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Zmeselo
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Djibouti's way of saying thanks, for 20+ years of Ethiopian business.

Post by Zmeselo » 24 Apr 2025, 02:48

:lol:




Egypt, Djibouti leaders reject threats to Red Sea navigation security

President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi and his Djiboutian counterpart Ismail Omar Guelleh firmly rejected on Wednesday any actions that threaten the safety and freedom of navigation in the Red Sea, underscoring the need to uphold regional security principles.

According to the Egyptian presidency, both leaders’ remarks came during a meeting in the capital, Djibouti, where they addressed the common challenges confronting both nations in the Red Sea region.

The Egyptian and Djiboutian presidents also agreed that the primary responsibility for governing and securing this key maritime trade route rests solely with the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden littoral states. https://english.ahram.org.eg/News/545093.aspx







Zmeselo
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Re: Djibouti's way of saying thanks, for 20+ years of Ethiopian business.

Post by Zmeselo » 24 Apr 2025, 03:07

:shock: :lol:

Here's who is replacing Klaus Schwab, founder of the World Economic Forum:



Peter Brabeck-Letmathe

Zack
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Re: Djibouti's way of saying thanks, for 20+ years of Ethiopian business.

Post by Zack » 24 Apr 2025, 05:11

Egypt is an Arab nation as we are with whom we have enjoyed strong and enduring strategic relations for many years. However, it must be clearly understood that this longstanding partnership with Egypt in no way implies enmity towards Ethiopi a neigbout of ours quite the contrary dear lad . Djibouti does not, nor has it ever, engaged in any form of collusion with Egypt aimed at undermining Ethiopia’s security. That notion is entirely is not here nor there

For Djibouti to consider such a course of action, there would have to be a significant deterioration in, or a radical shift of, Ethiopian policy towards Somalia and Djibouti. As matters stand now , we do not view Ethiopia as an adversary. There is no cause for alarm or hasty assumptions steady on, dear fellow. Relations between Djibouti and Ethiopia are, in fact, stable at present day , particularly in light of our having moved past the recent Memorandum of Understanding.

The dispute between Egypt and Ethiopia is theirs to manage, and theirs alone. On this issue, Djibouti maintains a position of strict neutrality. While President Sisi may seek to rally support for Egypt's stance, he will not find in us a willing voice , with which to provoke or antagonise Ethiopia. We will not be drawn into such games dear lad

Our president is a man of considerable strategic chess player when it comes to geopolitics . He understands the complexity of the regional dynamics, and he is fully cognisant of what is at stake. His leadership ensures that Djibouti remains a voice of balance and reason in an often volatile landscape.


Dr Zackovich

Zmeselo
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Re: Djibouti's way of saying thanks, for 20+ years of Ethiopian business.

Post by Zmeselo » 24 Apr 2025, 05:43



Power Shift in the Horn of Africa: Somalia Recognizes SSC-Khaatumo

Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor

https://www.blackagendareport.com/power ... c-khaatumo

23 Apr 2025



Somalia’s recognition of SSC-Khaatumo as its sixth Federal Member State (FMS) has radically shifted the Horn of Africa’s geopolitical dynamics, with implications for Israel, Palestine, and Ansar Allah (“the Houthis”).

The geopolitical dynamics of the Horn of Africa region are always volatile, but more so now than ever. The world’s attention is most drawn to the region by Ansar Allah’s disruption of crucial maritime routes in the Red Sea in support of Palestine and Donald Trump’s despicable proposal to remove and dump the entire population of Gaza in war-torn Sudan, Somalia, and/or Somaliland, the unrecognized Somali secessionist state.

Both the US and Israel have considered recognizing secessionist Somaliland as a state in order to turn it into a US/Israeli military enclave on the Gulf of Aden, near the mouth of the Red Sea and just across from Houthi-controlled Yemen. However, on April 14, when the federal government recognized
SSC-Khaatumo as Somalia’s sixth Federal Member State (FMS), the formal boundaries of the secessionist state radically shrank to roughly 45% of what was the former British Somaliland. What will Israel and/or the US recognize now? A Somaliland with its territory cut in two? There is also nationalist resistance in northwestern Somaliland, where the people of Awdal region want to be part of the Somali nation.

