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sarcasm
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Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by sarcasm » 06 Oct 2025, 07:54

Its enemies sense weakness, especially a newly irredentist Ethiopia, from which Eritrea seceded in 1993 after a three-decade armed struggle led by Mr Isaias. Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia’s messianic prime minister, has openly declared that he intends to gain control over one of Eritrea’s Red Sea ports. Many suspect his real ambition is to overthrow Mr Isaias and perhaps even reannex Eritrea. Ethiopia has amassed a menacing new arsenal of missiles, fighter jets and drones. “They can turn Asmara into Gaza if they want,” says a former Western diplomat.



https://www.economist.com/middle-east-a ... ial-crisis

sesame
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by sesame » 06 Oct 2025, 08:40

Ethiopia is dying! Anyone who thinks the disintegrating, dysfunctional nation is a threat to anyone, other than to itself, doesn't know much about the region.

Deqi-Arawit
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 06 Oct 2025, 08:53

There are rumours spread by the so called Opposition groups that the sodomite dictator is digging tunnels in Arebee RebUuu (Shegereni area) because he is scared of Drone attack. :lol: :lol:

We invite the Galla to bomb the crap of Adi-Halo with drones and chase the sodomite dictator......No Eritrean would care and drop tears.

Fed_Up
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Fed_Up » 06 Oct 2025, 09:10

Deqi-Arawit wrote:
06 Oct 2025, 08:53
There are rumours spread by the so called Opposition groups that the sodomite dictator is digging tunnels in Arebee RebUuu (Shegereni area) because he is scared of Drone attack. :lol: :lol:

We invite the Galla to bomb the crap of Adi-Halo with drones and chase the sodomite dictator......No Eritrean would care and drop tears.
ደቂ ሸራሙጥ
Since you are old fàrt b!tch with zero balls, you want someone else to do it. Out of everyone, you are relying on the gutless Galla to make it happen :oops: :lol: . You are simply a coward FESSAWI.

ሕርርርርርርርርርር ዳኣ በል

sesame
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by sesame » 06 Oct 2025, 09:17

ደቂ ዓጣሪት

ንሕናውን ድሮን ኣለና:: ቅማላም: እኛም ድሮን ኣለን:: ኮሪዶሮቹ ወደ ነበሩበት የሚመልስ::

DefendTheTruth
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by DefendTheTruth » 06 Oct 2025, 10:45

sarcasm wrote:
06 Oct 2025, 07:54
Its enemies sense weakness, especially a newly irredentist Ethiopia, from which Eritrea seceded in 1993 after a three-decade armed struggle led by Mr Isaias. Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia’s messianic prime minister, has openly declared that he intends to gain control over one of Eritrea’s Red Sea ports. Many suspect his real ambition is to overthrow Mr Isaias and perhaps even reannex Eritrea. Ethiopia has amassed a menacing new arsenal of missiles, fighter jets and drones. “They can turn Asmara into Gaza if they want,” says a former Western diplomat.

https://www.economist.com/middle-east-a ... ial-crisis
sarcasm,

why don't you get a rest? Serious advice for your health from my side?

You thought the Economist is somehow depicting Ethiopia in a negative way and would lose a love affair with the qomo qer- dictator of the Horn. The fact of the matter is that everybody is wishing to say goodbye to the old man and his garrison state of the HoA, read the article again, if you don't agree with my assessment of it.

The removal of the old-man is overdue, they wanted to declare, like everybody else, and they will be grateful if Ethiopia was to overtake the task of doing that, that is the message of the whole article. Reread it, if you like.

The lost love affair with the old man is summarized in the following paragraph, if not anywhere else:
If the past is a foreign country, its name is surely Eritrea. Residents of Asmara, its capital, pootle around in ancient Fiat 500s, wistfully gliding past art-deco cinemas, ornate villas and grand colonnades. These are (or were) the architectural triumphs of long-vanquished Italian colonists, whose peeling walls seem poetical in their decline. Equally anachronistic, if rather less endearing, is Isaias Afwerki, Eritrea’s dictator since 1991. Soon to be 80, he still regularly denounces the “misguided policies” of John Foster Dulles, a former American secretary of state, as if Dwight Eisenhower were still president.
But Ethiopia is saying, no, I am not interested in doing that, at least not for now!

