Friday, April 24, 2026

Strategic Pragmatism or Moral Drift? Rethinking U.S. Engagement with Eritrea

Strategic Pragmatism or Moral Drift? Rethinking U.S. Engagement with Eritrea
By Habtamu Nini Abino 

Recent commentary by Cameron Hudson has reignited debate over a possible recalibration in U.S. policy toward Eritrea. At issue is whether Washington’s reported willingness to ease sanctions reflects a pragmatic response to shifting geopolitical realities—or a troubling departure from its longstanding commitment to human rights and democratic governance.

Eritrea’s strategic importance is undeniable. Situated along the Red Sea, adjacent to one of the world’s most vital maritime chokepoints, the country occupies a position of considerable interest to global powers. The Red Sea corridor is essential not only for international trade but also for military logistics and energy flows linking Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. As competition intensifies among actors such as the Gulf states, China, and Western powers, the Horn of Africa has become an arena of overlapping strategic ambitions. In this context, Washington’s interest in re-engaging Asmara appears less an anomaly than a reflection of broader geopolitical recalibration (International Crisis Group, 2023; U.S. Congressional Research Service, 2024).

However, critics—including Hudson—warn that such engagement risks undermining U.S. credibility. Eritrea, under the long-standing leadership of Isaias Afwerki, has faced persistent allegations of authoritarian rule, indefinite national service, and severe restrictions on civil liberties. Reports by organizations such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have documented systemic human rights abuses, while the United Nations has previously characterized aspects of Eritrea’s governance as potentially constituting crimes against humanity (UN Human Rights Council, 2016).

Easing sanctions in such a context raises difficult questions. Does strategic access justify engagement without reform? And what message does this send to other states in the region where governance standards remain contested? A policy that appears to privilege geography over principle risks reinforcing perceptions of inconsistency in U.S. foreign policy—particularly in regions where democratic norms are already fragile (Lefebvre, 2021).

The broader regional context further complicates this calculus. Ethiopia continues to grapple with internal political fragmentation following the Tigray conflict and subsequent tensions between federal and regional forces. Sudan remains engulfed in a protracted civil war that has drawn in multiple external actors. Meanwhile, Gulf states such as United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia have expanded their economic and military footprint across Red Sea ports and infrastructure projects. In such a volatile environment, a narrowly transactional U.S. approach risks exacerbating regional rivalries rather than stabilizing them (Verhoeven, 2019).

Moreover, engagement without clearly defined conditions may weaken reformist constituencies both within Eritrea and across the Horn of Africa. Civil society actors and pro-democracy movements often rely on external pressure to sustain momentum. A shift toward unconditional engagement could dilute that pressure, signaling that international accountability is negotiable. As scholars of international relations have long argued, credibility in foreign policy is not merely about power—it is about consistency and perceived legitimacy (Keohane & Nye, 2012).

This does not mean that engagement with Eritrea should be categorically rejected. Isolation has its own limits and may entrench rather than moderate authoritarian behavior. However, a more effective approach would be conditional, incremental, and transparent. The United States could pursue a phased strategy linking diplomatic normalization to measurable benchmarks—such as improvements in human rights practices, regional non-interference, and steps toward political liberalization. Such an approach would balance strategic interests with normative commitments, rather than subordinating one to the other.

Coordination with international partners is equally essential. Multilateral engagement—through institutions such as the African Union and collaboration with European allies—can help ensure that policy toward Eritrea is not fragmented or contradictory. A unified framework would strengthen leverage while minimizing the risk of competitive diplomacy among external actors.

Ultimately, the debate over Eritrea reflects a broader tension in U.S. foreign policy: the balance between realism and idealism. The Horn of Africa, with its complex interplay of security challenges, governance deficits, and external interventions, is a testing ground for that balance. A policy rooted solely in strategic expediency may deliver short-term gains but risks long-term instability and reputational cost.

As Washington considers its next steps, the question is not whether to engage but how. A principled, coherent, and regionally informed strategy offers the best prospect for aligning U.S. interests with its values. Anything less risks turning strategic pragmatism into moral drift.

References

International Crisis Group. (2023). The Horn of Africa: Regional Dynamics and External Actors.

U.S. Congressional Research Service. (2024). Eritrea and U.S. Policy: Strategic Considerations.

Human Rights Watch. (2023). World Report: Eritrea.

Amnesty International. (2023). Eritrea 2023 Report.

United Nations Human Rights Council. (2016). Report of the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in Eritrea.

Lefebvre, J. A. (2021). Arms for the Horn: U.S. Security Policy in Ethiopia and Somalia. University of Pittsburgh Press.

