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Surviving the West: Eritrea after 32 Years

Posted: 16 May 2023, 14:09
by Zmeselo


Surviving the West: Eritrea after 32 Years

By Larmbert Ebitu

https://africainterest.org/surviving-th ... -32-years/

May 16, 2023

As Eritrea gears up to celebrate its 32nd anniversary of independence on May 24th, it’s worth reflecting on the country’s remarkable journey towards self-determination. Unlike many African nations that continue to grapple with neocolonialism and external interference, Eritrea has defended its sovereignty and charted its own course.

However, this independence has not come without challenges, including persistent efforts by Western powers to undermine Eritrea’s progress and stability. That threat has been portent over the decades. But it is even more potent today, in light of renewed US hostility, making this anniversary all the more significant

There are various ways in which the US has attempted (but ultimately failed) to destroy Eritrea over the years. From economic sanctions to political subversion, these tactics reveal a pattern of hostility towards a nation that has dared to forge its own path. This Eritrean story is one of resilience and determination to stand up to external pressures at any price. It is, so to say, a present-day example for other African countries to emulate.

Handouts instead of Helping hands

In his 2007 paper, http://www.dehai.org/archives/dehai_new ... 97__1_.pdf President Isaias Afwerki recounted an incident that occurred in early 1992, shortly after Eritrea gained independence. Apparently, a certain Western country had offered to provide Eritrea with some amount of food and commodity aid.

This was meant to help the country deal with the effects of war and drought. However, President Afwerki and the Eritrean government declined the offer, opting instead to rely on local resources and citizen mobilization. From this 2007 narration, President Afwerki naturally believed the aid offer was well-intentioned.

With hindsight, however, it is clear, this unnamed Western country, which we now know was the US, had ulterior motives. Its subsequent actions have since revealed its true intentions. The motive was to make the then barely months-old Eritrea aid dependent on the West, as were other African countries.

This was the first, and the most cynical of anti-Eritrea plots meant to destroy Eritrea even before it could crawl! And it would have succeeded, were it not for President Afwerki’s commitment to Eritrean independence and self-reliance. The experience, suffice to say, set the tone for Eritrea’s approach to development and foreign aid thereafter.

Containing Eritrea through Proxy

Eritrea’s rejection of Western aid, and subsequent pursuit of self-reliance, meant it was free to chart its own development course. The West took this as a direct challenge to their development paradigm, a repudiation of their interests. Eritrea’s economy didn’t have the vulnerabilities of others that depended on their aid, without which they could collapse.

This lack of leverage over Eritrea, and subsequently the inability to arm-twist the country to do its bidding angered Western countries. However, it was the fear that other African countries would emulate Eritrea’s self-reliance path, that deeply troubled the West. They immediately set toward ‘containing’ Eritrea, making sure it would pay the heavy price for daring Africans to become self-reliant. https://africainterest.org/eritrea-payi ... f-reliant/

But that ‘containment’ could not be implemented internally, seeing as Eritreans were fully behind their government. So, they had to attempt it through an external proxy. The opportunity came when tensions between Eritrea and Ethiopia in 1998 led to a devastating two-year border conflict. This was a conflict of regional causes, with some historical factors at play.

But the West saw an opportunity to exacerbate and prolong it at Eritrea’s cost. They provided significant military and economic support to TPLF-led Ethiopia, which they saw as a more pro-Western country. This conflict would end after OAU brokered a ceasefire, but having dealt Eritrea with severe economic and humanitarian impacts. Nevertheless, Eritrea, rather than break as the West had hoped, instead further shifted its focus toward regional security and self-reliance.

Regional destabilization

Between 2000 and 2008, Eritrea focused on regional security and signed agreements on economic cooperation, border security, and regional stability with neighboring countries in the Horn of Africa. It established diplomatic relations with Somalia in 2000 and signed security and development agreements with Sudan, Djibouti, and Somalia in subsequent years.

These were significant steps towards regional unity and stability in the Horn of Africa. But they did not sit well with Western countries who feared that Eritrea’s success would establish it as the gatekeeper to the region. So they fomented suspicion, and armed rival militias and warlords in Somalia to perpetuate the instability and breed extremist groups like Al-Shabaab.

These counter-actions didn’t stop Eritrea from taking the initiative and hosting talks to reconcile Somalia’s warring factions in Asmara, leading to the Djibouti Agreement. But not to be deterred, the West wasted no time sabotaging the implementation of this agreement, arming and urging factions to continue hostilities. Ironically, they also took every opportunity to blame Eritrea for its failure, in effect, accusing the peacemaker of being the troublemaker.