The man is dying of his own fear, and his past crime against Ethiopia, which is unforgivable!
Recent commentary by the Economist has painted an alarming picture of Ethiopia and Eritrea standing on the edge of war, with Addis Ababa supposedly preparing to march north to claim a Red Sea port. The claim rests on the idea that Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has openly declared intentions over Assab, echoed by Ethiopia’s National Defence Forces. The picture is then expanded with speculation of Egyptian and Sudanese involvement, along with a scenario of Tigrayan secession, in which the collapse of Isaias Afwerki’s regime could spark a “Greater Tigray” joined to its Eritrean cousins. The narrative is perhaps intentionally dramatic, yet it is deeply misguided.

Much like the conflict in Tigray, outside readings of Ethiopia–Eritrea relations often miss the realities on the ground. The assumptions behind this scenario rest on familiar tropes. They suggest that Ethiopia’s sea-access question is tied exclusively to Eritrea, that Addis Ababa has no option other than force, and that Tigrayans are waiting for an opportunity to secede. These ideas confuse Ethiopia’s national questions with the propaganda of its rivals.

Take Assab as an example. In Ethiopia, the story surrounding Assab is rooted in regret rather than conquest. The loss of access to the sea is remembered as a historical mistake, the outcome of Eritrea’s secession and the decision of the TPLF-led government at the time to accept landlocked status with little consideration for Ethiopia’s long-term interests. Many in the current generation of Ethiopian leaders, including the prime minister, have described this as a strategic blunder. That frustration, however, does not translate into a plan for war.

The history of Ethiopia’s access to the Red Sea is long and complex. For centuries, Ethiopia has confronted foreign incursions, colonial ambitions, and shifting borders. The coastline has always been regarded as a matter of national interest, defended at different times through diplomacy and through force. It has never been reduced to a simple binary of Ethiopia against Eritrea. To suggest today that Ethiopia’s port question revolves solely around Eritrea is to overlook this broader context.

Even so, Ethiopian officials occasionally speak of Assab with sentiment. Some military leaders recall its history of exclusive Ethiopian use. Yet sentiment is distinct from policy. Addis Ababa has already shown through recent moves, most clearly its agreement with Somaliland, that the pursuit of sea access is being approached through diverse and pragmatic channels. It is not fixed upon Assab. Reducing the matter to a single port and predicting inevitable war with Eritrea is to fall into the same alarmism that President Isaias has promoted for decades.

Asmara’s government has long thrived on the narrative of imminent threat. For three decades, Eritrea’s ruling party has justified its repressive system by pointing to Ethiopia as a looming aggressor. Each time public discussion in Ethiopia touches the question of sea access, Asmara responds with alliances and posturing. When Ethiopia signed its memorandum of understanding with Somaliland, Eritrea hurried to form an anti-Ethiopian alignment with Egypt and Somalia. The method is a classic one. Cast Ethiopia as the aggressor, rally allies, and keep Eritreans fearful of invasion. In this sense, today’s talk of war is more a reflection of Eritrean insecurity than Ethiopian intention.

To understand how this situation emerged, it is necessary to look back to 2018. When Abiy Ahmed became prime minister, he introduced ambitious plans to reset relations in the Horn. His outreach to Eritrea aimed at peace and reconciliation rather than confrontation. The world watched as Abiy and Isaias embraced, raising hopes for a new chapter. Those hopes quickly faded, undone by two spoilers: the TPLF and the PFDJ.

The TPLF, displaced from its dominant role in Addis Ababa, lashed out. Its surprise attack on the Northern Command triggered a devastating conflict that drew in Eritrea as well. Amid the chaos, Asmara seized the opportunity to settle scores with its bitter enemy. When the conflict ended, however, Eritrea remained unsatisfied. The PFDJ, consistent with its long-standing posture, retreated once again into suspicion and hostility. The brief window for genuine peace closed.

This brings us back to the present. The renewed talk of war has little to do with Assab itself and much more to do with political calculations in Mekelle and Asmara. The TPLF, weakened by conflict and facing growing unpopularity within Tigray, requires a new narrative to mobilize its constituency. “Greater Tigray” offers such a rallying cry, promising unity with Eritrean cousins and a break from Ethiopia. The PFDJ, meanwhile, sees Ethiopia’s stability as the greatest danger to its rule. An Ethiopia at peace and at ease with itself would strip away Asmara’s justification for its alarmist posture.

