HABTAMU NINI ABINO
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
የፈረንሳይ የምስራቅ አፍሪካ ምሰሶ፡ ማክሮን፣ ኬንያ እና የአፍሪካ-አውሮፓ ግንኙነት እንደገና ማዋቀር
Friday, May 8, 2026
Egypt’s Sudan Strategy, the GERD Crisis, and the Emerging UAE–Saudi Rift: The End of Strategic Ambiguity in the Middle East and the Horn of Africa
Egypt’s Sudan Strategy, the GERD Crisis, and the Emerging UAE–Saudi Rift: The End of Strategic Ambiguity in the Middle East and the Horn of Africa
The Middle East and the Horn of Africa are entering a new geopolitical phase in which traditional strategies of hedging, balancing, and strategic ambiguity are increasingly collapsing under the pressure of regional polarization. Egypt’s recent deployment of Rafale combat aircraft and pilots alongside coordination reflects a profound shift in Cairo’s strategic calculations. The confrontation with, instability in, and growing competition over the Red Sea are compressing the geopolitical flexibility of regional powers and forcing clearer alignments.
At the center of Egypt’s regional doctrine lies Sudan. For Cairo, Sudan is not merely a neighbouring state; it is an extension of Egyptian national security. Since the outbreak of Sudan’s civil war between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) under General, and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) led by Egyp, it has increasingly abandoned neutrality and positioned itself firmly behind the SAF. This policy is driven by three interconnected strategic concerns: Nile water security, territorial stability, and regional influence.
The first and most existential concern is the Nile River and the GER. Egypt views Ethiopia’s rise as a hydro-political power with deep suspicion. Cairo fears a geopolitical scenario that could potentially influence both the source of the Nile and strategic Red Sea access points if Addis Ababa secures maritime access through Eritrean or Somaliland ports. A fragmented Sudan, especially one weakened by RSF control in western or southern regions, would undermine the historical Egypt-Sudan alignment on Nile politics and weaken Cairo’s negotiating leverage against Ethiopia.
Consequently, Egypt treats Sudanese unity as a “red line.” Egyptian officials repeatedly frame the survival of Sudanese state institutions as essential to Egypt’s own survival. Cairo fears that Sudan’s fragmentation could produce refugee crises, uncontrolled armed groups, and regional spillover effects reaching Egypt’s southern borders. Thus, Egypt sees the SAF not simply as a military faction, but as the last remaining institutional pillar capable of preserving the Sudanese state.
Egypt’s Sudan strategy has evolved from cautious diplomacy into multidimensional intervention. Cairo has hosted negotiations, coordinated with regional and international actors, and pushed ceasefire initiatives aimed at preserving SAF dominance. Simultaneously, reports increasingly point to Egyptian military and intelligence assistance to the Sudanese army, including logistical coordination, training, intelligence sharing, and possible drone support. While Egypt has avoided a massive ground intervention, it has clearly signalled its willingness to escalate if Sudan’s territorial integrity collapses.
Yet Egypt’s Sudan policy exposes a growing contradiction in its regional alliances — particularly with the. Abu Dhabi is widely accused by analysts, humanitarian organizations, and international observers of supporting the RSF through financial networks, weapons transfers, and regional logistics. The UAE views Sudan through a different strategic lens. Whereas Egypt prioritizes centralized military authority and territorial unity, the UAE focuses on securing commercial corridors, Red Sea ports, gold networks, and influence through flexible proxy relationships.
This divergence has intensified the emerging rivalry between Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Although both Gulf powers once appeared strategically synchronized during the rise of the Crown Prince and the President, their interests increasingly diverge across the region. In Sudan, it leans closer to Egypt in supporting the SAF and preserving the state institutions. At the same time, le the UAE pursues a more transactional and decentralized strategy through relationships with armed non-state actors, including the RSF.
The Saudi-UAE divergence extends beyond Sudan. In the Red Sea, Riyadh seeks stable state-centred security architectures capable of protecting trade routes and energy corridors. Abu Dhabi, by contrast, often prefers flexible influence through ports, militias, commercial investments, and strategic partnerships. This difference reflects two competing geopolitical philosophies: Saudi Arabia increasingly seeks regional order and centralized stability. At the same time, the UAE pursues an agile, network-based influence capable of operating within fragmented political environments.
The growing confrontation with Iran is now accelerating these contradictions. Egypt’s military coordination with the UAE and Israel demonstrates that Gulf security concerns are forcing Cairo into closer strategic alignment with anti-Iran blocs despite disagreements elsewhere. This marks the gradual erosion of Egypt’s long-standing strategic ambiguity. Cairo can no longer easily balance between Gulf rivalries, Red Sea competition, Sudan’s civil war, and the GERD crisis simultaneously.