Strategic Depopulation

In 1995, the government of Eritrea introduced the National Service Program (NSP) for Eritrean youth. The program requires able-bodied Youths to serve in the military or in a civilian capacity for some period, learning skills and cultivating the attitudes necessary to defend Eritrea’s legitimate political and economic interests.

Realizing how this program shielded Eritrean Youths from their manipulative influences, the US and its allies started targeting them. From the early 2000s, western countries started granting blanket asylum in their countries to lure Eritrean youths.

In 2001, the US granted blanket asylum to Eritreans on a large scale, and continued to date. This European Union followed the same lead starting in 2009, mostly targeted working-age adults. The vile goal of all these blanket asylums was to drain Eritrea of industrious and talented young people and to weaken Eritrea’s economy.

It is what one might call: “strategic depopulation”, with the vile objective being to wean Eritrea’s youth from the country’s National Service and the arduous tasks of nation-building, necessary to keep their country independent and self-reliant.

Sanctions on Eritrea

By 2009, all the coercive plans by the West to subdue the government of Eritrea and undermine the country’s independence and sovereignty had failed. Hillary Clinton, the then US secretary of state would describe Eritrea as a
bad good example of governance.
With the government refusing to kowtow to their directives, the West increasingly started targeting the Eritrean public. The idea was to incite and turn the masses against the leadership of President Afwerki.

To accomplish that, they turned to sanctions, with the first package coming in December 2009. The sanctions included an arms embargo, travel restrictions on Eritrean individuals, and freezing of the assets of certain individuals and entities.

These were imposed as a means to undermine the government of Eritrea and its self-reliant economy. The objective was to constrain Eritrea’s capacity to export goods, tarnish its international reputation, and hinder its ability to engage in trade and security cooperation with other nations.

Cultural Terrorism

While they plotted to destroy Eritrea’s economy, the West also worked to under the country’s culture and identity. At around the same time, media propaganda, disinformation, and cyber-attacks against Eritrea increased. The vicious campaign involved spreading negative, malicious, and damaging images of Eritrea and its people.

Disinformation to sow discord and confusion within the Eritrean society also increased. Then in 1994, the United States Department of State designated Eritrea as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) for international religious freedom. This vile designation remains to date.

The designation was made under the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998, which requires the Secretary of State to identify countries that engage in or tolerate
particularly severe violations of religious freedom.
They based their designation on a number of preposterous reasons not worth repeating.

But it is enough to observe that these lies were meant to give the wrong impression that the government was violating religious freedom by restricting religious practices, targeting minority religious groups, and imposing stringent regulations on religious organizations.

Simple due diligence shows that Eritrea is a highly pious country of religious pluralism with centuries-old Abrahamic faiths that live in exemplary co-existence and harmony). The country has a complex religious landscape, with various religious groups coexisting, including Christianity (both Orthodox and Protestant denominations), Islam, and traditional indigenous beliefs.

In retrospect, the idea of demonizing Eritrea’s religious piousness, was actually because Eritrea had cushioned its religious landscape from the influence of Western perversions such as [deleted].

Military Bases to Counter Eritrea

Western countries including the US and France, and their client states such as Japan, have established a number of military bases in countries that border Eritrea. The number of these bases increased in the 2000s, and have since been used to monitor Eritrea’s activities and to project US power in the region.

The US has also conducted a number of military exercises in the region. These are obviously a veiled way of threatening Eritrea. Nonetheless, Eritrea has remained steadfast and refused to be subdued.

Conclusion

The US-led West has a long history of hostility towards Eritrea. It has used a variety of methods, including economic sanctions, cultural terrorism, military bases, blackmail, and slander, to try to undermine Eritrea’s independence and sovereignty. Despite these efforts, Eritrea has persevered and emerged stronger than ever before.

The Eritrean people have shown that they are determined to defend their country and build a better future for themselves and their children. The US should end its hostility towards Eritrea and respect the country’s right to self-determination. Indeed, the US does well to work with Eritrea to promote peace and stability in the region.

Re: Surviving the West: Eritrea after 32 Years

Posted: 16 May 2023, 14:16
by Zmeselo
በዓል ሊቂ-ጭፍሊቂ ሃሱሳት ማ.ወ.ስ. ጭንቀቶም ሰማይ ዓሪጉ፡ ዕብድብድ ክኣትዎም ዘርኢ ስእሊ። ወረ ገና፡ ዛንዛን ኣትዩካ ከተእዊ ኢኻ፡ ጃሱስ ዋሕድ።

ንኺድ ጥራይ፡ ህዝቢ ቅያ ስጡም መስርዕ!
ርሑስ ቅንያት መበል 32 ዓመት ናጽነት ኤርትራ!