I spoke to Dr. Abdirahman M. Abdi Hashi https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdirahma ... Abdi_Hashi, senior advisor to Abdiqadir Ahmed Aw-Ali https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdikhadir_Ahmed_Aw-Ali, the leader of the new regional state of SSC-Khaatumo, about the implications of Somalia’s recognition of SSC-Khaatumo.

ANN GARRISON: Dr. Abdirahman, tell us about the uprising in SSC-Khaatumo that led to its recognition as Somalia’s sixth Federal Member State on April 14th.

ABDIRAHMAN M. ABDI HASHI: The people of SSC-Khaatumo rose up at the end of December 2022, revolting against the oppression and subjugation of the Somaliland regime that began in October 2007. The Dhulbahante clan, who are the majority in SSC-Khaatumo, are proud and patriotic Somalis who strongly believe in the unity and sovereignty of Somalia. They do not want to be part of secessionist Somaliland, which is essentially a project of the Isaaq clan based in its capital Hargeisa.

In August 2023, the blue Somali flag was raised in Las Anod, the capital of SSC-Khaatumo, and its people announced their victory over the secessionist forces who had waged a full-scale war against them since February 6, 2023. For six consecutive months, Somaliland forces indiscriminately shelled the city of Las Anod, destroying schools, mosques, hospitals, and residential buildings and displacing over two hundred thousand people. Federal recognition came after the people of SSC-Khaatumo had successfully administered their region for nearly two years.

The people of SSC-Khaatumo have a history of fiercely resisting British colonialism under the leadership of Muḥammad ibn 'Abdallāh Hassan https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu%E1%B8% ... 81h_Hassan from 1899 to 1921. These fierce fighters were known as the Dervishes and renowned for their bravery. Drawing on that historical spirit of freedom fighting, the people of SSC-Khaatumo rejoined the Somali nation and were no longer dominated by Hargeisa.

AG: What about Awdal in northwestern Somaliland?

AMAH: The people of Awdal also want to be part of the Somali nation, not secessionist Somaliland. They are resisting administration by Hargeisa.

AG: Hargeisa is now claiming that SSC-Khaatumo has seceded from Somaliland, but Somaliland is not an officially recognized state that anyone could secede from. It’s not recognized by any of the 193 UN member states, while Somalia holds a UN seat https://sonna.so/en/somalia-officially- ... %20Council. and currently a seat on the Security Council. Only Taiwan, which is recognized by only 12 tiny states 12 tiny states https://worldpopulationreview.com/count ... untry-2021, recognizes Somaliland. Is there any legal forum where Somaliland might take its claim to SSC-Khaatumo?

AMAH: None whatsoever.

AG: Somaliland has long been a project of the right wing of the British government, which has been joined by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the right wing of the US. In the US, the ultra-right Heritage Foundation https://www.heritage.org/africa/heritag ... somaliland has long advocated recognizing Somaliland so as to turn it into a US military enclave on the Gulf of Aden, near the mouth of the Red Sea and just across from Yemen. Some of them claim https://www.semafor.com/article/12/10/2 ... the-region to speak for Trump, saying he plans to recognize Somaliland soon, but Trump himself has not said anything to that effect.

Israel has also considered recognizing Somaliland, in hopes of both establishing a military base and dumping the people of Gaza there, a proposal that Trump also recklessly put forth. What is left for the US and Israel to negotiate with now that SSC-Khaatuno has become the sixth state of Somalia?

AMAH: Well, first of all, the idea of dumping Gazans in either Somaliland or Somalia is hugely unpopular and untenable because, for one, the Somali people of both Somaliland and Somalia are very, very pro-Palestinian. And neither state is prepared to suddenly handle a huge refugee population.

