Tuesday, May 12, 2026

የፈረንሳይ የምስራቅ አፍሪካ ምሰሶ፡ ማክሮን፣ ኬንያ እና የአፍሪካ-አውሮፓ ግንኙነት እንደገና ማዋቀር


የፈረንሳይ የምስራቅ አፍሪካ ምሰሶ፡ ማክሮን፣ ኬንያ እና የአፍሪካ-አውሮፓ ግንኙነት እንደገና ማዋቀር

የፈረንሳዩ ፕሬዝዳንት ኢማኑኤል ማክሮን በቅርቡ ወደ ኬንያ የሄዱበት ጉብኝት እና ከፕሬዚዳንት ዊሊያም ሩቶ ጋር ወደ 1 ቢሊዮን ዶላር የሚጠጋ ዋጋ ያላቸው ስምምነቶች መፈረም ከመደበኛ የዲፕሎማሲ ተሳትፎ የበለጠ ይወክላሉ። እነዚህ ስምምነቶች የፈረንሳይን የአፍሪካ ፖሊሲ በሳህል ውስጥ ባለው ተጽዕኖ በከፍተኛ ሁኔታ ማሽቆልቆል በኋላ ጥልቅ ስትራቴጂካዊ ዳግም ማስተካከያን ያመለክታሉ። እንደ ማሊ፣ ቡርኪና ፋሶ እና ኒጀር ባሉ አገሮች ውስጥ ወታደራዊ መባረር እና እየጨመረ የመጣውን የፈረንሳይ ፀረ-ጥላቻ ስሜት ተከትሎ፣ ፓሪስ አሁን በምስራቅ አፍሪካ በተለይም እንደ ኬንያ ካሉ ፖለቲካዊ የተረጋጋ፣ ኢኮኖሚያዊ ምኞት ካላቸው አገሮች ጋር አዲስ አጋርነት እየፈለገች ነው።

ጉብኝቱ ብዙ ተንታኞች የፈረንሳይን “የአፍሪካ ዳግም ማስጀመር” ብለው የሚገልጹትን ያንፀባርቃል። በታሪክ፣ በአህጉሪቱ ላይ የፈረንሳይ ተጽዕኖ በተለምዶ “ፍራንሳፍሪክ” በመባል በሚታወቀው ማዕቀፍ - በፖለቲካዊ ተጽዕኖ፣ በወታደራዊ መገኘት፣ በኢኮኖሚ ጥገኝነት እና ፓሪስን ከቀድሞ ቅኝ ግዛቶች ጋር የሚያገናኙ ልሂቃን አውታረ መረቦች በሚታወቀው ስርዓት ውስጥ ተጠናቋል። ማክሮን ይህ ዘመን እንዳበቃ በይፋ አስታውቋል፣ ፈረንሳይ አሁን ከቅኝ ግዛት በኋላ ባለው የበላይነት ሳይሆን በኢንቨስትመንት፣ በንግድ እና በጋራ ጥቅሞች ላይ የተመሰረቱ ግንኙነቶችን እንደምትፈልግ አፅንዖት ይሰጣል።

 ይህ ተምሳሌታዊ ለውጥ በናይሮቢ በተካሄደው “የአፍሪካ ወደፊት ጉባኤ” ዝግጅት በግልጽ ታይቷል፣ ይህም ከ1973 ወዲህ ዝግጅቱ በእንግሊዝኛ ተናጋሪ የአፍሪካ አገር ውስጥ ለመጀመሪያ ጊዜ መካሄዱን የሚያሳይ ነው። ውሳኔው ጉልህ የሆነ የጂኦፖሊቲካዊ ትርጉም ነበረው። ፈረንሳይ በአፍሪካ ውስጥ ያለው የፖለቲካ የስበት ማዕከል እየተለወጠ መሆኑን እውቅና ሰጥታለች። የአንግሊፎን አፍሪካ፣ በተለይም የምስራቅ አፍሪካ፣ ተለዋዋጭ የኢኮኖሚ እና የስትራቴጂክ ድንበርን እየወከለ ነው።

በፈረንሳይ እና በኬንያ መካከል የተፈረሙት ስምምነቶች ይህንን አዲስ አቅጣጫ ያሳያሉ። ከ800 ሚሊዮን ዶላር በላይ የሞምባሳ ወደብን ዘመናዊ ለማድረግ ቃል ገብተዋል። ተጨማሪ ኢንቨስትመንቶች የኬንያን የንፋስ ኃይል ዘርፍ መስፋፋትን ጨምሮ የናይሮቢን የተጓዥ የባቡር ስርዓት እና የታዳሽ የኃይል መሠረተ ልማት ላይ ያነጣጠሩ ነበሩ። እነዚህ ፕሮጀክቶች ፈረንሳይ እራሷን እንደ የደህንነት ተዋናይ ብቻ ሳይሆን እንደ የረጅም ጊዜ የኢኮኖሚ ልማት አጋር እንደገና ለማስቀመጥ የምታደርገውን ሙከራ ያሳያሉ።

