Politics
THE POLITICS OF FANTASY VS. THE LABOR OF NATIONHOOD
Why Eritrea Builds While Others Manufacture Crises
By Alula Frezghi
https://redseabeacon.com/the-politics-o ... ationhood/
February 13, 2026
The Horn of Africa is once again saturated with spectacle. Studio maps are redrawn as if sovereignty were a graphic design exercise. Speeches recycle the language of “
historic rights” and “
sea access”, as if repetition can manufacture legitimacy. Ports are invoked like campaign slogans. Borders are treated as applause lines.
In this theater, Eritrea has become a convenient prop.
When domestic governance falters, when economic reform stalls, when social contracts fray, it is easier to invoke Assab than to explain inflation. Easier to promise access to waters, than to manage the land within one’s own borders. Easier to manufacture an external grievance, than to confront internal shortcomings.
But while the region debates fantasies, Eritrea is engaged in something less dramatic and far more consequential: state work.
Across its highlands and lowlands, communities rise before sunrise to construct micro-dams, rehabilitate terraces, plant drought-resistant crops, and expand local infrastructure. These efforts rarely trend online. They do not generate viral speeches. They do not produce dramatic headlines. But they alter material reality.
This contrast, is not rhetorical flourish. It is political substance.
The loudest voices in the region today are not offering structured maritime policy, negotiated trade frameworks, or legally grounded diplomatic proposals. They are offering symbolism. They speak of ports they have not secured through law or partnership. They promise corridors they have not financed or stabilized. They project futures detached from institutional capacity.
Invoking Assab without sovereignty, is not strategy. It is fantasy.
For Eritreans, Assab is not an abstraction. It is a battlefield memory, a port defended through decades of sacrifice, and a coastline anchored in internationally recognized borders. It's governed responsibility, not rhetorical leverage.
The danger of this regional fantasy politics, is not merely rhetorical escalation. It is cumulative destabilization. Narratives, when repeated, crystallize into public expectation. Expectations transform into pressure. Pressure, when untethered from legal reality, can mutate into confrontation. History in the Horn has demonstrated, how quickly myth can outpace prudence.
Eritrea’s response has been neither theatrical nor reactive. It has been institutional.
Rather than counter-slogan with slogan, it doubles down on internal resilience: water harvesting, agricultural self-reliance, infrastructure expansion, disciplined defense posture, and calibrated diplomacy. Critics may dispute methods or pace, but the orientation is consistent, sovereignty is preserved through capability, not commentary.
This distinction matters.
Nationhood is not sustained by emotional mobilization, alone. It is sustained by institutions, infrastructure, and disciplined civic participation. It requires a population that sees development not as a promise made at rallies, but as labor performed daily. It demands leadership that treats borders as legal commitments, not campaign props.
The region does not lack rhetoric. It lacks durable statecraft.
When politicians redraw maps on television screens, they do not change international law. When they chant port names, they do not create maritime jurisdiction. When they elevate grievance over governance, they may win applause, but they do not construct capacity.
Eritrea’s model, whether admired or contested, rests on a different premise: sovereignty must be defended, but it must also be built. Dams do not emerge from declarations. Agricultural terraces do not respond to hashtags. Coastlines are not secured by speeches.
They are secured by labor, planning, and memory.
When the current cycle of slogans fades as political cycles inevitably do, what will remain? The speeches will dissipate. The studio maps will disappear. The applause will migrate elsewhere.
The reservoirs will remain.
The rehabilitated land will remain.
The coastline will remain under the authority of those who defended it.
And the martyrs whose sacrifice secured that sovereignty will remain central to Eritrea’s political consciousness, not as propaganda, but as historical foundation.
In a region too often tempted by theatrical geopolitics, Eritrea’s answer is austere: work before words, construction before provocation, endurance before spectacle.
Fantasy produces momentum.
Labor produces permanence.
Only one of those builds a nation.