New Dynamics in the Horn

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New Dynamics in the Horn Amen Teferi Egypt has very recently talked to all of Ethiopia s neighbors individually. It has invited President Salva Kiir of South Sudan, Omar Guelleh of Djibouti, Isayas Afeworki of Eritrea and the Sudanese foreign Minister to Cairo and president Al-Sisi had flown to Uganda to confer with president Musevini. No doubt, this development can affect the political-strategic nuance of the region. To that extent, the rising insecurity and instability in the Horn of Africa would really trigger serious concern for those who would be directly affected by the eventuality of the strained political and diplomatic ramification observed in the bilateral and multilateral relation of countries in the Horn and in the middle-east. As we chart the way ahead, the domestic political ripple and the new development in the Horn of Africa would be a big test for Ethiopia. The desolate leadership in Asmara is isolated from the international community and thus eager to clinch partnership with anyone that shows it a smiling face and offers some help in destabilizing Ethiopia. We know that Eritrea is hosting a UAE naval facility and it has allowed its air space to be used in the war on Yemen. It has even sent its troops to Yemen allying with a block that it had been previously disdaining. By the decision to collaborate with the wealthy GCC in their war on Yemen, Eritrea has unequivocally side with a pro American unipolar coalition in order to receive money and fuel and to have the possibility of having relief from the sanction made UNSC. Now being under the protective wing of the GCC, some observers say, Asmara might feel encouraged to provoke Ethiopia and this situation holds out the threat of spilling over into armed violence in the future. Therefore, what has been transpiring lately in each of the Horn of Africa states must be evaluated through the tenets of our foreign policy. In my view, the Horn of Africa has remained calm in the last two decades mainly because Ethiopia has pursued a foreign policy that helped the region as a whole to transform. However, according Andrew korybko this situation seems to be changing. In this regard, korybko said the following: The northeastern reaches of the African continent have been maligned in the Western imagination as a place of dire suffering, war, and famine, but somewhat surprisingly, the region had remained relatively stable over the past decade, barring of course a few exceptions. All of that now seems ready to be reversed, however, with destabilizing events returning as the regional norm. Whereas the previous ten years of moderate stability and growth can be attributed to China s positive involvement in the Horn, the forthcoming years of uncertainty are directly linked to the US and Saudi Arabia s efforts to dislodge China from the region and bring it closer to the unipolar fold. As a result, it can objectively be

proclaimed that the New Cold War between the unipolar and multipolar blocs has officially penetrated this part of Africa. (THE DESTABILIZATIONS IN DJIBOUTI AND ETHIOPIA ARE BEING EXPLOITED AGAINST CHINA, 2016) Touching upon the grim prospect that follows from the latest development, Andrew korybko has also noted that it looks probable that Ethiopia could become a continental leader if it continues along its state-driven development trajectory. However, if anything goes wrong in the region Ethiopia would be the first to suffer the consequences. However, we can be reassured when we try to compose ourselves and see things critically based on tents of our foreign policy. The fundamental paradigm shift one can easily pointed out from the current foreign policy of Ethiopia is its proclivity towards the internal political harmony as a means to ensure its peace and national security rather than fumbling about to deal with isolated deeds of its perceived or real enemies who might conspire against it. In my view this is an astute policy that would possibly fend off any external threats Ethiopia may face in the volatile region of the Horn of Africa. The EFDR foreign policy would clearly indicates that Ethiopia has relieved itself from the pestering effects of a siege mentality that had deposed the previous regimes to be paranoid based on a wrong assessment or belief that other hostile countries are conspiring against the country. Freeing itself from imagined or real threats that incarcerate by fear of attack by external hostile forces, Ethiopia has adopted a new foreign policy that adopts an inward looking perspective and that tries to move with the time. And take my word for it and be rest assured that countries that are hovering around the Horn of Africa would not pose any real danger to our national security if we manage to cope with our internal political discord. According to some local and external observers, Ethiopia seems to be doing nothing being oblivious of the endangering maneuver of the power politics of the Gulf States that would possibly put Ethiopia s national security at risk. If Ethiopia continues to remain idle as such in the face of the ongoing stern political and military ramifications without taking the necessary precautionary measures that counterbalance the mug s game that involve these hostile Gulf Countries on one hand and Iran on the other, it will suffer the consequences. But according to our foreign policy, there is no more important issue to Ethiopia s domestic stability than the arrangement of its internal affairs. If it can reduce its internal anti-systemic threats that regularly conspire against our federal democratic establishment by ensuring and consolidating the democratic governance, no single terrorist group or conspiracy of rogue state would be strong enough to destabilize Ethiopia. This is my take. Therefore, in assessing the state of Ethiopia s strategic stability one must focus on the internal political situation. Anti-systemic groups who may threaten the stability of our federal democratic system solely