Somaliland would do anything for recognition, most of all by the US, and it’s been reported that Somaliland’s Foreign Minister, Abdirahman Dahir Adam, suggested https://x.com/umutcagrisari/status/1902 ... 38949?s=48 he would agree to take the Gazan refugees, but he denied it, https://x.com/min_abdirahman/status/1902674220561096877 no doubt knowing how unpopular that would be in Somaliland, Somalia, and the rest of the world.

Second, regarding the issue of the US military base in Berbera Port, Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud is the President of Somalia, whose UN-recognized borders include Somaliland. He has offered https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/so ... 025-03-28/ the US exclusive control of air bases and ports, including air bases in Balidogle and Berbera as well as the ports of Berbera and Bosaso, so the US doesn’t need to recognize Somaliland to expand its military presence here. Is mighty Hargeisa going to resist the US if it signs agreements with Mogadishu?

AG: It seems like a sad situation with Hargeisa and Mogadishu arguing about which has the authority to hand air bases and ports to the US.

AMAH: It is a sad situation, but you have to consider how greatly Somalia has been weakened and fragmented by decades of US intervention. In 2006 the US-backed intervention by Ethiopia, then led by the brutal Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), overthrew the Islamic Courts, which had managed to establish a welcome order after decades of conflict following the 1991 collapse of the Siad Barre government. They committed hair-raising atrocities https://www.voanews.com/a/a-13-2008-05- ... 56410.html, and the terrorist group al-Shabaab then emerged as a result.

Somalia has been struggling against al-Shabaab ever since, and the peacekeeping force created to fight them—AMISOM http://amisom-au.org/, which was rebranded as ATMIS https://atmis-au.org/, then AUSSOM https://au-ssom.org/ —has essentially been a self-preserving force that does not really fight against al-Shabaab terrorist insurgents. It has the African Union brand, but it has been funded by the US https://www.stimson.org/2023/us-securit ... h-somalia/ and the EU https://au-ssom.org/european-union-support-to-aussom/.

The Trump administration, however, abstained https://usun.usmission.gov/explanation- ... of-aussom/ on the most recent reauthorization of a UN resolution to renew support, citing the mission’s failures and lack of financial transparency and leaving AUSSOM in limbo.

The multilateral forces have been well-paid by African standards, so they have had no reason to see the conflict end and every reason to see it continue. These so-called peacekeeping forces have even been arrested for selling arms https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-36459005 on the open market.

In short, US intervention has had very long-term destabilizing consequences in Somalia. According to a 2023 report https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/fil ... omalia.pdf by Brown University’s Costs of War Project, the US has spent more than $2.5 billion to defeat al-Shabaab only to have the opposite effect, leaving Somalia more fragmented and weaker than ever.

So, ill-advised or not, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s offer to hand Somali air bases and ports over to the US can be understood as an attempt to keep the Somali nation together.

AG: Unity would seem to be a prerequisite of sovereignty.

AMAH: That is fair to say.

AG: The US and Israeli military are all but indistinguishable, but what about Israel’s aim of establishing a base on the Gulf of Aden? Wouldn’t that be unpopular given how pro-Palestinian the Somali people are?

AMAH: It would be very unpopular. That proposal would put Hassan Sheikh Mohamud in a very difficult place.

AG: Is there anything else you’d like to say?

AMAH: Somalia is of interest to all the world’s great powers because of its geostrategic location and its vast resources. Its northern coast sits at the mouth of the Red Sea. Fifteen percent https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2 ... obal-Trade of the world’s trade passes through the Red Sea, including 12 percent of its seaborne-traded oil, and 8 percent of its liquified natural gas shipments. It’s also close to the Strait of Hormuz, the world's most important oil transport chokepoint https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=61002.

It has the longest coast in Africa, with huge fisheries and huge offshore oil and gas reserves. Its interior also holds large oil and gas reserves, as well as gold, diamonds, uranium, and other minerals.

