Egypt’s geopolitical ambition to deepen its military influence in the Horn of Africa has been on display to the continent and the world with a series of high-level visits to Cairo.
Kenya’s defence secretary, Aden Duale, arrived in the Egyptian capital earlier this month for talks on deeper military cooperation between the two countries.
He met Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi after meeting with various defence industry officials and the Egyptian defence minister.
During the visit, Duale told a Kenyan newspaper that he viewed Egypt's well-established defence engineering industry as an opportunity for Kenya to enhance its own defence infrastructure.
"The exchange of knowledge and expertise can pave the way for growth and development in the defence sector," he said.
And two weeks before Duale landed in Cairo, an Egyptian military delegation visited the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, for talks on defence and security cooperation.
That came almost four months after Egypt’s Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly met Kenya’s President William Samuel Ruto in Nairobi to discuss cooperation and joint projects, including rainwater collection dams, groundwater wells, and modern irrigation programmes.
Politics of water
Egypt's move for greater cooperation in the region reflects Cairo's perceptions of emerging challenges to its national security – alongside wider geopolitical developments in the region – which have included direct threats to the country.
Conditions in the Nile Basin and the Horn of Africa have a direct bearing on two vital lifelines for Egypt: the Nile, which supplies Egypt with almost 90% of its freshwater, and the Suez Canal, which generates much of its national income.
Egypt's water supply from the Nile has come under intense pressure in recent years. A multi-billion-dollar construction project in Ethiopia to build a hydroelectric dam upstream in the Blue Nile will reduce water flow into Egypt.
Read more: Ethiopia pushes Egypt into tight corner after Nile dam talks collapse
Millions of acres of Egyptian farmland could be affected or even destroyed, worsening food shortages in Egypt and devastating its economy.
Almost a decade of negotiations with Ethiopia over the dam's operation and the filling of its reservoir produced nothing. Egypt walked away from the talks and now deals with the dam as a threat to national security.
Threats to Egypt’s economy are also emerging in the Red Sea, where the Houthi militia in Yemen has stepped up attacks against ships crossing the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait—a crucial passageway to the Suez Canal.
The desire of rival states – including Ethiopia – to gain a strategic foothold in the Red Sea also adds to Cairo’s concerns, making it necessary for it to take measures to safeguard the flow of traffic in the southern entrance of the Red Sea to and from the Suez.
Read more: Why Ethiopia's Red Sea ambitions unnerve Egypt
And so, Egypt is keen to work with other countries in the Nile Basin and the Horn of Africa to boost its wider security position in the context of its unease with Ethiopia.
Egypt is helping states construct rainwater collection dams and is offering them modern irrigation technologies and professional personnel training. This includes teaching techniques on mitigating the effects of climate change on water resources.
By doing so, Cairo aims to dissuade these states from building river dams on the Nile, convincing them there are alternative ways to secure water resources, produce food and generate electricity.