The Horn of Africa has therefore become inseparable from Middle Eastern geopolitics. Sudan’s war, Ethiopia’s maritime ambitions, Eritrea’s regional maneuvering, and Red Sea militarization are increasingly linked to Gulf rivalries and global power competition. In this evolving environment, alliances are becoming more transactional, fluid, and militarized.
Ultimately, Egypt’s current posture reveals a state operating under strategic stress. Cairo perceives simultaneous threats emerging from the Nile Basin, the Red Sea, Sudan’s fragmentation, and regional polarization. As a result, Egypt is abandoning portions of its traditional hedging strategy and moving toward selective strategic clarity. Its support for the SAF, opposition to Sudanese fragmentation, and growing military coordination with Gulf partners reflect a doctrine centred on survival, water security, and geopolitical containment.
However, this strategy also carries enormous risks. Deeper involvement in Sudan may entangle Egypt in a prolonged proxy war. Divergence with the UAE could weaken Arab strategic cohesion. Escalating confrontation around the Red Sea may intensify regional militarization. Most importantly, unresolved tensions surrounding the GERD continue to cast a shadow over the entire regional order.
The age of strategic ambiguity in the Middle East and the Horn of Africa may therefore be coming to an end. What is emerging instead is a fragmentary yet increasingly polarized regional system in which states are compelled to choose sides, redefine alliances, and prepare for a prolonged era of geopolitical competition.
Peace, Democracy, Development and National Transformation in Ethiopia: Reflections on Security, Elections, and Nation-Building
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Strategic Intelligence Assessment: Regional Destabilization Risks Surrounding Ethiopia’s June 2026 Election
Ethiopia’s Regional Alliances in the Horn of Africa: Pragmatism, Sea Access, and the Geopolitics of Survival
Ethiopia’s Regional Alliances in the Horn of Africa: Pragmatism, Sea Access, and the Geopolitics of Survival
The Horn of Africa has emerged as one of the most strategically contested regions in the contemporary international system. Positioned between the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden, the Nile Basin, and the Indian Ocean, the region connects Africa, the Middle East, and global maritime trade routes. Within this volatile geopolitical environment, it has increasingly pursued a foreign policy shaped less by ideological alignment and more by strategic pragmatism. Ethiopia’s regional alliances are fluid, transactional, and heavily influenced by four interrelated imperatives: securing maritime access, sustaining economic growth, managing internal conflicts, and navigating intensifying proxy rivalries across the Horn and Red Sea corridor.
Since its independence in 1993, Ethiopia has remained the world’s most populous landlocked country. The loss of direct access to the Red Sea fundamentally transformed Ethiopian strategic thinking. Sea access is no longer merely an economic issue; it has become deeply embedded in Ethiopia’s national security doctrine, regional diplomacy, and geopolitical calculations. Consequently, Addis Ababa has adopted a diversification strategy designed to reduce dependence on a single port corridor, particularly Djibouti, through which nearly 95 percent of Ethiopian trade currently passes.
This strategic reality explains Ethiopia’s growing partnership with the self-declared but internationally unrecognized state that controls the Berbera port corridor along the Gulf of Aden. The 2024 Memorandum of Understanding between Ethiopia and Somaliland represented a major geopolitical shift in the Horn of Africa. Under the agreement, Ethiopia was expected to gain access to maritime infrastructure and potentially a naval facility in exchange for diplomatic and economic concessions. Although the agreement remains politically controversial, it reflects Ethiopia’s broader strategic objective of reducing dependency on Djibouti while expanding its geopolitical leverage along the Red Sea corridor.
However, the Somaliland agreement also intensified tensions with those who consider Somaliland part of its sovereign territory. Mogadishu interpreted the agreement as a direct challenge to Somali territorial integrity and increasingly aligned itself with Egypt and Eritrea in response. This development contributed to the formation of emerging geopolitical blocs within the region, transforming maritime access into a central issue of regional power competition.
Among Ethiopia’s external partners, it has become one of its most influential strategic allies. UAE-Ethiopia relations combine economic investment, infrastructure development, logistical cooperation, and broader geopolitical coordination. Emirati investments in roads, logistics corridors, energy infrastructure, and port development—particularly around Berbera—reflect Abu Dhabi’s ambition to consolidate influence across the Red Sea and East African maritime system. From the Ethiopian perspective, UAE support offers critical financial resources, diplomatic backing, and access to regional economic networks.