These strategic military and resource interests complicate its politics, causing some global and regional players to support Somaliland secession and others to support its federal government and territorial integrity.

The UAE has military strategic interests but most of all economic interests, which are best served by fragmenting the country and weakening the federal government. The UAE has been pushing hard for the recognition of Somaliland, spending tens of millions of dollars on lobbying and public relations campaigns, including campaigns on social media.

It wants to control several of Somalia’s ports—Bosaso in Puntland, Berbera in Somaliland and recently Kismayo in Jubaland. DP World https://www.dpworld.com/, a UAE state corporation, bypassed the federal government to sign long-term agreements with the regional governments of Somaliland and Puntland to manage their Berbera and Bosaso ports, respectively, and thereby protect the trade dominance of its key port of Jebel Ali in Dubai.

Middle East Monitor reports https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20250 ... ions-rise/ that open-source intelligence and aerial imagery confirm that the ELM-2084 3D AESA multi-mission radar—manufactured by Israeli defense firm ELTA, a subsidiary of Israel Aerospace Industries—has been installed near Bosaso Airport, adjacent to the UAE-run Bosaso Air Base.

Another key player in Somalia is the government of Turkey, which also has geostrategic, economic, and political interests and competes with the UAE. Turkey is a very strong supporter of the federal government of Somalia and does not support the recognition of Somaliland. It has a long-term contract to manage both the port and the airport of Mogadishu.

Qatar does not have economic interests in Somalia, but they support the federal government, in part to minimize the destructive influence of their nemesis, the UAE. They build infrastructure and provide federal budget support.

Turkey and the UAE are fighting a proxy war in Somalia. Turkey is arming and training soldiers of the federal government, while the UAE is arming and training soldiers in Somaliland and two other federal member states, Puntland and Jubaland, in order to weaken the authority of the federal government.

President Donald Trump hasn’t recognized Somaliland despite the efforts of lobbyists in the US, the UK, and the UAE, and the Somaliland they championed ceased to exist when the nationalist forces of SSC-Khaatumo defeated the secessionist forces in 2023 and established effective administration of the region. The federal government of Somalia’s recognition of SSC-Khaatumo as its sixth Federal Member State formalized that reality.

Zmeselo
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Re: Djibouti's way of saying thanks, for 20+ years of Ethiopian business.

Post by Zmeselo » 24 Apr 2025, 05:51



Over 300 SPLA-IO officers defect to Kiir in Juba

Brig. Gen. Justin Mark Katuru, commanding officer of National Security Services officers, announced their allegiance to National Security Services at its headquarters in Juba on Tuesday.

By Sudans Post

https://www.sudanspost.com/over-300-spl ... r-in-juba/

April 22, 2025


SPLA-IO defectors address the media at National Security Service Headquarters on Tuesday, Juba 22 April 2025, in Juba. [Photo by Sudans Post]

JUBA — More than 300 officers from the main opposition group, Sudan People’s Liberation Army-In Opposition (SPLA-IO), led by First Vice President Riek Machar, have defected to the National Security Services (NSS) and South Sudan People’s Defense Forces (SSPDF) under President Salva Kiir Mayardit in Juba.

The groups comprise 259 National Security Services officers from Gut-Makur training in Western Equatoria State and 48 soldiers from the Wunlet training center in Central Equatoria State.

Brig. Gen. Justin Mark Katuru, commanding officer of National Security Services officers, announced their allegiance to National Security Services at its headquarters in Juba on Tuesday.
We undersigned 259 officers, non-commissioned officers, and personnel of the National Service (NSS) under the SPLM/A-IO in sector six, division 9B, brigade 4 Tambura and Nagero or Gut-Makur training center in Western Equatoria hereby officially declare our allegiance to the National Security Service under President Salva Kiir Mayardit and commander-in-chief of the SSPDF and all other regular forces,
Gen. Mark said.
We are disillusioned by growing tribalism, sectarianism, and nepotism within the SPLM/A-IO. We believe that under the SPLM leadership, we can better contribute to a unified security structure that serves all South Sudanese fairly and takes our country forward.
For his part, Brig. Gen. John Lubari Yakobo, commander of 48 defectors from the Wunlet training center in Central Equatoria, said they defected in order to end the suffering of civilians.
There are more coming. I have come to work for peace with Comrade Gen. Salva Kiir Mayardit and the citizens of this country,
said Lubari.