feed on the dissatisfaction of the public that arise from lack of good governance and anti-democratic proclivity of government officials. While I believe that it is sensible to think in terms of the new scenario -owing to the siege mentality that Eritrea has adopted and accordingly acted over the past two decades- I would strongly believe the ball is in our hand. The most important factor that determines the outcome of any possible war of aggression that Eritrea may launch against Ethiopia is its internal political stability. The utmost hate the regime in Asmara harbors on Ethiopia might once again lead the leadership to miscalculate and may launch an open aggression. Nonetheless, if Eritrea decides to launch an aggression for the second time, Ethiopia will respond, as the late PM Meles has once said, in a manner that would make sure that Eritrea won t have a third chance. If Eritrea decides on its own to go to war with Ethiopia or is emboldened to do so by the new allies, it will likely bring itself into the fray that would speed up its demise. If Ethiopia does all its homework, then it will meet any case and would surly fend off any threats. In a nut shell, the recent Saudi moves in Africa shows its interest to take a leadership role in African- Arab joint actions and also its desire to counter some of the progress Iran has made in recent years in the Horn of Africa. Given its tensions with Lebanon and Egypt, Saudi Arabia simply wants to diversify its allies in the Horn and wanted to achieve food security by expanding its agricultural projects in countries with abundant water and land resources be it in the Nile Basin region or elsewhere. Cairo continues to commit to a quiet diplomacy and contents itself with messages stressing the importance of the Egyptian role in many areas of Africa. Yet for many observers of the African-Arab scene, the lack of unified Arab vision toward Africa will turn the African continent into a field for Middle Eastern conflict whether among Arab countries, or between Arab countries led by Saudi Arabia on one hand and Iran and Turkey on the other. Ethiopia Can Meet the Case Recent developments seen in the Horn of Africa and the Middle-East have triggered serious concerns among some Ethiopians and have sometimes casted doubt on the wisdom of Ethiopia s foreign policy that it has been advancing with regards to the Horn of Africa in general and Eritrea in particular.