Verhoeven, H. (2019). The Gulf and the Horn: Changing Geopolitics of the Red Sea. Columbia University Press.

Keohane, R. O., & Nye, J. S. (2012). Power and Interdependence. Longman.

Collective Narcissism, Elite Fragmentation, and the Limits of Identity Mobilization in Amhara Politics: Toward a Civic Democratic Framework in Ethiopia

Collective Narcissism, Elite Fragmentation, and the Limits of Identity Mobilization in Amhara Politics: Toward a Civic Democratic Framework in Ethiopia

Abstract

This article examines contemporary Amhara political discourse within Ethiopia’s ethnic federal system through the analytical lenses of collective narcissism, elite fragmentation, and victimhood rhetoric. Drawing on recent analytical frameworks developed by Habtamu Nini Abino and situating them within broader theories of nationalism and political psychology, the paper argues that identity-based mobilization—while emotionally potent—often substitutes for institutional reform. The study highlights how narrative dominance without strategic coherence undermines democratic transformation and proposes a shift toward civic nationalism grounded in shared institutions, legal equality, and mutual recognition.

1. Introduction

Ethiopia’s post-1995 political order, structured under ethnic federalism, has transformed the terrain of political competition. The system institutionalized identity as a primary axis of political organization, granting nations, nationalities, and peoples constitutional recognition, most notably under Article 39 of the 1995 Constitution. While this framework addressed historical marginalization, it also intensified inter-ethnic contestation and elite-driven identity mobilization (Vaughan, 2003; Aalen, 2011).

Within this context, Amhara politics occupies a paradoxical position. Historically central to state formation, sections of the Amhara elite now articulate grievances of marginalization, dispossession, and symbolic exclusion. This duality—historical dominance versus contemporary victimhood—creates fertile ground for what political psychology terms collective narcissism (Golec de Zavala et al., 2009).

2. Collective Narcissism and Nationalist Discourse

Collective narcissism refers to an inflated belief in the greatness of one’s group combined with a persistent sense of external disrespect. As theorized by Golec de Zavala et al. (2009), such groups demand recognition but remain hypersensitive to perceived slights, often interpreting equality as humiliation.

Applied to Amhara nationalist discourse, this framework reveals several recurring features:

Mythologized historical consciousness: Ethiopia’s imperial past is reframed as a civilizational project uniquely tied to Amhara identity.

Selective memory: Narratives emphasize unity and glory while minimizing the experiences of domination reported by other groups.

Emotional nationalism: Cultural production, particularly music, becomes a vehicle for collective mourning and symbolic restoration.

The cultural influence of Teddy Afro illustrates this dynamic. His music often evokes Ethiopia as a wounded yet sacred entity, fostering emotional solidarity. While such artistic expressions serve legitimate cultural and psychological functions, their politicization risks transforming mourning into exclusionary ideology.

3. The “Teddy Afro Syndrome”: Narrative Without Transformation

Building on this critique, Abino conceptualizes what may be termed the “Teddy Afro Syndrome”—a condition where:

Narrative production is maximized,

Institutional reform is minimized.

This imbalance produces a feedback loop:

 Past glory → perceived humiliation → emotional catharsis → symbolic resistance → absence of structural change

Such dynamics align with Anderson’s (1983) concept of “imagined communities,” but diverge in that imagination becomes static rather than transformative. Emotional release replaces political strategy, draining urgency for institutional reform.

4. Elite Fragmentation and Strategic Incoherence

Ethiopia’s political crisis is not confined to a single ethnic group; rather, it reflects a broader pattern of elite fragmentation across Oromo, Amhara, and Tigrayan political spheres. However, in the Amhara case, a distinctive contradiction emerges:

High narrative coherence (clear messaging about victimhood and identity),

Low strategic coherence (limited institutional or coalition-building capacity).

This results in:

1. Binary framing of politics (e.g., “Oromo government” vs. “Amhara resistance”),

2. Reduced coalition space,

3. Unintended reinforcement of securitized governance.

As Habtamu Nini Abino notes, rhetorical dominance without institutional strategy leads to political stagnation rather than transformation.

This phenomenon reflects what Levitsky and Way (2010) describe as competitive authoritarian drift, where weak institutions amplify elite opportunism rather than democratic consolidation.

5. Victimhood Rhetoric and the Logic of “Menu Politics”

A central critique in recent analyses is the notion of “menu politics”—the framing of political life as a zero-sum distribution of power among ethnic groups. Within this logic:

History is reduced to narratives of domination (“one group eating another”),

Political demands become framed as entitlement rather than rights,

Grievances are essentialized into permanent identity claims.