David John Kumuri, the spokesperson of the National Security Services (NSS) Internal Security Bureau, reaffirmed the government’s commitment to integrating all armed forces under a single national military structure.
The National Security Service welcomes the decision taken by the cited commander and reiterates that the safety and security of their forces is guaranteed, as well as swift integration into the SSPDF and other regular forces of the South Sudan government,
said Kumuri.

In April, over 2,000 active personnel from the South Sudan Opposition Alliance (SSOA), led by Brigadier General Samir Ibrahim David, defected to the South Sudan People’s Defense Forces (SSPDF) under President Salva Kiir.

According to the defectors, the group includes 105 army officers, 650 police officers, 668 prison service officers, 400 wildlife officers, and 506 fire brigade officers.

Fiyameta
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Re: Djibouti's way of saying thanks, for 20+ years of Ethiopian business.

Post by Fiyameta » 24 Apr 2025, 12:40

In 2021, when TPLF forces entered neighboring Afar region, their aim was to disrupt the Ethiopia-Djibouti supply route which could have had a devastating impact on landlocked Ethiopia's aid-fed economy. Djibouti has just got the memo that it may be necessary to do just that in order to tame the expansionist beast next door. :P :P

Zack
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Re: Djibouti's way of saying thanks, for 20+ years of Ethiopian business.

Post by Zack » 24 Apr 2025, 13:18

Zmeselo wrote:
24 Apr 2025, 05:43


Power Shift in the Horn of Africa: Somalia Recognizes SSC-Khaatumo

Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor

https://www.blackagendareport.com/power ... c-khaatumo

23 Apr 2025



Somalia’s recognition of SSC-Khaatumo as its sixth Federal Member State (FMS) has radically shifted the Horn of Africa’s geopolitical dynamics, with implications for Israel, Palestine, and Ansar Allah (“the Houthis”).

The geopolitical dynamics of the Horn of Africa region are always volatile, but more so now than ever. The world’s attention is most drawn to the region by Ansar Allah’s disruption of crucial maritime routes in the Red Sea in support of Palestine and Donald Trump’s despicable proposal to remove and dump the entire population of Gaza in war-torn Sudan, Somalia, and/or Somaliland, the unrecognized Somali secessionist state.

Both the US and Israel have considered recognizing secessionist Somaliland as a state in order to turn it into a US/Israeli military enclave on the Gulf of Aden, near the mouth of the Red Sea and just across from Houthi-controlled Yemen. However, on April 14, when the federal government recognized
SSC-Khaatumo as Somalia’s sixth Federal Member State (FMS), the formal boundaries of the secessionist state radically shrank to roughly 45% of what was the former British Somaliland. What will Israel and/or the US recognize now? A Somaliland with its territory cut in two? There is also nationalist resistance in northwestern Somaliland, where the people of Awdal region want to be part of the Somali nation.

I spoke to Dr. Abdirahman M. Abdi Hashi https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdirahma ... Abdi_Hashi, senior advisor to Abdiqadir Ahmed Aw-Ali https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdikhadir_Ahmed_Aw-Ali, the leader of the new regional state of SSC-Khaatumo, about the implications of Somalia’s recognition of SSC-Khaatumo.

ANN GARRISON: Dr. Abdirahman, tell us about the uprising in SSC-Khaatumo that led to its recognition as Somalia’s sixth Federal Member State on April 14th.