ማክሮን ቻይና በአፍሪካ መሠረተ ልማት እና በማዕድን ዘርፎች ላይ እያደገች ያለውን የበላይነት ለመተቸት አጋጣሚውን ተጠቅሞበታል። ቤጂንግ በሀብት ማውጣት እና በውጭ ማቀነባበሪያ ሰንሰለቶች አማካኝነት የጥገኝነት መዋቅሮችን እንደምትፈጥር ከሷል። ሆኖም፣ ይህ ትችት ሙሉ በሙሉ ኢኮኖሚያዊ ስጋቶችን ከማንጸባረቅ ይልቅ ሰፊ የጂኦፖሊቲካዊ ውድድርን ያንፀባርቃል። ቻይና እራሷን የአፍሪካ ግንባር ቀደም የመሠረተ ልማት ፋይናንስ አድራጊ ሆና አቁማለች፣ ሩሲያ ደግሞ በወታደራዊ ትብብር እና በግል የደህንነት ዝግጅቶች አማካኝነት በበርካታ የአፍሪካ አገሮች የደህንነት አሻራዋን አስፍታለች።

ለፈረንሳይ፣ ኬንያ በርካታ ስትራቴጂካዊ ጥቅሞችን ትሰጣለች። ከፖለቲካዊ ተለዋዋጭ የሳህል ክልል በተለየ መልኩ ኬንያ አንጻራዊ ተቋማዊ መረጋጋት፣ የተለያየ ኢኮኖሚ እና በዓለም አቀፍ የንግድ ስርዓቶች ውስጥ ጠንካራ ውህደት ታቀርባለች። ከዚህም በላይ፣ በቀይ ባህር የባህር ኮሪደር ውስጥ በሚከሰቱ መስተጓጎሎች መካከል፣ የህንድ ውቅያኖስ ለአለም አቀፍ ንግድ እና ለጂኦፖሊቲካዊ ውድድር ወሳኝ እየሆነ መጥቷል። የኬንያ በዚህ ኮሪደር ላይ ያላት ጂኦግራፊያዊ አቀማመጥ የንግድ እና የባህር መረጋጋትን ለማረጋገጥ ለሚፈልጉ የአውሮፓ ኃያላን አስፈላጊ አጋር ያደርገዋል።

ኬንያ በክልላዊ ጉዳዮች ላይ በተለይም በሱዳን እና በሰፊው የአፍሪካ ቀንድ ግጭቶች ላይ እየጨመረ በሚሄድ ተጽዕኖ ፈጣሪ የዲፕሎማሲ ሚና ትጫወታለች። ከዩናይትድ ስቴትስ እና ከዩናይትድ ኪንግደም ጋር ያላት የጠበቀ የደህንነት ትብብር ለምዕራባውያን ኃያላን ያላትን ስትራቴጂካዊ እሴት የበለጠ ያሳድጋል።

ፕሬዝዳንት ሩቶ ሽርክናውን በጋራ ጥቅም ላይ የሚውል እና ወደፊት የሚመለከት አድርገው አስቀምጠውታል። ኬንያ አሁን “ወደፊት” እና “ወደ ደቡብ” እያየች እንደሆነ የሰጡት መግለጫ አፍሪካ ከባህላዊ የምዕራባውያን ኃያላን ጋር ብቻ ከመተባበር ይልቅ የተለያዩ ዓለም አቀፍ ሽርክናዎችን በመከተል ላይ ያላትን እምነት የሚያንፀባርቅ ነው። ይህ በአፍሪካ ውስጥ ሰፊ ለውጥን የሚያንፀባርቅ ሲሆን መንግስታት ርዕዮተ ዓለምን ከማስተካከል ይልቅ የግብይት፣ የወለድ ላይ የተመሠረተ ዲፕሎማሲያዊ ግንኙነትን እየፈለጉ ነው።

ሆኖም አስፈላጊ ጥያቄዎች አሁንም መልስ አላገኙም። ፈረንሳይ ከአስርተ ዓመታት በኋላ ከቅኝ ግዛት በኋላ ተጽዕኖ ካሳደረች በኋላ በአፍሪካ ውስጥ እራሷን በእውነት እንደገና ማደስ ትችላለች? የአፍሪካ ማህበረሰቦች የፈረንሳይን የዳግም ብራንዲንግ ጥረቶች ይቀበላሉ ወይስ አህጉሪቱ በቻይና፣ ሩሲያ፣ ቱርክ፣ የባህረ ሰላጤ ሀገራት እና በአዳዲስ የአፍሪካ ክልላዊ ኃያላን መልክ ወደተቀረፀው የድህረ-ፈረንሳይ ጂኦፖለቲካዊ ዘመን እየተሸጋገረች ነው?