The newly emerging tumultuous situation has also forced some Ethiopians to raise questions about the relevance Ethiopia s standing policy towards the rogue state in Asmara. These days we have a renewed skepticism that was sparked by the expansion of the GCC to Eritrea- a skepticism that has become more and more consolidated and widened as the latest development in the Middle-East that permeated mess in the diplomatic and political alliance of the GCC and soon reflected by the ramification in the economic, diplomatic and military sectors of the Horn of Africa. The situation in the Horn is tempered by combination of factors that has led some observers to prefigure a complicated scenario in the Horn. Putting the new political reconfiguration in the Middle- East with other factors such as the war in Yemen, terrorist groups operating in region, Iran and Arab countries competition for influence in the region, the rivalry between the multi-polar (being represented by China) and the uni-polar (being represented by USA) among others. Considering the important role China has in the Ethiopia some commentators expected that the US would try to destabilize the Ethiopian government as a form of asymmetrical punishment. According to these commentators, this has become all the more probable with coming to power of Donald Trump. Even some observers typified the recent incidence of violence in Djibouti during the religious celebration (Maulid) as the common tactic the US employed in its regime changing project. The writer, Andrew korybko has even said that the upcoming Djibouti s election is a good triggering event for justifying a color revolution and all of the resultant tangential destabilization that comes with it that would be exploited to overthrow the long-serving president Omar Guelleh and replace him with a pro-us/gcc puppet or to force him to be subservient to the world s anti-chinese wishes so as to misappropriate the Horn from China. Moreover, we know Iran has been supplying weapons to the Houthi rebels in Yemen, while Saudi Arabia strives to restore the defunct Abdela Salah s government. Thus, Saudi and her allies sought to associate with the countries in the Horn which can be instrumental in its effort to defeat the Houthis rebel. Saudi s effort to establish a military base in Djibouti was of course a failure. Hence, Djibouti has earned the consternation of Saudi Arabia and its GCC allies for resisting their appeal to open a base there for use in the war on Yemen and that is allegedly why they had to seek Eritrea s assistance instead. On the other hand, Qatar is monitoring the Eritrean-Djiboutian boarder since 2010 as part of its UN responsibilities in mediating the 2008 crisis between the two countries. Therefore, they argue, that Qatar is already within an easy operational range to manage any destabilizing project if it so chooses.

Saudi Arabia has secured the alliance of Sudan that severed its ties with Iran last year. In return it has got 5 billion USD grant from Saudi in military assistance after Saudi has halted its military aid to Lebanon s army for its ties with Iran. Already Saudi s political coordination with some African countries had become evident when Djibouti and Somalia, like the Sudan, broke off their ties with Iran immediately after the January 2016 attack on Saudi Arabia embassy in Tehran. Another new development that has sparked concerns and grabbed the attentions of some observers is the withdrawal of a number of Gulf countries from the Arab-Africa summit. As we see now conflicting political interests and agendas are creating rift among member countries of the Arab League and this has clearly seen as Morocco, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Yemen, Somalia and Qatar withdrew from the Arab-African Summit held last year in Equatorial Guinea, whereas Egypt opted to attend. In support of Morocco s position that protest against the presence of the Sahrawi Republic at the Arab- African Summit held in November, the Gulf countries boycotted the meeting, while Egypt on the other hand rejected Morocco s proposal to return to the African Union. Saudi Arabia and Egypt s lack of correspondence of political position in relation to various international issues is reflected on yet another matter that involves Ethiopia. Egypt is highly alarmed by the huge Saudi investments in the agricultural sector of Africa. It particularly disdained Saudi investments in the land and water of the Nile basin countries. As Hani Raslan, head of the Sudan and Nile Basin Studies Program at Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, recently told to Al-Monitor Saudi s investment in the Nile Basin is part of Saudi s policy to isolate Egypt and a rejection of Egyptian fears and concerns. He also construed the high-level Saudi delegation s visit to the GERD as an infringement on Egyptian national security and a backing of Ethiopia s position regarding the dam. Another Egyptian scholar, Adel Nabhan, has reacted saying Although international relations are governed by interest, it is unacceptable that a party exploits sensitive issues, such as water, to achieve particular goals, even when it comes to the Saudi-Egyptian disagreement, as quoted by Al-Monitor. Now Egypt is trying to rectify its failure and striving to promote its African identity. As a means to counter Saudi s role in Africa, Egypt has vigorously engaged itself in affirming its presence not only when the opportunity to do so arises, but also by proactively creating occasions to this end. For instance, in December 2016 Abdel Fattah al-sisi had hosted the Djibouti president and had travelled to Uganda.

Addendum to this equation is the role of Asmara in the region and the construction of the GERD that would have impact on the power game in the Nile basin (to be specific Egypt and Ethiopia) and all these combined would put the peace of the Horn of Africa more precarious and eventually threaten Ethiopia s security, as some observers argued