ABDIRAHMAN M. ABDI HASHI: The people of SSC-Khaatumo rose up at the end of December 2022, revolting against the oppression and subjugation of the Somaliland regime that began in October 2007. The Dhulbahante clan, who are the majority in SSC-Khaatumo, are proud and patriotic Somalis who strongly believe in the unity and sovereignty of Somalia. They do not want to be part of secessionist Somaliland, which is essentially a project of the Isaaq clan based in its capital Hargeisa.

In August 2023, the blue Somali flag was raised in Las Anod, the capital of SSC-Khaatumo, and its people announced their victory over the secessionist forces who had waged a full-scale war against them since February 6, 2023. For six consecutive months, Somaliland forces indiscriminately shelled the city of Las Anod, destroying schools, mosques, hospitals, and residential buildings and displacing over two hundred thousand people. Federal recognition came after the people of SSC-Khaatumo had successfully administered their region for nearly two years.

The people of SSC-Khaatumo have a history of fiercely resisting British colonialism under the leadership of Muḥammad ibn 'Abdallāh Hassan https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu%E1%B8% ... 81h_Hassan from 1899 to 1921. These fierce fighters were known as the Dervishes and renowned for their bravery. Drawing on that historical spirit of freedom fighting, the people of SSC-Khaatumo rejoined the Somali nation and were no longer dominated by Hargeisa.

AG: What about Awdal in northwestern Somaliland?

AMAH: The people of Awdal also want to be part of the Somali nation, not secessionist Somaliland. They are resisting administration by Hargeisa.

AG: Hargeisa is now claiming that SSC-Khaatumo has seceded from Somaliland, but Somaliland is not an officially recognized state that anyone could secede from. It’s not recognized by any of the 193 UN member states, while Somalia holds a UN seat https://sonna.so/en/somalia-officially- ... %20Council. and currently a seat on the Security Council. Only Taiwan, which is recognized by only 12 tiny states 12 tiny states https://worldpopulationreview.com/count ... untry-2021, recognizes Somaliland. Is there any legal forum where Somaliland might take its claim to SSC-Khaatumo?

AMAH: None whatsoever.

AG: Somaliland has long been a project of the right wing of the British government, which has been joined by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the right wing of the US. In the US, the ultra-right Heritage Foundation https://www.heritage.org/africa/heritag ... somaliland has long advocated recognizing Somaliland so as to turn it into a US military enclave on the Gulf of Aden, near the mouth of the Red Sea and just across from Yemen. Some of them claim https://www.semafor.com/article/12/10/2 ... the-region to speak for Trump, saying he plans to recognize Somaliland soon, but Trump himself has not said anything to that effect.

Israel has also considered recognizing Somaliland, in hopes of both establishing a military base and dumping the people of Gaza there, a proposal that Trump also recklessly put forth. What is left for the US and Israel to negotiate with now that SSC-Khaatuno has become the sixth state of Somalia?

AMAH: Well, first of all, the idea of dumping Gazans in either Somaliland or Somalia is hugely unpopular and untenable because, for one, the Somali people of both Somaliland and Somalia are very, very pro-Palestinian. And neither state is prepared to suddenly handle a huge refugee population.

Somaliland would do anything for recognition, most of all by the US, and it’s been reported that Somaliland’s Foreign Minister, Abdirahman Dahir Adam, suggested https://x.com/umutcagrisari/status/1902 ... 38949?s=48 he would agree to take the Gazan refugees, but he denied it, https://x.com/min_abdirahman/status/1902674220561096877 no doubt knowing how unpopular that would be in Somaliland, Somalia, and the rest of the world.

Second, regarding the issue of the US military base in Berbera Port, Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud is the President of Somalia, whose UN-recognized borders include Somaliland. He has offered https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/so ... 025-03-28/ the US exclusive control of air bases and ports, including air bases in Balidogle and Berbera as well as the ports of Berbera and Bosaso, so the US doesn’t need to recognize Somaliland to expand its military presence here. Is mighty Hargeisa going to resist the US if it signs agreements with Mogadishu?

AG: It seems like a sad situation with Hargeisa and Mogadishu arguing about which has the authority to hand air bases and ports to the US.