Such rhetoric has three major consequences:

1. Dehumanization: Opponents are cast as existential threats rather than political competitors.

2. Radicalization: Emotional mobilization escalates into cycles of revenge.

3. Analytical distortion: Complex historical processes (e.g., Derg repression, EPRDF authoritarianism) are reduced to ethnic conspiracies.

Empirical evidence suggests that state violence in Ethiopia has historically affected multiple groups, undermining mono-ethnic explanations (Clapham, 2018). Thus, victimhood narratives, while grounded in real suffering, become politically counterproductive when absolutized.

6. Implications for Democratic Reform

The persistence of collective narcissism and elite fragmentation poses significant obstacles to democratic transformation:

Erosion of shared political space: Identity absolutism undermines civic trust.

Institutional weakness: Focus on narratives diverts attention from governance reform.

Polarization: Competing victimhood claims create a hierarchy of suffering.

A sustainable democratic framework requires a shift from identity-based mobilization to civic institutionalism, defined by:

1. Equal citizenship under the rule of law,

2. Independent institutions (judiciary, electoral bodies),

3. Cross-ethnic political coalitions,

4. Historical reconciliation grounded in plural narratives.

This aligns with Habermas’s (1996) concept of constitutional patriotism, where loyalty is directed toward democratic principles rather than ethnic identity.

7. Conclusion

Amhara politics, as analyzed through the lenses of collective narcissism, elite fragmentation, and victimhood rhetoric, reflects broader structural challenges within Ethiopia’s ethnic federal system. While identity-based narratives provide emotional resonance and historical meaning, they often fail to translate into effective political strategy or institutional reform.

The central argument of this article is clear:
Narrative power without institutional transformation is politically sterile.

A democratic Ethiopia cannot be built on competing collective egos or hierarchies of victimhood. Instead, it requires a deliberate transition toward civic nationalism, grounded in shared institutions, legal equality, and mutual recognition across all communities.

References

Aalen, L. (2011). The Politics of Ethnicity in Ethiopia: Actors, Power and Mobilisation under Ethnic Federalism. Brill.

Anderson, B. (1983). Imagined Communities. Verso.

Clapham, C. (2018). The Ethiopian State at the Crossroads. James Currey.

Golec de Zavala, A., et al. (2009). “Collective Narcissism and Its Social Consequences.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

Habermas, J. (1996). Between Facts and Norms. MIT Press.

Levitsky, S., & Way, L. (2010). Competitive Authoritarianism. Cambridge University Press.

Vaughan, S. (2003). “Ethnicity and Power in Ethiopia.” PhD Dissertation, University of Edinburgh.






Saturday, April 18, 2026

Metaphor, State Decay, and Governance Crisis: Interpreting “The Death of a Country” in Contemporary Ethiopia

Metaphor, State Decay, and Governance Crisis: Interpreting “The Death of a Country” in Contemporary Ethiopia

Abstract

The assertion that “a country is dead,” as articulated by Tewodros Kassahun, is best understood not as a literal claim but as a metaphorical critique of governance failure. Drawing on theories of statehood, legitimacy, and institutional capacity, this article examines the conceptual meaning of “state death” and situates the Ethiopian case within broader debates on state fragility and resilience. It argues that the “death” of a country refers to the erosion of authority, legitimacy, and capacity—the core pillars of effective governance. While Ethiopia exhibits symptoms of institutional strain, it remains analytically more accurate to characterize its condition as a governance crisis rather than state collapse. The article concludes that such metaphors function as normative warnings, urging institutional reconstruction rather than signaling irreversible demise

1. Introduction

Political discourse often employs existential metaphors to describe moments of acute crisis. The claim that a country is “dead” belongs to this rhetorical tradition, reflecting not biological cessation but institutional breakdown. In contemporary Ethiopia, such expressions have gained prominence amid intensifying political fragmentation and security challenges. This article seeks to reinterpret such claims through the lens of political theory and governance analysis, asking: under what conditions can a state be said to “die,” and how applicable is this concept to Ethiopia?

2. Conceptualizing “State Death” in Political Theory

In classical political theory, the state is defined not by territory alone but by its capacity to exercise authority, maintain legitimacy, and deliver public goods (Weber, 1978; Fukuyama, 2013). A state is “alive” when it performs these functions effectively. Conversely, what is metaphorically described as “death” corresponds to a condition of state failure or institutional collapse (Rotberg, 2004).