Here the paranoia of Eritrea and the opportunism of the TPLF intersect. Both gain from stoking fears of Ethiopian aggression, and both gain from the idea of a looming conflict. To accept these claims at face value is to confuse political theatre with actual reality. The real danger is not an Ethiopian plan to invade Eritrea, but the persistence of actors who cannot coexist with peace. The TPLF still struggles with its reduced role in Ethiopian politics. The PFDJ still clings to its siege mentality. Together they create narratives, noise, and flashpoints. Yet these remain distinct from Ethiopia’s national policy. Ethiopia’s question of sea access is indeed central to its future. It is a matter of economics, security, and identity. To leap from this fact to predictions of war with Eritrea is to adopt a flawed interpretation. The issue is older, broader, and more complex than Asmara’s fears allow.
https://hornreview.org/2025/10/05/ethio ... -question/

Digital Weyane
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Digital Weyane » 06 Oct 2025, 11:20

ድሮ የአእምሮ ደሃ እያለሁ በዓለም ላይ ኢትዮጵያ ብቻ ድሮኖች ያላት ሀገር ይመስለኝ ነበር፣ እንዲህ ብሎ ማሰብ ለካስ ራስን ማጃጃል ነው፤ ቂልነት ነው። :roll: :roll:

Dark Energy
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Dark Energy » 06 Oct 2025, 13:05

Deqi,

It is the job of brave Eritreans not the stupid Galla . I believe the jerk himself is behind all these sh…it.

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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 06 Oct 2025, 14:29

Dark Energy wrote:
06 Oct 2025, 13:05
Deqi,

It is the job of brave Eritreans not the stupid Galla . I believe the jerk himself is behind all these sh…it.
Because of War and the news of war is what the sodomtie is trying to cling to power....Economy forget about it, exodus of the youth? He doesnt care? the future of Eritreans? He care less? Hence, The Galla would make humanity a great service, if he just dispatch a drone to chase the the sodomite, Let the qentir feel how he reacts when his life and the life of his love once is on line....It is easier to be tough when others are sacrificed like a sacrifice lamb but it is different when you are the one who are going to be sacrificed. 8)

Deqi-Arawit
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 06 Oct 2025, 14:38

Fed_Up wrote:
06 Oct 2025, 09:10
Deqi-Arawit wrote:
06 Oct 2025, 08:53
There are rumours spread by the so called Opposition groups that the sodomite dictator is digging tunnels in Arebee RebUuu (Shegereni area) because he is scared of Drone attack. :lol: :lol:

We invite the Galla to bomb the crap of Adi-Halo with drones and chase the sodomite dictator......No Eritrean would care and drop tears.
ደቂ ሸራሙጥ
Since you are old fàrt b!tch with zero balls, you want someone else to do it. Out of everyone, you are relying on the gutless Galla to make it happen :oops: :lol: . You are simply a coward FESSAWI.

ሕርርርርርርርርርር ዳኣ በል
Fucked up.
Let juliet take care of Romeo.. :mrgreen: ..The sodomite and his Galla lover Married in addis abeba infront of the entire addis abeba, and they blessed their holy matrimony both in Riyadah saudi arabia and Dubai in the united arab emirates.....Hence, why should Eritreans care what two love birds do to each other....We were not even invited to eat wedding cake and in your case to hold the dressing of the bride. :mrgreen:

Deqi-Arawit
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 06 Oct 2025, 14:45

When countries like Rwanda rose like a phoenix to change their image after the genocide they experienced, to attract investors and tourists and become the envy of Africa, what is our status in this regard?

And the skunis are adamant that Eritreans should support the dictator because of Galla threat. :mrgreen:


Please wait, video is loading...

sarcasm
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by sarcasm » 06 Oct 2025, 16:07

DefendTheTruth wrote:
06 Oct 2025, 10:45
sarcasm wrote:
06 Oct 2025, 07:54
Its enemies sense weakness, especially a newly irredentist Ethiopia, from which Eritrea seceded in 1993 after a three-decade armed struggle led by Mr Isaias. Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia’s messianic prime minister, has openly declared that he intends to gain control over one of Eritrea’s Red Sea ports. Many suspect his real ambition is to overthrow Mr Isaias and perhaps even reannex Eritrea. Ethiopia has amassed a menacing new arsenal of missiles, fighter jets and drones. “They can turn Asmara into Gaza if they want,” says a former Western diplomat.

https://www.economist.com/middle-east-a ... ial-crisis
sarcasm,

why don't you get a rest? Serious advice for your health from my side?
Hi Defend,

I didn't include the rest of the article because it is not relevant to the topic - an expansionist African country is threatening to invade and annex territories of another African country.

African countries have used military force to change bad governments of their neighboring countries. Julius Nyerere's Tanzania removed Idi Amin but never annexed an inch of Uganda's territory.