Yet this partnership has also drawn Ethiopia deeper into regional proxy rivalries, particularly surrounding the Sudan conflict. Ethiopia has faced accusations from Sudanese authorities and regional observers of indirectly facilitating or tolerating logistical support networks linked to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), allegedly through broader UAE regional alignments. Whether fully verified or not, such accusations reveal how regional conflicts are increasingly interconnected through overlapping alliance systems and geopolitical competition.
The war has significantly complicated Ethiopia’s strategic environment. Historically, Ethiopia and Sudan maintained a relationship characterized by both cooperation and rivalry, shaped by border disputes, Nile politics, refugee flows, and regional security concerns. However, Sudan’s civil war transformed these tensions into a broader regional confrontation. Sudan’s military leadership increasingly accused Ethiopia of supporting forces hostile to Khartoum, while Egypt and Eritrea deepened their support for the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF).
This alignment reflects a broader geopolitical counter-axis emerging in the region. Egypt, Eritrea, and Somalia increasingly share concerns regarding Ethiopian regional ambitions, the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), and the Somaliland maritime agreement. Ethiopia’s rise represents both a strategic and existential challenge, particularly concerning Nile water security. Cairo continues to view the GERD as a direct threat to downstream water access and regional influence. Consequently, Egypt has expanded military cooperation with Somalia and strengthened security coordination with Eritrea as part of a broader balancing strategy against Ethiopia.
Relations between Ethiopia and Eritrea remain especially volatile. Although the two states cooperated militarily against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) during the Tigray conflict, that tactical alliance gradually deteriorated following the Pretoria Agreement and disagreements over regional security arrangements. Eritrea increasingly perceives Ethiopia’s maritime ambitions and regional expansion as potential threats to its own strategic position along the Red Sea. At the same time, Ethiopia views Eritrea’s alignment with Egypt and Sudan as part of a containment strategy aimed at diminishing Ethiopian influence.
Despite these rivalries, Ethiopia continues to pursue what may be described as a “Horn First” doctrine. This approach prioritizes regional autonomy, economic integration, infrastructure connectivity, and multilateral engagement through institutions such as the IGAD. Ethiopia has historically viewed itself as a central pillar of African diplomacy and regional security architecture. As host of the African Union headquarters and one of Africa’s largest economies and militaries, Ethiopia seeks to maintain its status as a dominant regional actor despite growing instability.
At the same time, Ethiopia has carefully diversified its external partnerships beyond traditional Western alliances. remains one of Ethiopia’s most significant economic partners through infrastructure financing, railway construction, industrial parks, and Belt and Road investments. Chinese engagement offers Ethiopia access to capital and development financing with fewer political conditions than Western institutions typically impose.
Similarly, has emerged as an increasingly important defence and diplomatic partner. Ankara has expanded military cooperation, drone sales, infrastructure investment, and mediation efforts within the Horn. Turkey’s attempt to mediate tensions between Ethiopia and Somalia demonstrates its growing influence as a middle power operating between the Gulf, African, and global geopolitical systems.
Nevertheless, Ethiopia’s strategic ambitions face serious constraints. Internally, the country continues to grapple with political fragmentation, armed insurgencies, economic pressures, and unresolved post-conflict tensions in regions such as Amhara, Oromia, and Tigray. These internal vulnerabilities weaken Ethiopia’s diplomatic flexibility and expose it to external pressure. Simultaneously, intensifying competition over Red Sea ports, Nile waters, and Sudan’s civil war increases the risk of regional escalation.
Ultimately, Ethiopia’s foreign policy reflects the logic of classical political realism within a highly unstable regional environment. Its alliances are neither permanent nor ideological; they are shaped by shifting calculations of security, economic necessity, maritime access, and geopolitical survival. The emerging UAE-Ethiopia-Somaliland alignment and the Egypt-Eritrea-Somalia counter-axis illustrate a rapidly evolving regional order defined less by formal alliances than by flexible strategic partnerships.
In this sense, the Horn of Africa is increasingly becoming a geopolitical chessboard where regional and external powers compete simultaneously over ports, trade corridors, security influence, ideological legitimacy, and state survival. Ethiopia, because of its demographic weight, economic potential, military capacity, and geographic position, remains at the center of this evolving struggle.
Whether Ethiopia succeeds in transforming its regional ambitions into sustainable influence will depend not only on external alliances but also on its ability to address domestic instability, institutional fragility, and the growing risks of regional isolation. In the coming years, the future of the Horn of Africa may largely depend on whether Ethiopia can balance its pursuit of strategic autonomy with the realities of an increasingly polarized and militarized regional order.