"Azerbaijan has always been interested in establishing and developing friendly and partnership relations with all countries."

Ziyafat Asgarov, chairman of the defense, security and anti-corruption committee of the Milli Majlis, said this in his statement to APA.

The chairman of the committee said that Azerbaijan's development of relations with other countries, including Israel, should not worry other countries: "Especially the position of our neighbor Iran in this regard is unacceptable.

Because Azerbaijan always pursues a policy in accordance with its national interests, and its policy is not against neighboring countries.

Iran does not seem to intend to refrain from this or other actions that are unbecoming of its neighbor.

The scale of threats against Azerbaijan is expanding day by day.

Instead of looking for traces of Israel in Azerbaijan, it would be better for Iran to identify and neutralize spies within itself.

Just recently, it became known that Iran's deputy defense minister worked for British intelligence for many years.

Killing of scientists in Iran

I wonder whose job it is to cancel the projects?

Many see the trail of Israeli intelligence, which has achieved great success in this matter.

It turns out that it looks like an Iranian ostrich.

He puts his head in the ground and thinks that the world is not aware of what is happening inside."

The deputy drew attention to the fact that the mullah regime is already losing control in the country: "The large masses of people protesting, neighbors fed up with terrorism, big powers acting with a reflex of self-defense are now causing serious panic and chaos in Tehran.

As a result, the mullah regime has already lost the ability to think logically.

The people no longer support the regime and all hope for it is dead.

Tehran, which considers itself the master of the region, is getting more and more deviant as its opportunities run out of its hands.

Calling oneself a great state does not mean greatness.

Iran, which threatens another country with aggression and attack, is as small and vile as its closest ally, Armenia.

It is better if Tehran draws conclusions from the fate of its friend-brother Yerevan.

Recently, the identification of spies working for foreign countries in Iran has made this regime even more corrupt.

Government agencies,

power structures interfere with each other in competitive conditions and disrupt the general work of the state.

In such a situation, there are very fertile conditions for foreign intelligence agencies to infiltrate the ranks of the Iranian government, army, and special services.

Now it is not clear who plays horses in Iran and who serves whom.

It will not be surprising if one day it is determined that the mullahs serve Israel.

The chairman of the committee noted that the shock of his situation pushes the representatives of the Tehran regime to take inappropriate and irresponsible steps: "Sometimes they say that the presence of foreign forces in the region is inadmissible, and sometimes they declare the immutability of state borders as "red lines".

As if they are talking about some Zionist elements, but they are not talking about the mission of the European Union, which Armenia has placed on the tip of its nose.

The mullah regime, which did not raise its voice against Armenia's occupation of Azerbaijan's 132-km border with Iran for 30 years, today defines a "red line" when there is no threat.

This can be called hypocrisy at its mildest.

After our Victory in the 44-day Patriotic War, they threaten Azerbaijan and conduct continuous exercises on the border.

"It seems that the Tehran regime, like its ally Armenia, cannot digest the victory of Azerbaijan, and it has taken away the comfort of liberating our lands from occupation."