Max Max Weber conceptualized the state as the entity that successfully claims the monopoly of legitimate violence within a territory. When this monopoly is contested or lost, the foundational basis of statehood is undermined. Similarly, modern governance theorists emphasize three interdependent pillars:

Authority: The ability to formulate and enforce rules

Legitimacy: The societal acceptance of those rules

Capacity: The institutional ability to implement policy and deliver services


The simultaneous erosion of these pillars signals not immediate disappearance but progressive institutional decomposition.

3. Conditions of State “Death”

A state may be considered functionally “dead” when governance loses coherence across both territory and population. The literature on fragile states identifies several key indicators:

3.1 Loss of Monopoly on Violence

The proliferation of non-state armed actors—insurgencies, militias, or regional forces—indicates a breakdown in centralized coercive authority (Tilly, 1992).

3.2 Collapse of Legitimacy

When citizens withdraw consent and no longer perceive the state as representing a shared political community, legitimacy erodes (Habermas, 1975).

3.3 Fragmentation of Authority

Multiple competing centers of power emerge, each claiming sovereignty, thereby diluting the coherence of governance (Jackson, 1990).

3.4 Institutional Paralysis

Judicial, legislative, and administrative institutions cease to function effectively, often replaced by informal or coercive mechanisms.

In such contexts, the state may persist juridically—retaining international recognition and formal sovereignty—while becoming substantively hollow

4. Pathways of Institutional Decay

State “death” is rarely abrupt; it unfolds through cumulative processes:

4.1 Erosion of Political Consensus

A shared national narrative weakens, and identity-based cleavages—ethnic, regional, or ideological—supersede civic cohesion (Anderson, 1983).

4.2 Personalization of Power

Governance shifts from institutional frameworks to individual authority, undermining rule-based systems and reducing predictability (Bratton & van de Walle, 1997).

4.3 Decline of Rule of Law

Selective application of laws erodes judicial independence, transforming legal disputes into political or coercive conflicts.

4.4 Militarization of Politics

Political competition increasingly relies on force rather than negotiation, elevating the role of armed actors in governance.

4.5 Economic Dislocation

Governance failure produces economic decline, which in turn exacerbates grievances and further weakens state capacity (Collier et al., 2003).

These dynamics interact in a feedback loop, deepening institutional fragility.

5. Ethiopia in Analytical Context

Applying this framework to Ethiopia reveals a complex picture. Contemporary political dynamics exhibit elements associated with state fragility:

Fragmentation of authority across federal and regional actors

Contestation of legitimacy amid competing national narratives

Expansion of armed actors influencing political outcomes

However, Ethiopia retains key attributes of statehood: functioning administrative structures, international recognition, and ongoing policy implementation. Thus, it does not meet the threshold of full state failure as defined in comparative political analysis.

The metaphor of “death” therefore reflects a perceived crisis of coherence and effectiveness, rather than an empirical condition of state extinction.

6. Metaphor as Political Diagnosis

Artistic and cultural expressions often serve as diagnostic tools in political life. The metaphor of “death” amplifies perceptions of crisis, translating complex institutional failures into accessible emotional language. Such narratives can mobilize public discourse, but they also risk oversimplification if interpreted literally.

In this sense, the statement attributed to Tewodros Kassahun functions as a normative critique, highlighting governance deficits rather than declaring irreversible collapse.

7. Prospects for State Recovery

Historical experience demonstrates that states can recover from severe crises through deliberate institutional reform. Three pathways are particularly critical:

Rebuilding Legitimacy: Inclusive political settlements and credible representation mechanisms

Restoring Institutional Autonomy: Strengthening rule-based governance and judicial independence

Re-establishing Security Monopoly: Integrating or neutralizing non-state armed actors under unified command

Successful recovery depends on reconstituting the relationship between state and society around trust, accountability, and effectiveness.

8. Conclusion

The notion that a country can “die” is best understood as a metaphor for governance breakdown rather than a literal condition. In political terms, state “death” occurs when authority, legitimacy, and capacity erode to the point of systemic incoherence. Ethiopia’s current trajectory reflects significant institutional strain but does not constitute terminal collapse.

Rather than an obituary, such claims should be read as warnings—calls for institutional renewal and political recalibration. The future of the state depends not on its formal existence, but on its ability to restore effective governance and reestablish a shared political community.

References

Anderson, B. (1983). Imagined Communities. Verso.

Bratton, M., & van de Walle, N. (1997). Democratic Experiments in Africa. Cambridge University Press.

Collier, P., et al. (2003). Breaking the Conflict Trap. World Bank.

Fukuyama, F. (2013). What Is Governance? Governance, 26(3).

Habermas, J. (1975). Legitimation Crisis. Beacon Press.

Jackson, R. (1990). Quasi-States. Cambridge University Press.

Rotberg, R. I. (2004). When States Fail. Princeton University Press.