መልሱ በመጨረሻ በዲፕሎማሲያዊ ንግግር ላይ ሳይሆን ፈረንሳይ በአክብሮት፣ በኢኮኖሚ ፍትሃዊነት እና በስትራቴጂካዊ እኩልነት ላይ የተመሠረተ አጋርነት መስጠት ትችል እንደሆነ ላይ የተመሠረተ ሊሆን ይችላል። ዛሬ አፍሪካ ከአሁን በኋላ የቀዝቃዛው ጦርነት አፍሪካ ወይም ወዲያውኑ ከቅኝ ግዛት በኋላ ያለው ዘመን አይደለችም። እየጨመረ የመጣ ጠንካራ፣ ባለብዙ ዋልታ እና የጂኦፖሊቲካዊ እሴቷን የምታውቅ ናት። ስለዚህ የፈረንሳይ በምስራቅ አፍሪካ ስኬት የተመሰረተው አሮጌውን ተጽዕኖ በአዲስ ቋንቋ ለማደስ ከመሞከር ይልቅ ከዚህ አዲስ የአፍሪካ እውነታ ጋር ለመላመድ ባላት ችሎታ ላይ ነው።

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

Peace, Democracy, Development and National Transformation in Ethiopia: Reflections on Security, Elections, and Nation-Building

Ethiopia stands at a historic crossroads where questions of peace, democracy, development, and national unity have become central to the country’s future. The nation is simultaneously confronting armed conflict, political polarization, economic pressures, and ambitious infrastructure transformation. At the same time, Ethiopia continues to pursue major national projects, including the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), corridor development programs, and urban modernization initiatives, aimed at reshaping the country’s economic future.

This article examines key national issues through the lenses of security, electoral democracy, development, and urban transformation.

Security Issues and the Search for Lasting Peace

How would you describe the current security situation in Oromia?

The current security situation in the Oromia Region remains fragile and deeply concerning. Armed conflict, political mistrust, displacement, insecurity along transportation corridors, and fear among civilians continue to affect daily life. The conflict has weakened local governance structures and disrupted economic and social activities in many rural areas.

Recent international assessments continue to identify insecurity in Oromia linked to clashes involving government security forces and the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA).

The reality is that military approaches alone cannot produce sustainable peace. Lasting peace requires political dialogue, justice, the rule of law, and inclusive reconciliation among communities.

How does conflict affect people?

Conflict affects ordinary citizens more than political elites. Farmers lose access to land, students are unable to attend school consistently, traders face restrictions on movement, and many families become internally displaced. Insecurity also increases unemployment, poverty, trauma, and mistrust within society.

Beyond physical destruction, conflict damages the psychological and social fabric of communities. Fear and uncertainty weaken social cohesion and reduce public confidence in institutions.

To what extent can dialogue with government and armed groups bring lasting peace?

Dialogue remains one of the most important instruments for sustainable peace. However, dialogue succeeds only when it is inclusive, sincere, and supported by trust-building mechanisms. Political leaders, elders, religious institutions, women, youth, civil society organizations, and armed actors must all participate meaningfully.

Peace negotiations without accountability, constitutional clarity, rehabilitation, and political reform risk becoming temporary ceasefires rather than lasting solutions.

Which body has the constitutional right to carry weapons?

According to the Constitution of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, the federal government has authority over national defence and federal security institutions. In contrast, regional governments maintain regional police forces responsible for maintaining local order. Therefore, constitutionally recognized armed institutions are state-authorized security bodies rather than private or informal armed groups.

How can dialogue and understanding among the Oromo be strengthened?

Dialogue among Oromo communities requires mutual respect despite ideological differences. Political competition should not evolve into social hostility. Traditional institutions such as the Gadaa system, alongside elders, scholars, women, youth, religious leaders, opposition parties, and government actors, can play critical roles in rebuilding trust.

Constructive dialogue must prioritize collective survival, peace, and the future of younger generations over short-term political gains.

What should the government and people work on to bring lasting peace?

The government must strengthen the rule of law, protect civilians, open democratic space, and pursue genuine political negotiations. Citizens, in turn, must reject revenge politics, support peaceful solutions, and resist hate-based mobilization.

Peace cannot be imposed solely through force; it must be built through legitimacy, trust, and inclusive governance.

Electoral Issues and Democratic Transition

What makes this year’s election different from previous elections?

The current electoral environment differs from previous periods because it is taking place amid heightened political polarization, security concerns, economic hardship, and declining public trust in institutions.

The National Election Board of Ethiopia has repeatedly faced logistical, financial, and security challenges while attempting to organize credible elections under difficult conditions. Reports indicate ongoing concerns regarding electoral security and opposition participation.

Unlike earlier periods, citizens today are more politically aware and demand greater transparency, accountability, and inclusion.

How wide is the democratic field for opposition parties?

Legally, Ethiopia’s constitutional framework permits multiparty democracy. However, in practice, opposition parties continue to face challenges, including insecurity, administrative pressure, limited media access, and restricted organizational capacity in some regions.