AMAH: It is a sad situation, but you have to consider how greatly Somalia has been weakened and fragmented by decades of US intervention. In 2006 the US-backed intervention by Ethiopia, then led by the brutal Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), overthrew the Islamic Courts, which had managed to establish a welcome order after decades of conflict following the 1991 collapse of the Siad Barre government. They committed hair-raising atrocities https://www.voanews.com/a/a-13-2008-05- ... 56410.html, and the terrorist group al-Shabaab then emerged as a result.

Somalia has been struggling against al-Shabaab ever since, and the peacekeeping force created to fight them—AMISOM http://amisom-au.org/, which was rebranded as ATMIS https://atmis-au.org/, then AUSSOM https://au-ssom.org/ —has essentially been a self-preserving force that does not really fight against al-Shabaab terrorist insurgents. It has the African Union brand, but it has been funded by the US https://www.stimson.org/2023/us-securit ... h-somalia/ and the EU https://au-ssom.org/european-union-support-to-aussom/.

The Trump administration, however, abstained https://usun.usmission.gov/explanation- ... of-aussom/ on the most recent reauthorization of a UN resolution to renew support, citing the mission’s failures and lack of financial transparency and leaving AUSSOM in limbo.

The multilateral forces have been well-paid by African standards, so they have had no reason to see the conflict end and every reason to see it continue. These so-called peacekeeping forces have even been arrested for selling arms https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-36459005 on the open market.

In short, US intervention has had very long-term destabilizing consequences in Somalia. According to a 2023 report https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/fil ... omalia.pdf by Brown University’s Costs of War Project, the US has spent more than $2.5 billion to defeat al-Shabaab only to have the opposite effect, leaving Somalia more fragmented and weaker than ever.

So, ill-advised or not, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s offer to hand Somali air bases and ports over to the US can be understood as an attempt to keep the Somali nation together.

AG: Unity would seem to be a prerequisite of sovereignty.

AMAH: That is fair to say.

AG: The US and Israeli military are all but indistinguishable, but what about Israel’s aim of establishing a base on the Gulf of Aden? Wouldn’t that be unpopular given how pro-Palestinian the Somali people are?

AMAH: It would be very unpopular. That proposal would put Hassan Sheikh Mohamud in a very difficult place.

AG: Is there anything else you’d like to say?

AMAH: Somalia is of interest to all the world’s great powers because of its geostrategic location and its vast resources. Its northern coast sits at the mouth of the Red Sea. Fifteen percent https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2 ... obal-Trade of the world’s trade passes through the Red Sea, including 12 percent of its seaborne-traded oil, and 8 percent of its liquified natural gas shipments. It’s also close to the Strait of Hormuz, the world's most important oil transport chokepoint https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=61002.

It has the longest coast in Africa, with huge fisheries and huge offshore oil and gas reserves. Its interior also holds large oil and gas reserves, as well as gold, diamonds, uranium, and other minerals.

These strategic military and resource interests complicate its politics, causing some global and regional players to support Somaliland secession and others to support its federal government and territorial integrity.

The UAE has military strategic interests but most of all economic interests, which are best served by fragmenting the country and weakening the federal government. The UAE has been pushing hard for the recognition of Somaliland, spending tens of millions of dollars on lobbying and public relations campaigns, including campaigns on social media.

It wants to control several of Somalia’s ports—Bosaso in Puntland, Berbera in Somaliland and recently Kismayo in Jubaland. DP World https://www.dpworld.com/, a UAE state corporation, bypassed the federal government to sign long-term agreements with the regional governments of Somaliland and Puntland to manage their Berbera and Bosaso ports, respectively, and thereby protect the trade dominance of its key port of Jebel Ali in Dubai.

Middle East Monitor reports https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20250 ... ions-rise/ that open-source intelligence and aerial imagery confirm that the ELM-2084 3D AESA multi-mission radar—manufactured by Israeli defense firm ELTA, a subsidiary of Israel Aerospace Industries—has been installed near Bosaso Airport, adjacent to the UAE-run Bosaso Air Base.