Tilly, C. (1992). Coercion, Capital, and European States. Blackwell.

Weber, M. (1978). Economy and Society. University of California Press.




Primordialism, Social Construction, and the Re-Ethnicization of Amhara Identity in Contemporary Ethiopia

Primordialism, Social Construction, and the Re-Ethnicization of Amhara Identity in Contemporary Ethiopia: 

Abstract

The theoretical divide between primordialism and social constructivism has long shaped scholarly debates on ethnicity and nationalism. In contemporary Ethiopia, however, this debate has transcended academic boundaries and become a central axis of political mobilization, conflict, and survival. This article examines the ongoing re-ethnicization of Amhara identity in the context of post-Tigray War political dynamics, the rise of movements such as Fano, and the pressures of Ethiopia’s ethnic federal system. Drawing on classical and modern theories of nationalism, the study argues that Amhara identity—historically articulated through a civic and imperial Ethiopian framework—is undergoing a transformation into a more bounded, ethnically defined category. This shift reflects not a simple return to primordial roots but a strategic reconfiguration of identity under conditions of insecurity and political competition. The article concludes that the Ethiopian case illustrates a hybrid model in which constructed identities are re-essentialized in response to perceived existential threats.

1. Introduction

The nature of ethnic identity—whether primordial or socially constructed—remains one of the most enduring questions in political anthropology and nationalism studies. While early scholarship emphasized the deep, affective, and quasi-biological roots of identity, later work challenged this assumption, demonstrating the historical contingency and political construction of ethnic categories.

In Ethiopia, this debate has acquired renewed relevance. As the country approaches the 2026 general elections, identity has become a central organizing principle of political competition. Among the most significant developments is the transformation of Amhara identity from a historically expansive and integrative framework often associated with Ethiopiawinet into a more explicitly ethnic and territorially bounded form.

This paper addresses the following research questions:

1. What explains the shift from civic Ethiopian identity to Amhara ethno-nationalism?

2. How do primordialist and constructivist frameworks help interpret this transformation?

3. What are the broader implications for Ethiopian statehood and political stability?

2. Theoretical Framework

2.1 Primordialism

Primordialism conceptualizes ethnic identity as rooted in deep, enduring ties such as kinship, language, religion, and shared ancestry. Scholars such as Clifford Geertz argue that these “primordial attachments” carry an emotional weight that cannot be reduced to rational calculation. From this perspective, ethnic conflict emerges when these inherent identities are threatened.

2.2 Social Constructivism

In contrast, constructivist scholars emphasize the historical and political production of identity. Benedict Anderson famously described nations as “imagined communities,” while Ernest Gellner linked nationalism to processes of modernization and state formation. Identity, in this view, is neither fixed nor natural but contingent and malleable.

2.3 Instrumentalism and Hybrid Approaches

Instrumentalist theorists, such as Paul Brass, bridge these perspectives by highlighting the role of political elites in mobilizing identity for strategic purposes. Contemporary scholarship increasingly adopts hybrid models, recognizing that identities are constructed yet experienced as deeply rooted.

3. Historical Context: Amhara Identity and the Ethiopian State

Amhara identity has historically been intertwined with the Ethiopian state. During imperial periods, particularly under Haile Selassie, the Amharic language, Orthodox Christianity, and court culture became central pillars of state identity. However, this did not necessarily translate into a clearly bounded ethnic category.

Instead, Amhara identity functioned as:

A linguistic-cultural framework

A political-administrative elite identity

A civilizational core of Ethiopian statehood

This aligns with constructivist interpretations: Amhara identity was less a primordial ethnicity and more a state-forming cultural matrix.

4. Ethnic Federalism and Identity Reconfiguration

The introduction of ethnic federalism in 1995 marked a critical turning point. By constitutionally recognizing “Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples,” the system institutionalized ethnicity as the primary basis of political organization.

This had two major effects:

1. Ethnicization of politics: Political competition became structured along ethnic lines.

2. Marginalization of supra-ethnic identities: Civic Ethiopianism lost institutional support.

Within this framework, Amhara identity faced a paradox: it was both historically dominant and institutionally underdefined as a distinct ethnic category.

5. Conflict, Crisis, and the Return of Ethnicity

5.1 The Impact of War

The Tigray War and its aftermath fundamentally reshaped Ethiopia’s political landscape. Territorial disputes in areas such as Welkait and Raya intensified identity-based mobilization.

5.2 Emergence of Armed Mobilization

Groups such as Fano became central actors in articulating a new form of Amhara nationalism. Their discourse emphasizes:

Historical land claims

Collective victimhood

Existential threat narratives

These elements reflect a shift toward primordialist framing, even if strategically constructed.