For democracy to mature, opposition parties must be able to organize freely, present policy alternatives, criticize government policies peacefully, and access voters without intimidation.

What is the role of government and opposition parties in maintaining election security?

The government has a responsibility to provide neutral security and ensure that state institutions are not used for partisan purposes. Opposition parties also bear responsibility to campaign peacefully, discourage violence, and respect legal procedures.

Election security should protect democratic participation rather than create fear among voters.

What should the government, electoral institutions, and citizens do to ensure fair elections?

The government must guarantee neutrality and security. Electoral institutions must maintain transparency and independence. Citizens should participate peacefully, reject political violence, and respect democratic outcomes.

Independent media, civil society organizations, courts, and observers also play essential roles in ensuring electoral credibility.

Major National Projects and Economic Transformation

What are the benefits of major projects like GERD?

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam represents one of Africa’s largest hydroelectric projects and symbolizes Ethiopia’s developmental ambition. The project is expected to expand electricity generation, support industrialization, reduce energy shortages, and increase export revenues.

International reporting confirms that GERD became operational as Africa’s largest hydroelectric facility with expected capacity exceeding 5,000 megawatts.

How do these projects contribute to development and youth employment?

Large infrastructure projects generate both direct and indirect employment opportunities. Construction, engineering, transport, manufacturing, energy distribution, and service sectors all benefit from such investments.

However, long-term success depends on linking infrastructure projects with education, technical training, entrepreneurship, and industrial policy.

How can these projects improve people’s lives?

Major projects improve lives by providing electricity, transportation, water access, housing, digital connectivity, and employment opportunities. Development should ultimately enhance human dignity and improve living standards.

At the same time, development policies must ensure fairness, proper compensation, environmental sustainability, and social inclusion.

What should communities do to make the economy globally competitive?

Citizens should protect public infrastructure, support productivity, encourage innovation, and promote a culture of education and accountability. National competitiveness depends not only on infrastructure, but also on institutional quality, human capital, technological advancement, and social stability.

How is it possible to focus on development despite political differences?

Political disagreement is natural in democratic societies. However, development should not become hostage to political polarization. Citizens and political actors may disagree ideologically while still cooperating on national priorities such as roads, electricity, healthcare, education, and job creation.

Corridor Development and Urban Transformation

How do you view Ethiopia’s corridor development projects?

Recent corridor development and urban modernization initiatives have visibly transformed several Ethiopian cities, particularly Addis Ababa. Improvements in roads, public spaces, pedestrian corridors, and urban aesthetics demonstrate growing emphasis on modernization and infrastructure planning.

Nevertheless, sustainable urbanization requires transparency, fair compensation, environmental protection, and social inclusion.

What role does corridor development play in improving people’s lives?

Urban corridor projects can improve transportation, reduce congestion, support commerce, create employment opportunities, and enhance public services. Studies examining urban mobility and corridor development in Ethiopia indicate improvements in accessibility and traffic management.

When properly implemented, urban modernization contributes to productivity, tourism, investment attraction, and quality of life.

How much can corridor development raise Ethiopia’s reputation?

Modern infrastructure projects can significantly improve Ethiopia’s international image by demonstrating administrative capacity, modernization, and economic ambition. Well-designed cities also attract tourism, investment, and international business partnerships.

However, long-term reputation depends not only on physical beauty but also on governance quality, social justice, and institutional trust.

What is important for continued future success?

Future success requires long-termrmrmrmrmrmrmrmrmrmrmrm urban planning, accountability, public participation, environmental sustainability, affordable housing, heritage preservation, and infrastructure maintenance

Development should not focus solely on physical transformation; it must also prioritize human development, social equity, and economic opportunity.

Conclusion

Ethiopia’s future depends on balancing peace, democracy, development, and national cohesion. Security challenges cannot be solved by force alone; they require dialogue, legitimacy, and inclusive governance. Democracy cannot succeed without political openness and public trust. Development cannot endure without justice, accountability, and stability.

At this critical historical moment, Ethiopia’s greatest challenge is not merely building roads, dams, or cities, but building institutions capable of sustaining peace, democracy, and shared prosperity for future generations.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Strategic Intelligence Assessment: Regional Destabilization Risks Surrounding Ethiopia’s June 2026 Election



Strategic Intelligence Assessment: Regional Destabilization Risks Surrounding Ethiopia’s June 2026 Election

Executive Assessment

The Horn of Africa is entering a period of heightened geopolitical volatility marked by converging proxy conflicts, alliance realignments, and strategic competition over the Red Sea corridor, Nile Basin security, and regional political legitimacy. As Ethiopia approaches its scheduled June 1, 2026, parliamentary election, multiple regional and non-state actors are perceived by Ethiopian political circles as attempting to exploit internal fragilities and regional crises to weaken federal authority, undermine electoral legitimacy, and reshape the regional balance of power.

