As global attention remains fixed on Israel's war on Gaza, a less-reported crisis is bubbling up at the other end of the Red Sea that could prove similarly destabilising: the breakaway republic of Somaliland has enjoyed de facto independence from Somalia since 1991 but remains unrecognised by the international community.
However, this looks set to change following a memorandum of understanding signed between the breakaway state and neighbouring Ethiopia in early January 2024.
In exchange for access to Somaliland’s Red Sea coastline, including the port of Berbera and space to build a military base, landlocked Ethiopia pledged to recognise its neighbour.
The declaration not only outraged Mogadishu, which accused Addis Ababa of greenlighting the formal fragmentation of the Somali state, but also several Middle Eastern powers, especially Egypt, who both support Somalia’s territorial integrity and fear the entry of Ethiopia into the Red Sea.
Read more: Why Ethiopia's Red Sea ambitions unnerve Egypt
But Middle Eastern interest in the dispute is no anomaly. Regional powers have considerably upped their interest in Somali politics — and the Horn of Africa more generally — in the last decade.
It is not just Egypt but also Qatar, Turkey, the UAE and even, to a lesser extent, Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Israel that have vested interests in Somalia and the Horn.
An indication of this was Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s prompt visits to Cairo and Doha soon after the agreement was signed, as well as his calling an emergency meeting of the Arab League in a bid to derail the accord.
Where once Middle Eastern states took little interest in this war-torn Arabic-speaking state on the Horn of Africa, today it is a key arena for Middle Eastern foreign policy and, at times, competition.
The Middle East in Somalia
Somalia enjoys cultural, religious, and linguistic links with the Middle East. It joined the Arab League in 1974, and Qatar signed labour agreements with Mogadishu in the 1980s.
However, for most of Somalia’s history since independence in 1960, it has been global rather than Middle Eastern powers that have been the most interested and influential outsiders.
During the Cold War, Somalia’s Marxist dictatorship allied with the USSR, who armed Mogadishu extensively, giving it the confidence to launch an ill-fated invasion of Ethiopia in 1977.
During the war, Moscow opportunistically switched sides, contributing to Somalia’s defeat and its eventual descension into anarchy in 1991.
Collapse into civil war prompted interest from the United States, who led a UN-mandated task force to stabilise Mogadishu in 1992 as part of George HW Bush’s ‘New World Order’.
Though heavy casualties and a loss of interest prompted the US to withdraw its forces a year later, Somalia remained on Washington’s radar.
After 9/11, the presence of Islamist militia fighting in Somalia contributed to George W Bush launching Operation Enduring Freedom – Horn of Africa in 2002 and establishing a military base in nearby Djibouti to combat Somali jihadists, among others.
Read more: Why do so many foreign powers have military bases in Djibouti?