Another key player in Somalia is the government of Turkey, which also has geostrategic, economic, and political interests and competes with the UAE. Turkey is a very strong supporter of the federal government of Somalia and does not support the recognition of Somaliland. It has a long-term contract to manage both the port and the airport of Mogadishu.

Qatar does not have economic interests in Somalia, but they support the federal government, in part to minimize the destructive influence of their nemesis, the UAE. They build infrastructure and provide federal budget support.

Turkey and the UAE are fighting a proxy war in Somalia. Turkey is arming and training soldiers of the federal government, while the UAE is arming and training soldiers in Somaliland and two other federal member states, Puntland and Jubaland, in order to weaken the authority of the federal government.

President Donald Trump hasn’t recognized Somaliland despite the efforts of lobbyists in the US, the UK, and the UAE, and the Somaliland they championed ceased to exist when the nationalist forces of SSC-Khaatumo defeated the secessionist forces in 2023 and established effective administration of the region. The federal government of Somalia’s recognition of SSC-Khaatumo as its sixth Federal Member State formalized that reality.


That is a one sided report of the situation in the northern part of the Somali republic . The territory at hand in the eastern part of the sool region was only part of Somaliland since 2007. Prior to that it shared a region with puntland region. Puntland and Somaliland have contested over lasanod. Which is a predominantly a dhulbahante territory and they are part of the harti clan how ever they switched over to Somaliland back in 2007 and after president bihi former president of Somaliland took over some qat trade company’ from a fellow called jabuutaawi he rallied his clan against Somaliland and Somaliland was removed from lasanod the map posted is incorrect that is not a clan map or a regional map of Somaliland or Somalia .
Further more president of Somalia is using khatumo to gain leverage against the other clan states puntland jubbaland . So in a sense khatumo is a Trojan horse . Puntland and the federal government are odds for some time now . Though I do believe the USA is sending mixed signals to the Somaliland region and the horn . I do believe the Israelis are behind this but no Somali is going to entertain the Jews . Unless the Jews put an offer to Somaliland it can’t refuse . Things are not what it looks like reconciliation between Somaliland and Somalia have further detoriated further Somalia forced Somalia from somaliland to obtain visas . Not sure what Somaliland response would be and the fact that jubbaland and puntland are still not in agreement with. The federal government. For the time a short term winner is khatumo they got what they wanted but I predict they will be swallowed by the larger Somaliland or puntland eventually indeed . Also the man who claims that awdal people will rebel against Somaliland is just absurd really they are the most docile Somali clan. And they would never do such thing . We know them because they are our cousins . So in a sense that that assesment is incorrect to .



Dr Zackovich


sesame
Member+
Posts: 7108
Joined: 28 Feb 2013, 17:55

Re: Djibouti's way of saying thanks, for 20+ years of Ethiopian business.

Post by sesame » 24 Apr 2025, 18:53

Eritrea offered these morons the USE of its ports at exceptionally generous conditions. But first the Agames and now the PP clowns declined the offer. Abiy signed a peace deal with Eritrea in 2018. The question is: Why hasn't Ethiopia started to use Assab and Massawa? The moronic Abiy's idea was to get Assab for free. I applaud Djibouti for treating these morons the way a moron should be treated! :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Odie
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Posts: 3821
Joined: 24 Jun 2024, 23:07

Re: Djibouti's way of saying thanks, for 20+ years of Ethiopian business.

Post by Odie » 24 Apr 2025, 19:07

Dj-bo0ty!

I don’t see any propoganda in this!

If Dj-bo0ty breaks its rope, where is it gona go?
Where did smurf-arse Eri go?

Egypt the beggar was in Sudan, Eritrea, Somali with its plane full of toys but nothing happened. This time what is it going to do in Dj-bo0ty? Build a nuclear Al-sasiy :lol: :lol: :lol:

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