Within this context, a growing narrative inside Ethiopia frames the alignment among Egypt, Eritrea, factions associated with the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), and elements connected to the Sudan conflict as constituting a coordinated anti-Ethiopian strategic bloc. Although the characterization of such actors as an “Axis of Evil” reflects political rhetoric rather than neutral intelligence terminology, the underlying concern reflects a genuine perception within Ethiopian strategic discourse that external pressure and proxy destabilization efforts are intensifying ahead of the election period.

The central strategic question is not whether a formal alliance exists, but whether parallel interests among these actors are converging around the objective of constraining Ethiopian regional influence and weakening the federal government’s strategic position.

The Geopolitical Environment

The Horn of Africa has increasingly become a multi-layered theatre of geopolitical competition. The region now intersects with wider contests involving Gulf rivalries, Red Sea militarization, Nile water disputes, maritime access, counterterrorism operations, and global trade routes.

Ethiopia occupies the center of this geopolitical system due to four structural realities:

1. It is the demographic and military heavyweight of the Horn.
2. It controls the headwaters of the Blue Nile through the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD).
3. It seeks diversified maritime access after decades of landlocked vulnerability.
4. It hosts the headquarters of the African Union and remains central to continental diplomacy.

These structural factors make Ethiopia both indispensable and threatening to neighbouring rivals.

Egypt’s Strategic Calculus

From Cairo’s perspective, Ethiopia’s rise represents a long-term strategic challenge, primarily over Nile water security and regional influence. Egypt views the GERD not merely as an infrastructure project but as a geopolitical instrument capable of altering the historical balance of power in the Nile Basin.

Consequently, Egypt’s regional strategy increasingly appears designed to contain Ethiopian influence through diplomatic balancing, military partnerships, and regional alliance-building.

Egypt’s growing military cooperation with Somalia and expanding ties with Eritrea are interpreted within Ethiopian security circles as components of a broader containment architecture. Cairo’s deployment of military personnel within the framework of the African Union Support and Stabilization Mission (AUSSOM) has generated additional suspicion in Addis Ababa, where policymakers fear that anti-Ethiopian strategic coordination may increasingly take place under multilateral security umbrellas.

Whether Egypt seeks direct confrontation remains doubtful. However, its strategy appears aimed at constraining Ethiopia’s regional maneuvering room while increasing political pressure on Addis Ababa regarding both the GERD and its Red Sea access ambitions.

Eritrea’s Strategic Position

Relations between Ethiopia and Eritrea remain among the most unpredictable variables in the Horn. The temporary alliance formed during the Tigray conflict has gradually deteriorated following the Pretoria Agreement and disagreements over post-war regional arrangements.

President Isaias Afwerki has historically viewed internal fragmentation in Ethiopia as strategically advantageous to the Eritrean regime's security. Ethiopian analysts increasingly suspect that Eritrea seeks to maintain leverage through indirect relationships with armed actors and political factions that could weaken Ethiopian federal cohesion.
At the same time, Eritrea fears Ethiopia’s long-term maritime ambitions, particularly discussions surrounding Assab, Berbera, and regional port diversification. As Ethiopia intensifies efforts to secure permanent sea access, Eritrea is likely to perceive these ambitions as existential threats to its strategic autonomy and regional relevance.

Thus, Eritrean strategy appears less oriented toward outright war and more toward preserving strategic ambiguity while ensuring Ethiopia remains internally preoccupied.

The TPLF Factor and Post-Pretoria Fragility

The 2022 Pretoria Agreement significantly reduced active large-scale conflict in northern Ethiopia. Yet, it did not fully resolve the underlying political and security tensions between federal authorities and factions within Tigray.

The re-emergence of confrontational rhetoric from fringe TPLF-associated elements has raised fears in Addis Ababa regarding potential spoilers seeking to destabilize the fragile post-war settlement. Ethiopian political discourse increasingly frames any attempt to challenge the legitimacy of the federal order before the election as part of a broader regional destabilization strategy.

However, it is important to distinguish between political rhetoric and verified operational coordination. While Ethiopian security narratives often describe external sponsorship of destabilizing actors, publicly available evidence regarding direct coordinated military planning among all alleged parties remains limited and contested.

Nevertheless, the perception of encirclement itself significantly shapes Ethiopian security doctrine.

Sudan’s Civil War and the Regional Proxy System

The war in Sudan has become a catalyst for wider regional instability. Competing accusations involving drone operations, logistical corridors, proxy sponsorship, and border militarization have intensified mistrust across the Horn.

Sudanese accusations that Ethiopian territory has been linked to hostile operations reflect broader fears in Khartoum that Addis Ababa has tilted toward networks associated with the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), particularly through overlapping relationships involving Gulf actors.

Ethiopia officially denies such allegations, while external actors, including the United States, have generally avoided publicly endorsing claims of Ethiopian operational involvement in attacks inside Sudan.

Nevertheless, Sudan’s civil war has effectively regionalized insecurity, creating opportunities for rival actors to exploit instability while increasing the risk of miscalculation.