6. The Politics of Victimhood and Identity Hardening

The re-ethnicization of Amhara identity is closely linked to narratives of victimization. In contemporary discourse, claims of marginalization, displacement, and violence are used to justify a more rigid and defensive identity.

From a theoretical standpoint:

Constructivist narratives are viewed as politically dangerous, as they imply reversibility

Primordialist narratives provide moral and political legitimacy for collective action

This dynamic illustrates a key paradox: identities become more rigid precisely when they are most contested.

7. Secularization and Expansion of Ethnic Identity

Historically associated with the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, Amhara identity is increasingly being secularized.

7.1 Inclusion of Religious Minorities

Amhara Muslims and Protestants are now explicitly incorporated into nationalist discourse, expanding the identity’s demographic base.

7.2 From Religion to Ethnicity

The shift from religious to ethnic markers reflects a broader transformation:

From faith-based belonging → to ancestry-based belonging

From cultural identity → to political identity

This transition aligns with global patterns of modern nationalism.

8. Polarization of Identity Discourses

The Ethiopian political field now exhibits three competing frameworks:

1. Primordialist Ethno-Nationalism

Identity as fixed and ancestral

Emphasis on land, blood, and protection

2. Constructivist Civic Nationalism

Identity as historically contingent

Emphasis on shared citizenship

3. Strategic Hybrid Approaches

Recognition of constructed identity

Simultaneous ethnic mobilization for survival

This polarization reflects deeper structural tensions within Ethiopia’s federal system.

9. Discussion: Identity as Strategy and Structure

The Ethiopian case demonstrates that identity is both:

A structural outcome of institutional design (ethnic federalism)

A strategic tool used by political actors

The re-ethnicization of Amhara identity is therefore not an anomaly but a predictable response to:

Political competition

Security dilemmas

Institutional incentives

10. Implications for the 2026 Elections and Beyond

As Ethiopia approaches the 2026 elections, the hardening of identity carries several risks:

Increased ethnic polarization

Fragmentation of national politics

Escalation of territorial conflicts

At the same time, it may also produce:

Stronger political organization

Greater clarity in representation

New forms of negotiation and alliance

The long-term outcome remains uncertain.

11. Conclusion

The transformation of Amhara identity in contemporary Ethiopia illustrates the dynamic interplay between primordialism and social construction. Rather than confirming one theory over the other, the case demonstrates their mutual entanglement.

Amhara identity is not simply reverting to an ancient essence; it is being reconstructed as primordial in response to modern political pressures. This process underscores a broader theoretical insight: identities are most likely to become rigid and essentialized when they are perceived to be under threat.

Ethiopia’s future will depend on whether its political system can accommodate these evolving identities without descending into deeper fragmentation. The challenge lies not in choosing between primordialism and constructivism, but in understanding how both operate simultaneously within the lived realities of political life.

References

Anderson, B. (1983). Imagined Communities. Verso.

Brass, P. (1991). Ethnicity and Nationalism. Sage.

Geertz, C. (1963). “The Integrative Revolution.”

Gellner, E. (1983). Nations and Nationalism. Cornell University Press.

Young, C. (1976). The Politics of Cultural Pluralism. University of Wisconsin Press.

Horowitz, D. (1985). Ethnic Groups in Conflict. University of California Press.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Force-field analysis: Is momentum for change gathering in Ethiopia?

 A force-field analysis suggests that Ethiopia is experiencing strong pressure for political change, but that pressure is still contested, fragmented, and not yet consolidated into a single national momentum. In other words, the system is under strain, but strain alone is not the same as a coherent transition.

Force-field analysis: Is momentum for change gathering?

In Kurt Lewin’s terms, political movement depends on the balance between driving forces pushing change and restraining forces preserving the status quo. In Ethiopia today, the driving forces are substantial: prolonged conflict in Amhara and Oromia, instability in Tigray, economic hardship despite reform, shrinking civic space, and widening distrust between society and state. These do not automatically produce regime change, but they do increase pressure for political reconfiguration.

Driving forces pushing change

1. Multi-front armed conflict is eroding state legitimacy.
The federal government still faces insurgent violence in Amhara and Oromia, while Tigray remains politically fragile after the 2022 Pretoria agreement. The Ethiopian Human Rights Commission has also warned about renewed fighting around the Tigray-Amhara-Afar borderlands. This means the state is not confronting a single crisis but a layered security burden, which historically increases demand for political change.

