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The Horn Of Africa States: The Region Must Choose Peace Over Patronage – OpEd

The Horn of Africa States today stands at a critical crossroads where the shadows of chronic instability and a bright potential of economic integration are colliding. For decades, the region has over the years been defined as a conflicted space. The region now needs to shift gears and move away from serving as a playground for middle-power rivalries, specifically the interventionist policies of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and others toward a domestic agenda of peace and industrialization. 

The argument against war in the Horn is not merely moral  but an economic imperative. The region is home to over 170 million people, a demographic powerhouse with a median age under 20. When leadership chooses conflict, they are actually squandering this youthful dividend on the front lines of unnecessary wars and conflicts or losing them to perilous migration journeys toward Europe, the Americas, and the Gulf. 

The leadership should revamp the region to make it peaceful with the intention of making it Africa’s premier logistics hub, where trains and roads could start from to reach the furthest corners of the continent, and where its major deep ports could become not only ports but also industrial free zones for the continent. It is time they realized that, with the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden handling nearly 12% of global trade, the region is sitting on one of the world’s most valuable real estates. It is only stability and peace, which can allow for the integration of Ethiopia’s massive manufacturing potential with Eritrea’s,  Djibouti’s and Somalia’s world-class ports, creating a seamless trade corridor that benefits the local population and the African continent.

The primary obstacle to this vision is the behavior of certain leaders who trade national sovereignty for short-term political survival and who seem to be serving others instead of their countries and the region, with the UAE being a prime example of countries, which instigate most of the destabilizing dynamics in the region. While the UAE frames its involvement through developmental diplomacy, its actions often tell a different story. 

By providing sophisticated weaponry to factions, such as the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Sudan or military hardware to the Ethiopian government or dealing directly with regions in Somalia without respecting the Federal authorities of the country, Abu Dhabi has been accused of fueling proxy wars that prolong human suffering. These interventions are rarely about the long-term prosperity of Africans; they are about securing Emirati food security through vast land grabs, controlling strategic maritime chokepoints like the Bab El-Mandeb,  or ports like Bossaso, Berbera, and Kismayo.

When leaders prioritize these external patrons over their own citizens, they hollow out their state institutions. Foreign military aid, with no-strings-attached, and cash injections allow autocrats to bypass the need for a social contract with their people. Instead of building a tax base through economic development, they become accountable only to their foreign donors. This creates a cycle of fragility, where external support triggers internal resentment, leading to domestic uprisings, which then invite further foreign meddling. To break this, the leadership of the region must pivot toward homegrown peace processes. The African Union’s mantra of African solutions to African problems must move from a slogan to a policy framework in the region, where disputes over borders or water are settled through technical cooperation instead of sabre-rattling and power is shared through meritocracy instead of ethnicity or clan or personal loyalty.

True security in the Horn of Africa States will only come through economic interdependence. If the region’s economies were intertwined through shared electrical grids, standard-gauge railways, and a unified customs union, the cost of war would become too high for any one leader to bear and there would be no quest for sea access. Instead of exporting raw gold and livestock to the Gulf for pennies, the region should focus on value-added industrialization. This requires a leadership class that views its neighbors not as existential threats, but as essential partners in a regional market.

In conclusion, the Horn of Africa States must reject the role of a geopolitical janitor for external powers. Serving the strategic whims of external countries offers only a fleeting sense of power while leaving the region and the continent scarred by division. The path to dignity lies in silencing the guns, investing in the brilliance of the region’s youth, and building a collective economy that serves the people from the highlands to the coastal plains of the region. The era of the proxy of others must end for the era of the citizen to begin.

Ria.city






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