Election Timing and Strategic Pressure

The timing of these developments ahead of Ethiopia’s June 2026 parliamentary election is strategically significant. Elections in fragile geopolitical environments often become focal points for both domestic contestation and external pressure campaigns.

From the Ethiopian government’s perspective, regional rivals may seek to:

Amplify narratives of instability.

Undermine confidence in federal institutions.

Trigger localized security crises.

Internationalize electoral legitimacy disputes.

Exploit unresolved ethnic and regional tensions.

Pressure Ethiopia diplomatically before the election.
At the same time, external actors likely recognize that a destabilized Ethiopia would have severe regional consequences, including refugee flows, economic disruption, insecurity in the Red Sea, and the fragmentation of existing regional security arrangements.

Thus, many regional actors appear simultaneously interested in constraining Ethiopia without triggering total state collapse.

Strategic Outlook

The Horn of Africa is increasingly defined by what intelligence analysts often describe as “competitive instability”: a condition in which states avoid direct interstate war while supporting indirect pressure mechanisms designed to weaken rivals strategically, economically, and politically.

Ethiopia’s election, therefore, occurs within a broader environment characterized by:

Red Sea militarization,

Nile Basin competition,

Sudanese state fragmentation,

Gulf power rivalry,

Proxy warfare,

and contested regional realignment.


Despite escalating rhetoric across the region, the probability of full-scale conventional interstate war remains relatively low in the near term. However, the risks of hybrid conflict, proxy escalation, drone incidents, political destabilization, cyber operations, and border confrontations remain elevated.

Ultimately, Ethiopia’s stability will depend not only on military deterrence but also on institutional legitimacy, economic resilience, inclusive political management, and the successful navigation of an increasingly fragmented regional order.

The Horn of Africa is no longer governed by stable alliance systems. It is increasingly governed by fluid coalitions, strategic opportunism, and overlapping crises in which today’s tactical partner can rapidly become tomorrow’s strategic rival.

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.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Somalia’s Unfinished State: Why James Clapper’s 2014 Warning Still Echoes in 2026

Somalia’s Unfinished State: Why James Clapper’s 2014 Warning Still Echoes in 2026

In 2014, James Clapper delivered a sober assessment of Somalia during the first administration of Hassan Sheikh Mohamud. At the time, Somalia was emerging from more than two decades of state collapse and attempting to build its first internationally recognized permanent federal government since the fall of the Siad Barre regime in 1991. Clapper’s analysis was not merely an intelligence briefing; it was a structural diagnosis of a fragile post-conflict state struggling to convert formal sovereignty into effective governance.

More than a decade later, the striking reality is not that Somalia has failed to make progress, but that many of the core structural weaknesses identified in 2014 continue to define the Somali political landscape in 2026. The persistence of these problems explains why Clapper’s assessment now appears remarkably prescient.

Sovereignty Without Capacity

The core message of Clapper’s warning was simple yet profound: sovereignty on paper does not automatically create state capability in practice.

Somalia today possesses:

internationally recognized borders;

a federal constitution;

diplomatic recognition;

international financial support;

membership in regional and global institutions.


Yet the Somali state continues to struggle with one of the central dilemmas of post-conflict governance: how to transform formal legitimacy into functioning institutions capable of exercising authority beyond the capital city.

This distinction between juridical sovereignty and operational sovereignty remains central to understanding Somalia’s predicament.

Persistent Political Infighting

In 2014, Clapper criticized the culture of political infighting within the Somali Federal Government. The conflict between the presidency and successive prime ministers consumed political energy that might otherwise have been directed toward security reform, institution-building, and reconstruction.

A decade later, the form of the conflict has evolved, but the underlying pattern remains.

Today, Somalia’s most serious political disputes increasingly revolve around the federal system itself. Tensions between the federal government in Mogadishu and member states such as Puntland and Jubaland have intensified over:

constitutional amendments;

electoral systems;

power-sharing arrangements;

resource control;

security authority.


What was once a rivalry between political offices has now evolved into a structural crisis of federalism.

This reflects a deeper unresolved question within Somalia’s political settlement: is Somalia moving toward a genuinely decentralized federal system, or toward recentralization under Mogadishu?

Weak Leadership or Structural Constraint?

Clapper’s description of “weak leadership” was controversial because it implied that the Somali presidency lacked the capacity to unify competing political actors and project authority beyond the capital.

However, the issue was never solely about individual leadership ability. Somalia’s fragmentation is rooted in:

clan-based political organization;

regional autonomy;

war economy networks;

external interventions;

historical mistrust of centralized authority.


Even highly capable leaders struggle to govern effectively when the state itself lacks institutional depth.

During Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s second term, this challenge has become even more pronounced. While the government has pursued military campaigns against Al-Shabaab and attempted constitutional reforms, critics argue that political consensus-building remains fragile.

