But there are elements also, who are career servants of their masters, the likes of Yohannes Woldemariam, who is using the mouthpiece of neocolonialists to disparage his own country of birth, at the cost of his own intellectual integrity and intellectual dishonesty. In doing so this inept political cadre tries to implicate the neutral body of Norwegian Nobel Peace Prize Committee as part of a grand plot against Tigreans, he is a loss!
When Abiy won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for “his decisive initiative to resolve the border conflict with neighboring Eritrea,” it was widely celebrated as evidence that the prime minister was on track to forge a more inclusive and thus stable government in Ethiopia. But read against recent events, it is now clear that the achievement for which the prize was awarded — forging a new peace and “international cooperation” in the region — was part of a broader agreement to curtail TPLF influence over both countries. The deal that led to the peace prize was, in reality, a prelude to war.
In this short paragraph the authors try to imply that the war was planned and triggered by the Ethiopian government, purposefully omitting the fact that TPLF triggered it when it decided to attack the base of the Northern Command of the ENDF, it what was dubbed by the TPLF itself as blitzkrieg of "anticipatory attack to self defense". How could someone miss that, if not on purpose?
If he admits and present this simple fact, then connecting the dots will be impossible or very difficult, so disgracefully omit facts and present fictious narrative as an alternative.
They write the following to mean that it is the intereference of Eritrea and others that makes peace difficult, assuming this allegation is true for a moment, while omitting on pupose the interference of America will do even more worse to achieve the same.
Foreign powers are intervening in Ethiopia. They may only make the conflict worse.
Eritrea’s involvement makes the Ethiopian war more difficult to resolve, but it is hardly the only complicating factor from a foreign power. The Ethiopian government appears to have bombed towns in Tigray using drones purchased from authoritarian states including Turkey. It has also been emboldened by its strong relationship with China. As of 2020, China was the main source of foreign investment in Ethiopia, with its companies and corporations accounting for 31 percent of all brand-new projects last year (compared with the 21 percent that originated in the United States and the 5 percent in Britain). Ethiopia has also reduced its dependence on the West by diversifying its international partnerships. It receives a large amount of fungible money from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Persian