Deepening tensions in the Red Sea following Israel’s attack on the Houthi-controlled port of Hodeidah in Yemen have highlighted the growing importance of Djibouti as a military base used by world powers to monitor the region.
A tiny country on the Horn of Africa with just over a million people, Djibouti is home to American, French, Chinese, Japanese and Italian military bases, to name but some. It is also the home port for two European Union (EU) naval operations.
Earlier this month, Josep Borell, the EU’s top diplomat, visited the country, calling it “a strategic partner at the heart of a region beset by multiple crises”, adding that it “plays a major role thanks to its strategic position”.
Notwithstanding the problems in the Red Sea caused by the Houthis, Djibouti is nevertheless in a tough neighbourhood. One of the world’s oldest Muslim countries, it shares a border with Somalia, Ethiopia, and Eritrea.
Tensions have been heightened in and around Somalia following a deal signed between Ethiopia and Somaliland. Ethiopia, meanwhile, has gone through a terrible civil war in Tigray. Not too far away, Sudan is wracked by civil war, too.
Repercussions of Gaza
In November, the Houthi militia in Yemen—one of Iran’s main allies in the region—declared war on Israel in support of the Palestinians of Gaza.
Ever since, they have targeted merchant ships passing through the Red Sea, ostensibly those with links to Israel, either in terms of ownership or destination, that being the Israeli Red Sea port of Eilat.
The Houthis have disrupted one of the world’s busiest shipping routes, with operators re-routing around Africa, adding up to two weeks to the journey and almost doubling the cost of transit. This has helped push European inflation up.