynamics have prompted the deployment of a second US carrier strike group, heightening the risk of renewed conflict. Washington is attempting to guide the region toward post-conflict stabilization even as the possibility of confrontation with Iran persists.

Reconciling Turkey and Saudi Arabia with Israel while managing tensions with Iran will require skillful statecraft from the Trump administration. Azerbaijan is well-positioned to assist due to its unique diplomatic ties. It maintains close relations with Turkey, the UAE, and Israel, while also engaging Saudi Arabia. Washington can leverage Baku as a key intermediary to coordinate regional actors.

Azerbaijan has already demonstrated both the intent and capability to act as a strategic intermediary in the Middle East. It has hosted deconfliction talks between Turkey and Israel, underscoring its readiness to bridge regional divides. Baku has also served as a conduit between Israel and the new regime in Syria, exemplified by Ahmed al-Shara’s visit to Baku. Its participation in the Board of Peace further highlights the country’s growing diplomatic importance.

What Azerbaijan Brings to the Peace Table

An unparalleled combination of geographic, historical, and sociopolitical factors confers exceptional leverage on Azerbaijan. Positioned along Iran’s northwestern frontier, it borders provinces with large ethnic Azeri populations whose cultural ties to Baku remain strong. Azerbaijan’s secular model, combined with the Iranian Azeris’ presence in senior state and military roles, offers the United States a potential window into Iran’s internal dynamics. Leveraging these connections, Baku could support stabilization efforts and help shape Tehran’s behavior amid ongoing diplomacy and security pressure.

Vice President JD Vance’s Feb. 10–11 visit to Baku advanced US geostrategy by formalizing Azerbaijan’s role in regional stabilization. The two countries signed a Strategic Partnership Charter, committing to enhanced maritime security and economic connectivity. The visit underscores Baku’s strategic value as US lawmakers consider repealing Section 907 of the 1992 Freedom Support Act. Originally enacted during the 1988–94 Armenia-Azerbaijan war and supported by diaspora lobbying, 907 is now largely obsolete following the 2020–23 conflict and the August 2025 peace deal brokered by the Trump administration.

It remains a barrier to expanding American-Azerbaijani ties envisioned in the Strategic Charter signed by Vance. The Armenian National Committee of America’s effort to preserve the restriction is increasingly anachronistic and counterproductive to the very community it seeks to serve. Profound changes in Armenia’s own interests, regional geopolitics, and American global strategy have altered the landscape. Overcoming Cold War–era constraints is essential for Washington to operationalize its new geostrategy in the Middle East and West Asia.

Kamran Bokhari, PhD, is a senior director at the New Lines Institute for Strategy & Policy in Washington. He is a strategic forecaster and teaches Eurasian geopolitics in Georgetown University’s Security Studies Program.

national

You Might Also Like

Aliyev’s model: adapting to a changing environment with a clear vision of national interests

Brussels and Baku move toward deeper strategic cooperation

When humanity matters more than politics

How Azerbaijan views the Iran war

How an incident on the Azerbaijan-Iran border became a test for diplomacy in the region

AzeMedia February 21, 2026 February 20, 2026

New articles

17732967912260948104 1200x630
Aliyev’s model: adapting to a changing environment with a clear vision of national interests
Opinion March 13, 2026
Bigstock azerbaijani manat a business b 329741881 990x556
The war in Iran promises Azerbaijan multi-billion revenues… and a stronger manat
News March 13, 2026
Snimok ekrana 2021 12 07 v 13.46.46 e1670495782321 7a66353b
Brussels and Baku move toward deeper strategic cooperation
Opinion March 12, 2026
17733008292245060088 1200x630
Aliyev opens XIII Global Baku Forum, highlights peace with Armenia and Azerbaijan’s role in global connectivity
News March 12, 2026
VK31F11RIMjnNhJflFmtnERmnXGIw5YdE74NOYqo
EU backs Azerbaijan’s peace process with Armenia, Costa says in Baku
News March 11, 2026
Nikol pashinyan 28 1 2025
Pashinyan: Fuel imports from Azerbaijan lowered prices, broken monopoly on market
News March 11, 2026
406207
Vladimir Putin thanks Ilham Aliyev for evacuation of Russian citizens from Iran
News March 11, 2026
Screenshot
When humanity matters more than politics
Opinion March 10, 2026
1773120876662040459 1200x630
Humanitarian aid has been sent to Iran on the instructions of Ilham Aliyev
News March 10, 2026
Gettyimages 2161911778 Scaled
How Azerbaijan views the Iran war
Opinion March 10, 2026

You Might Also Like

17732967912260948104 1200x630

Aliyev’s model: adapting to a changing environment with a clear vision of national interests

March 13, 2026 10 Min Read
Snimok ekrana 2021 12 07 v 13.46.46 e1670495782321 7a66353b

Brussels and Baku move toward deeper strategic cooperation

March 12, 2026 7 Min Read
Screenshot

When humanity matters more than politics

March 10, 2026 9 Min Read
Gettyimages 2161911778 Scaled

How Azerbaijan views the Iran war

March 10, 2026 7 Min Read
GettyImages 2147784914 scaled

How an incident on the Azerbaijan-Iran border became a test for diplomacy in the region

March 9, 2026 11 Min Read
17727126852611137167 1200x630

Iranian ultimatum from the rubble: Baku rejects blackmail and threats

March 9, 2026 14 Min Read
F641cc3e ee8f 4ec0 be97 73cf3910fcb2

Azerbaijan between Türkiye, Iran, and Israel: strategic balance in a changing regional environment

March 7, 2026 13 Min Read
Iran war us israel

The price of a strategic miscalculation: Tehran is forcing its neighbors to unite against it

March 6, 2026 7 Min Read

Useful links

426082d1 a9e4 4ac5 95d4 4e84024eb314 pojkz91103g6zqfh8kiacu662b2tn9znit7ssu9ekg
Ab65ed96 2f4a 4220 91ac f70a6daaf659 pojkz67iflcc0wjkp1aencvsa5gq06ogif9cd0dl34
96e40a2b 5fed 4332 83c6 60e4a89fd4d0 pojkz836t9ewo4gue23nscepgx7gfkvx6okbbkasqo
759bde00 a375 4fa1 bedc f8e9580ceeca pq8mvb9kwubqf6bcadpkq5mz16nayr162k3j2084cg
aze-media-logo-ag1

We are a unique political and socio-cultural digest offering exclusive materials, translations from Azerbaijani media, and reprints of articles from around the world about Azerbaijan.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Cookies Policy

Email: editor@aze.media

© 2021 Aze.Media – Daily Digest
aze-media-logo1 aze-media-logo-ag1
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?