In Somalia, leadership is not measured only by executive decisiveness. It is measured by the ability to negotiate simultaneously among clans, federal entities, business elites, religious actors, and external partners. This makes governance extraordinarily difficult.

The ATMIS Transition and the Security Test

Perhaps the most urgent dimension of Clapper’s warning concerns institutional weakness.

In 2014, the Somali National Army suffered from severe deficiencies in training, command structure, logistics, salary distribution, and operational cohesion. International donors repeatedly complained that state institutions existed more on paper than in practice.

Today, the stakes are far higher because Somalia is approaching a historic transition. The gradual drawdown of the African Union Transition Mission in Somalia (ATMIS) means Somali forces are increasingly expected to secure territory independently.

This creates a dangerous test of state capacity.

If Somali security institutions remain fragmented, clan-influenced, underfunded, or politically divided, the withdrawal of external stabilization forces could create security vacuums exploitable by Al-Shabaab.

The central question confronting Somalia today is therefore the same one implied in Clapper’s assessment a decade ago: can Somali institutions function without permanent external support?

Governance Versus Survival

Another enduring feature of Somalia’s fragility is that the state often remains trapped in survival mode rather than developmental governance.

International aid, counterterrorism operations, humanitarian crises, climate shocks, and emergency security priorities dominate political attention. Long-term institution-building frequently becomes secondary.

As a result:

corruption remains systemic;

Civil service reform progresses slowly.

Judicial institutions remain weak;

local governance capacity is uneven;

Economic diversification is limited.


This creates a cycle where insecurity undermines governance, while weak governance simultaneously fuels insecurity.

The Regional Dimension

Somalia’s internal fragility is further complicated by regional geopolitics.

The Horn of Africa has become increasingly shaped by competition involving:

Ethiopia;

Eritrea;

United Arab Emirates;

Turkey;

Egypt;

Gulf rivalries and Red Sea security dynamics.


Somalia is no longer merely rebuilding internally; it is simultaneously navigating complex external alignments involving ports, military partnerships, intelligence cooperation, and maritime competition.

This externalization of Somali politics often reinforces internal divisions rather than resolving them.

Somalia’s Central Dilemma

The deeper issue is that Somalia’s crisis is not only a security crisis. It is fundamentally a state-formation crisis.

The country continues to struggle with three interconnected questions:

1. Who legitimately holds authority?


2. How should power be distributed?


3. Can institutions become stronger than clan and factional networks?



Until these questions are addressed through a broad political consensus, Somalia risks remaining trapped between formal sovereignty and functional fragility.

Conclusion

James Clapper’s 2014 assessment remains relevant because it identified structural rather than temporary problems. The persistence of political infighting, institutional weakness, fragmented authority, and governance shortfalls demonstrates how difficult post-conflict state-building can be.

Somalia has undeniably made progress since the era of complete state collapse. Mogadishu has been rebuilt, diplomatic relations expanded, economic activity increased, and federal institutions partially restored. Yet the deeper transition — from fragile sovereignty to effective statehood — remains incomplete.

The challenge facing Somalia in 2026 is therefore not simply defeating Al-Shabaab or surviving the ATMIS withdrawal. It is building a political order in which institutions command greater loyalty than clan fragmentation, governance extends beyond the capital, and constitutional arrangements are accepted as legitimate by all major actors.

Without resolving these foundational issues, Somalia risks continuing the cycle Clapper warned about more than a decade ago: a state internationally recognized, but internally struggling to fully govern itself.

Intelligence Assessment: The Emerging Internal Fracture Within the UAE Federation


Intelligence Assessment: The Emerging Internal Fracture Within the UAE Federation

Executive Summary

Recent geopolitical commentary and speculative analytical reporting have increasingly focused on the possibility of internal tensions within the United Arab Emirates federation, particularly regarding the concentration of political, security, and strategic authority under Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Abu Dhabi’s dominant role in federal governance. These discussions suggest that long-standing balances among Abu Dhabi, Dubai, and other emirates may be under strain as the UAE transitions from a commercially driven Gulf federation into a highly centralized regional power projecting influence across the Middle East, the Red Sea, and the Horn of Africa.

However, many of the more dramatic claims — including predictions of federation fragmentation or imminent structural collapse — remain speculative and lack publicly verified evidence. Still, the debate itself is strategically significant because it reflects growing international scrutiny of the UAE’s evolving political model and regional ambitions.

Historical Structure of the UAE Federation

Since its establishment in 1971 under the leadership of Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, the UAE operated through a carefully balanced federal arrangement among seven emirates. Although Abu Dhabi possessed overwhelming oil wealth and military influence, Dubai emerged as the federation’s commercial and financial engine.

An unwritten political understanding gradually developed:

Abu Dhabi would dominate strategic security and federal political authority;

Dubai would lead trade, finance, logistics, and international business.

smaller emirates would retain internal autonomy while benefiting from federal stability and wealth redistribution.


This balance became one of the defining strengths of the Emirati model.