Meles's Ethiopia removed Sharif Sheikh Ahmed but never annexed an inch of Somalia's territory.

But Abiy Ahmed's expansionist Ethiopia wants to annex internationally recognized territory of Eritrea. This thread is discussing Africa's 21st century expansionism.

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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Misraq » 06 Oct 2025, 16:13

The subhuman has Gala no interest on attacking Eritrea. He invoked the Asseb and red sea issue to divert domestic pressure and recruite as many soldiers as he can in the name of Ethiopia. The Gala leader and its PP organization only thinks about empowring his Galla ethnicities. He fears that he might lose power at 4 killo and he needs to recruit soldiers from all ethnicities to stay longer. He created the Asseb drama just for that. If there is any fool out there, he is either low IQ dumbo or very coward. Galas cowardness is visible that it is not acting like a government. They have already started pitching Muslims vs Christians. Such is the weakness of the coward Gallas. But very effective in propogandas (Convuse and Convince should come to mind)

Issayas is a coward in that since if he is already digging trenches to hide himself

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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Abere » 06 Oct 2025, 16:29

ሻዕብያ እና ኦነግ-ፒፒ የአጥፍተህ ጥፋ ጦርነት ገጠሙ ማለት ፈረስ እና ጥሬ ተጣሉ እንደ ማለት ነው፡ ዐብይ አህመድ አሁን በአሰብ ፕሮፓጋንዳ ባተሌ የሆነበት ምክንያት አማራ ክልል ውስጥ በአፍ-ጢሙ ስለተደፋ እና አረንቋ ውስጥ ስለገባ በድፍን ኢትዮጵያ ልብ ውስጥ የተዳፈነውን የአሰብ የቁጭት ካርድ በመሳብ ለማጭበርበር መሆኑ ማንም ጤነኛ ሰው የሚያውቀው ጉዳይ ነው። አማራ የሌለበት ጦርነት ድል ማድረግ እንደማይችል 100% ስታትሲካዊ እርግጠኝነት መናገር ይቻላል - አማራ ከጎኑ እንዳልሆነ እያወቀ አሰብ እግሩ ድርሽ አትልም፤ በተጨማሪም ኦነግ-ፒፒ የሻዕብያን ራዕይ ይጋራል - እንደ ኤርትራ ሌላ ትርጉም ዐልባ ጦርነት ቀውስ ውስጥ የምትኖር "አገረ-ኦሮምያ" መፍጠር። ስለዚህ የሻዕብያን ይዞታ ያጸድቃል እንጅ አይቃወምም?

የማይሆነውን እንደ አብነት ( Thinking the unthinkable just for example to see where Abiy Ahmed's truly is) ፤- ኢሳይያስ አፈወርቅ በፍርሃት ቆፈን ተይዞ የሚጨንቅ ከሆነ ታዲያ አብይ አህመድ ከሚቀድመው እሱ ኤርትራ ክ/ሀገር ከኢትዮጵያ ጋር እንደ ገና መዋሃድ ትፈልጋለች፤ ግን ኦሮሙማ እና ኦሮምያ መፍረስ አለባቸው - ቢል አብይ አህመድ እና ሁሬሳ (እሬቻ ቂጥ አጣቢ) ምን ይሆኑ ይመስልሃል? They will cry about Orommuma :mrgreen:
Misraq wrote:
06 Oct 2025, 16:13
The subhuman has Gala no interest on attacking Eritrea. He invoked the Asseb and red sea issue to divert domestic pressure and recruite as many soldiers as he can in the name of Ethiopia. The Gala leader and its PP organization only thinks about empowring his Galla ethnicities. He fears that he might lose power at 4 killo and he needs to recruit soldiers from all ethnicities to stay longer. He created the Asseb drama just for that. If there is any fool out there, he is either low IQ dumbo or very coward. Galas cowardness is visible that it is not acting like a government. They have already started pitching Muslims vs Christians. Such is the weakness of the coward Gallas. But very effective in propogandas (Convuse and Convince should come to mind)

Issayas is a coward in that since if he is already digging trenches to hide himself

Zack
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Re: Eritrea’s sovereignty is under threat from an expansionist Ethiopia (The Economist)

Post by Zack » 06 Oct 2025, 16:37

Gallas won’t attack Eritrea I believe Misraq way he just wanted to divert attention same with the mou keep Ethiopians pre occupied that he is some sort of national leader. Eritreans should only worry if an Amhara is in arat kilo Amhara will only attack Eritrea. Abiye is still consolidating power to be honest

Dr Zackovich

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