2. Political space is narrowing rather than widening.
A joint statement by 41 countries at the UN Human Rights Council warned that full civil and political rights, plus a free civil society and media environment, are preconditions for free and fair elections in Ethiopia. Human Rights Watch likewise said the government intensified pressure on independent media and civil society ahead of the 2026 elections. When legal channels narrow, pressure often moves into informal, oppositional, or insurgent channels.

3. Economic reform is real, but socially costly.
Ethiopia’s IMF-backed reform program has continued, with the IMF board completing its fourth review in January 2026 and releasing another tranche of funding. At the same time, debt restructuring remains contentious, and external shocks are weighing on African economies broadly. So the government has reform momentum, but reform also creates losers, inflationary pain, and public impatience if security and livelihoods do not improve fast enough.

4. Regional entanglements are raising strategic pressure.
Relations with Eritrea have sharply deteriorated, with Ethiopia accusing Eritrea of sending ammunition to Amhara rebels. Reuters also reported evidence pointing to Ethiopia’s involvement with Sudan’s RSF, which, if accurate, deepens regional militarization and stretches state capacity. External entanglement often amplifies domestic instability instead of containing it.

Restraining forces holding the current order

1. The federal state still retains the core instruments of coercion.
Despite multiple insurgencies, there is no clear evidence that the central state has lost national command capacity. The government still controls the federal security architecture, the formal bureaucracy, the fiscal relationship with international lenders, and the election machinery. That matters because momentum for change usually succeeds only when state cohesion breaks at the center.

2. Opposition pressure is fragmented, not unified.
The anti-government space is divided geographically, ideologically, and organizationally: Amhara insurgency, Oromo insurgency, Tigrayan internal splits, formal opposition parties, diaspora actors, and civil-society critics do not form one coherent bloc. Tigray itself remains divided, and conflict dynamics differ sharply between Amhara and Oromia. Fragmented opposition can generate pressure, but it often cannot convert pressure into orderly transition.

3. Elections may absorb some pressure without resolving the crisis.
The National Election Board is preparing for the 7th general election in 2026, so there is still an institutional channel on paper. But external observers have already warned that shrinking civic space undermines the conditions for genuinely free and fair competition. That makes elections a possible safety valve, but not necessarily a transformative one.

4. Economic stabilization gives the government breathing room.
The IMF program, debt talks, and official growth projections provide the government with an argument that reform is working, at least macroeconomically. Even if ordinary citizens do not fully feel the benefit, macro-financial support can delay political rupture by sustaining the state’s ability to pay, borrow, and govern.

Net assessment

My assessment is this: momentum for change is gathering structurally, but not yet converging politically. Ethiopia today resembles a system under cumulative pressure rather than a system facing one decisive revolutionary wave. The driving forces are stronger than they were a few years ago in breadth, but the restraining forces remain stronger in organization. Put differently, the desire for change is diffuse; the machinery of change is not yet unified. This is an inference from the current pattern of conflict, civic restriction, economic reform, and elite fragmentation.

What would indicate that momentum has truly crossed the threshold?

Three signs would matter most.

First, elite fracture at the center: defections or open splits inside the ruling coalition or security establishment. Second, cross-regional convergence: if grievances in Oromia, Amhara, Tigray, and urban centers begin to align around a shared political program instead of parallel anger. Third, institutional blockage: if the 2026 electoral process is widely seen not merely as flawed, but as incapable of channeling political competition at all. Those are the conditions under which accumulated pressure becomes real transition momentum.

Bottom line

So, is Ethiopia gathering momentum for change?
Yes—socially, militarily, and structurally.
Not yet—organizationally, institutionally, and strategically.

The country is moving closer to a pre-transition condition, but it has not yet reached a point where the forces for change clearly outweigh the forces of regime survival. The present danger is therefore not only abrupt change, but also prolonged unstable stalemate.


Wednesday, April 15, 2026

A Hegelian thesis–antithesis–synthesis analysis of the current political dynamics in Ethiopia:

A Hegelian thesis–antithesis–synthesis analysis of the current political dynamics in Ethiopia:

Ethiopia’s Political Crisis Through a Hegelian Lens

Thesis: The Centralizing State and the Promise of National Unity

The thesis in contemporary Ethiopia is represented by the project of state centralization, most visibly embodied in the Prosperity Party and the political vision of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed. This thesis presents itself as a corrective to the weaknesses of the post-1991 federal order. It argues that Ethiopia cannot survive as a coherent state if political authority remains excessively fragmented along ethnic and regional lines. In this view, a stronger center, a unified national narrative, and a post-ethnic political imagination are necessary for peace, development, and sovereignty.