Re: Surviving the West: Eritrea after 32 Years

Posted: 16 May 2023, 14:38
by Zmeselo
Americans invade your country, destroy it, massacre your compatriots, murder your family, imprison you, torture you, then they make a musical about it.


Re: Surviving the West: Eritrea after 32 Years

Posted: 16 May 2023, 15:14
by Zmeselo
🇺🇸🇰🇷 U.S. military bases, aren't just about guns. It is also about the broken lives of girls living near the bases - now the New York Times has decided to tell us about it.
For more than 60 years, the United States and South Korea have forced tens of thousands of Korean women and girls into prostitution and sexual slavery in special "comfort camps" near U.S. military bases in South Korea. "Women for pleasure" were recruited by the Korean side in various ways: some were deceived by promising to buy real estate on seniority, others were simply stolen from their families and forced to become prostitutes. Understandably, the American soldiers had no sympathy for them, nor did many of the locals.
And the officials explained to the girls the importance of their "work" in keeping the American army on their island and earning money for the country's economy.

Some dared to demand compensation years later, but it was only $2270 to $5300 and was more like a waving-off.
Source: New York Times


Re: Surviving the West: Eritrea after 32 Years

Posted: 16 May 2023, 15:27
by Digital Weyane
ኤርትራን በፈረንጆች እግር ስር ለማንበርከክ ሲሉ ውድ ህይወታቸውን በመስዋዕትነት የከፈሉ አንድ ነጥብ አምስት ሚልየን የትግራይ ወጣቶችና ህፃናትን በሰላም እንዲያርፉ እንፀልያለን። አምየን።

Re: Surviving the West: Eritrea after 32 Years

Posted: 16 May 2023, 16:44
by Temt
ቀጽሎ ደኣ ሓየት Dr. Zmeselo! "The Eritrean camels keep on marching while the enemy dogs bark" for that is all they could do. Keep it up, brother!

Re: Surviving the West: Eritrea after 32 Years

Posted: 16 May 2023, 20:25
by Temt
President Isaias Afwerki and President Xi Jinping Hold Talks
May 16, 2023



Asmara, 16 May 2023 – President Isaias Afwerki and his host, President Xi Jinping, held extensive talks yesterday evening in Beijing on the enhancement of strategic bilateral ties and regional matters.

President Isaias expressed his profound gratitude to President Xi Jinping for the kind invitation extended to him and his delegation. President Isaias further recalled his first visit and stay in China in 1967. The President stated that those momentous times had left extraordinary experiences on him and his comrades.

President Isaias added that even though Eritrea and China established formal diplomatic ties in 1993, their practical ties of friendship and cooperation had begun in earnest 60 years ago. In this context, President Isaias expressed appreciation for the support that the People’s Republic of China had extended to the struggle of the Eritrean people for Independence.



Indicating that China, in the space of three-quarters of a century, has registered exponential progress to emerge as the first economic power, President Isaias applauded the historical contributions that the People’s Republic of China has made to humanity in the past 75 years. These realities have instilled high hopes and aspirations in developing countries regarding the PRC’s higher contribution to the promotion of global stability and development.

In this connection, President Isaias underlined that, notwithstanding the challenges, the world is increasingly extricating itself from the domination of big powers and embarking on a new international order whose hallmarks are the prevalence of justice and mutual respect between peoples and nations.

President Isaias elaborated on Eritrea’s broad multi-sectoral development programs for the short, medium, and long terms.

President Xi Jinping on his part stated that China views its bilateral ties with Eritrea from a strategic and long-term perspective and stressed that China is a reliable friend of Eritrea.



President Xi further noted that against the backdrop of the current international situation, which is characterized by instability and uncertainty, a sound China-Eritrea relationship not only serves the common and long-term interests of the two countries but is also of great significance to regional peace and international fairness and justice.

President Xi also applauded Eritrea’s firm adherence to an independent foreign policy.

On bilateral economic cooperation, President Xi Jinping also expressed the readiness of Chinese enterprises to invest and do business in various sectors including construction, telecommunications, agriculture, mining, and fisheries.



President Isaias also met and held talks with Prime Minister Li Qiang. At the meeting, Prime Minister Qiang congratulated President Isaias in connection with the 30th anniversary of the establishment of the formal diplomatic relations between China and Eritrea.

Prime Minister Qiang stated that bilateral ties between the two countries have transcended normative diplomatic ties to constitute a strategic relationship and tangible cooperation.



President Isaias for his part underlined that Eritrea-China ties go back almost 60 years and expressed profound gratitude to the Communist Party of China for extending moral and material support to the struggle of the Eritrean people for independence.

The two sides also discussed a broad range of areas for investment and development cooperation including in the sectors of manufacturing, coastal development, blue economy, digital economy, mining, education, health, and human capacity development.