For decades, the Caspian littoral states presented the sea as a special zone: closed to outside military interference, governed by cooperation among the five coastal countries, and protected by agreements meant to preserve peace and regional balance. That long-standing principle was put to the test when Israeli strikes on March 18-19 reportedly hit Iran’s naval base and port at Bandar Anzali, damaging Tehran’s Northern Fleet, destroying vessels, and hitting a naval command center and repair yard.
Yet the response was strikingly uneven. Russia issued direct and forceful criticism, while Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan remained cautiously silent.
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Calculation more than indifference
None of the three had much to gain from publicly protesting a strike on Iranian military infrastructure, especially given the risk of being drawn into a wider confrontation involving Iran, Israel, and potentially the US.
Russia, by contrast, saw the strikes as directly affecting its own interests. Moscow has issued the strongest criticism so far, viewing the attack not only as a blow to Iran but also as a threat to a strategic and economic corridor in the Caspian. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova condemned the strike on Bandar Anzali, describing the port as an important trade and logistics hub for food and civilian goods. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, in a call with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Aragchi, said any spread of war into the Caspian would create “unacceptable risks” for Russian personnel and could bring “catastrophic environmental consequences.”
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