The attraction of this thesis is understandable. Ethiopia has long suffered from weak institutions, regional rivalries, and competing nationalisms. The centralizing project therefore claims to offer order over fragmentation, citizenship over ethnicity, and national purpose over centrifugal politics. Its language is that of unity, stability, prosperity, and state restoration.

Antithesis: Ethno-National Resistance and the Demand for Self-Determination

Yet every thesis generates its antithesis. In Ethiopia, the antithesis is the enduring force of ethno-national self-determination, rooted in the constitutional order of 1995 and in the historical grievances of various nations and nationalities. For many Oromo, Amhara, Tigrayan, Somali, and other political actors, centralization is not experienced as national renewal but as the return of domination in another form.

This antithesis insists that Ethiopia is not merely a nation-state in the classical sense, but a contested multinational polity. It argues that peace cannot be built by suppressing identity-based claims, but only by recognizing them. Hence the persistence of armed insurgencies, regional defiance, and identity-based mobilization. What the center defines as disorder, the periphery often defines as resistance. What the state calls unity, others interpret as homogenization. The antithesis therefore emerges not simply as rebellion against power, but as a rejection of an unbalanced political settlement.

Synthesis: Toward a Democratic Multinational State

A genuine synthesis cannot be the victory of one side over the other. If the thesis crushes the antithesis, Ethiopia risks authoritarian centralism. If the antithesis destroys the thesis, Ethiopia risks disintegration into mutually hostile sovereignties. The synthesis must therefore preserve what is rational in both: the necessity of a functioning common state and the legitimacy of multinational self-rule.

Such a synthesis would require Ethiopia to move beyond both rigid centralism and unmediated ethnic competition. It would mean building a democratic multinational federation anchored in constitutionalism, institutional trust, and negotiated coexistence. The state must be strong enough to guarantee security and equality before the law, but limited enough to respect regional autonomy and collective rights. Likewise, ethno-national movements must transform themselves from instruments of grievance into participants in a shared constitutional order.

Conclusion

In Hegelian terms, Ethiopia’s crisis is not accidental; it is dialectical. The country is caught between the universal claim of the state and the particular claims of its nations and nationalities. The tragedy of the present moment is that both forces remain locked in mutual negation. The hope of the future lies in synthesis: not the erasure of difference, but its reconciliation within a just political whole.


Habtamu Nini Abino


 

Legal Scholar | Former Secretary General, House of Federation | Author and Researcher (Canada)

About

Habtamu Nini Abino is an Ethiopian legal professional, public administrator, and author with extensive experience in constitutional governance, judicial systems, and parliamentary administration. His career spans regional and federal institutions, where he has contributed to the development of legal frameworks, institutional coordination, and public sector leadership.

He is currently based in Canada, pursuing doctoral research focused on constitutional law, federalism, and governance in Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa.

Professional Experience

Secretary General
House of Federation
Approx. 2006 – 2012

Led the administrative and institutional operations of Ethiopia’s constitutional upper chamber

Coordinated legislative processes and intergovernmental relations

Supported constitutional interpretation mechanisms and federal-regional dialogue

International Parliamentary Engagement (ASGP/IPU)

Participant in the Association of Secretaries General of Parliaments (ASGP) meetings held in conjunction with the Inter-Parliamentary Union Assemblies (2007–2012)

Contributed to global dialogue on parliamentary governance and institutional best practices

Participated in meetings hosted in Bali, Geneva, Cape Town, Addis Ababa, Bangkok, Panama City, Bern, Kampala, and Quebec City

High Court Judge (Oromia)
Appointed 2002

Presided over judicial proceedings and contributed to regional legal development

Strengthened judicial administration and rule of law practices

Senior Government Roles – Oromia & Dire Dawa Administration
2003 onward

Served in leadership roles in justice, security, and governance sectors

Assigned to Dire Dawa Administration under Prime Minister Meles Zenawi

Led capacity-building and public administration initiatives


Board Chairperson (Public Enterprises)

Harar Brewery

Dire Dawa Cement Factory

Provided strategic oversight and governance leadership in state-affiliated enterprises

Education

MBA, Open University (United Kingdom)

LL.B, Ethiopia

Diploma in Teaching Geography, Kotebe Teachers Education College (1992)

Executive Training, Public Administration & Good Governance – Erasmus University Rotterdam

Publications

The Second Republic and the Politics of Article 39 in Ethiopia

Liberal Democracy and the Constitution of 1994: The User’s Handbook

Areas of Expertise

Constitutional Law & Federalism

Parliamentary Administration

Judicial Systems & Rule of Law

Governance & Public Sector Reform

Ethiopian & Horn of Africa Politics 

Current Focus

 Research and writing on constitutional governance, institutional design, and political development in Ethiopia.