Last week’s Turkish-brokered agreement to end tensions between Ethiopia and Somalia has raised questions about Egypt’s future involvement in the Horn of Africa, given its recent military support to Somalia.
On 11 December 2024, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, and Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed announced that they had come to an arrangement after Ethiopia had earlier signed a deal with the want-away Somali province of Somaliland.
A huge but landlocked country, Ethiopia has long wanted to establish a naval presence on the Red Sea coast and announced plans to do so through Somaliland in January. This caused consternation in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, where leaders saw it as a breach of sovereignty.
In return for leasing the Red Sea naval base, Ethiopia planned to give diplomatic recognition to Somaliland and to offer it a stake in Ethiopian Airlines. This led to a political and diplomatic confrontation between Ethiopia and Somalia that threatened to escalate into a military fight.
There is a significant mismatch in terms of military capabilities, Ethiopia having by far the bigger armed forces, so in stepped Egypt, with an offer to help the Somalis.
Egypt is an archenemy of Ethiopia, the two having most recently fallen out over a huge hydroelectric dam that Ethiopia has built across the Blue Nile, imperilling Egypt’s main source of fresh water. Egyptian weapons and soldiers began entering Somalia in the summer.
Turkey steps in
To avoid escalation, Erdoğan offered to mediate earlier this year and has since hosted at least three rounds of talks, both in Ankara and in the Horn of Africa. Turkey has good relations with Ethiopia and Somalia, so was well-placed to step in.
If reports are to be believed, Turkish diplomats succeeded by fair means and foul, even preventing Ethiopian and Somali leaders from leaving one of the rooms in the Presidential Complex in Ankara before they agreed a deal.