Centralization Under Mohammed bin Zayed

Over the past decade, the UAE has undergone significant political and strategic centralization. Under Mohammed bin Zayed’s leadership, Abu Dhabi consolidated its influence across:

national security institutions;

intelligence systems;

military planning;

foreign policy;

advanced technology sectors;

strategic infrastructure;

sovereign wealth coordination.


This transformation enabled the UAE to emerge as one of the Middle East’s most influential middle powers despite its relatively small population.

The UAE expanded its regional role through:

interventions in Yemen and Libya;

Red Sea and Horn of Africa port networks;

security partnerships;

drone and cyber capabilities;

normalization with Israel under the Abraham Accords;

Maritime and logistics influence extending from the Gulf into Africa.


Supporters view this transformation as evidence of strategic modernization and geopolitical sophistication. Critics, however, argue that rapid centralization and regional activism have altered the federation’s traditional internal equilibrium.

Emerging Internal Tensions

Some geopolitical analyses now suggest that economic and political circles in Dubai and Sharjah are increasingly concerned about the long-term consequences of Abu Dhabi’s assertive policies.

Dubai’s concerns are believed to center primarily on economic exposure. As a global financial and commercial hub, Dubai depends heavily on:

investor confidence;

geopolitical stability;

tourism;

international banking;

logistics and aviation networks.


Escalating regional confrontations or perceptions of military adventurism could potentially undermine Dubai’s carefully cultivated image as a neutral and safe commercial gateway between East and West.

Sharjah’s concerns are often portrayed differently. As one of the federation’s more socially conservative emirates with strong cultural and Arab identity traditions, some analysts speculate that segments of its leadership may view aspects of the UAE’s newer geopolitical posture — especially its deepening Israeli partnership and aggressive regional influence operations — as diverging from traditional Gulf-Arab political identity.

The Strategic Risks Facing the Federation

Several interconnected risks are now discussed in analytical circles:

1. Overcentralization Risk

Excessive concentration of authority within Abu Dhabi may gradually weaken the consensual federal culture that historically stabilized the UAE system.

2. Economic Vulnerability

Dubai’s globally integrated economy is highly sensitive to geopolitical instability, sanctions risks, or regional military escalation.

3. Strategic Overextension

The UAE’s expanding footprint across Yemen, Sudan, Libya, the Horn of Africa, and the Red Sea may create cumulative security burdens beyond what a small federation can sustainably manage.

4. Gulf Realignment

Growing tensions with Saudi Arabia and differing regional strategies could weaken traditional GCC cohesion and complicate the UAE’s external balancing strategy.

5. Identity Tensions

Rapid geopolitical transformation may spark internal debates over the UAE’s long-term identity — whether it remains primarily a Gulf Arab federation or evolves into a highly securitized global strategic actor.

Are Fragmentation Scenarios Realistic?

Despite growing speculation, predictions of imminent federation collapse appear exaggerated.

Several structural factors continue to strongly support Emirati stability:

enormous sovereign wealth reserves;

advanced state institutions;

elite interdependence;

strong internal security capacity;

integrated economic systems;

shared ruling-family interests;

high living standards;

absence of organized public opposition movements.


Unlike fragile states experiencing ethnic fragmentation or institutional collapse, the UAE retains exceptionally high state capacity.

However, this does not eliminate the possibility of elite-level tensions beneath the surface. Modern authoritarian and semi-authoritarian systems often maintain outward stability while managing complex internal negotiations among ruling factions.

The more realistic scenario is therefore not a sudden federation breakup, but a gradual internal recalibration regarding:

power distribution;

economic priorities;

regional military involvement;

relations with Israel;

Gulf diplomacy;

federal-emirate balances.


The UAE’s Strategic Paradox

The UAE today faces a paradox common to rising middle powers. Its regional influence has expanded dramatically, but influence expansion also generates strategic exposure.

Abu Dhabi’s assertive posture has undeniably elevated the UAE into a central geopolitical actor shaping events from the Mediterranean to the Horn of Africa. Yet the same policies now expose the federation to:

proxy rivalries;

regional backlash;

diplomatic friction;

economic vulnerability;

questions about long-term sustainability.


The challenge for the Emirati leadership is therefore not simply maintaining power externally, but preserving internal federal cohesion while managing the costs of regional ambition.

Conclusion

The current debate over alleged fractures within the UAE federation reflects broader transformations in Gulf geopolitics. The federation is evolving from a commercially oriented Gulf union into a centralized strategic power with global ambitions.

While sensational predictions of imminent collapse remain unsupported by verified evidence, the underlying tensions highlighted in geopolitical analyses should not be dismissed entirely. They point to a deeper question confronting the UAE leadership: whether a federation originally built on internal balance and economic pragmatism can indefinitely sustain an increasingly centralized and interventionist geopolitical model.

The future stability of the UAE will likely depend not only on its external power projection, but also on its ability to preserve the delicate federal equilibrium that historically made the Emirati model successful in the first place.