Hamza Hendawi
Tuesday September 3, 2024
Egypt and Somalia have decided to hold joint military exercises in the Horn of Africa nation, in what appears to be a show of force that could increase tension between the two Arab League members and Ethiopia, security officials told The National on Monday.
The war games, which are expected to be held this month, will involve ground, air, and naval forces, according to the regional security sources close to Cairo. They declined however to disclose the start date, duration or the number of troops involved.
"The drills will send a clear and loud message about our firm commitment to co-operate and protect Somalia," said one of the officials. "They'll mean much more than just war drills."
News of the joint war games broke only a day after Egypt said it had written to the UN Security Council to protest against what it saw as Ethiopia's unilateral policies over the Grand Renaissance Ethiopia Dam (Gerd).
Cairo rejects Ethiopia's policies of moving ahead with completing the construction of the dam and filling its reservoir without consulting downstream Egypt, read the letter written by Foreign Minister Badr Abdel Atty. Those policies threaten regional stability, it added.
Egypt and Ethiopia have been at loggerheads for more than a decade over the construction of the massive Nile dam, which Cairo says will reduce its vital share of Nile waters.
“Egypt has negotiated in good faith [with Ethiopia] for 13 years. The negotiations have been halted after it became clear to everyone that Addis Ababa wanted them to continue indefinitely as a cover while it created a de facto situation on the ground,” the letter said.
The letter does not add anything new to the long-standing Egyptian position on Ethiopia's handling of the dispute over the Gerd. However, it took on added significance because it came amid rising tension between the two nations.
News of the military drills came less than a week after Egypt began sending troops, arms and military hardware to Somalia under the provisions of a military co-operation agreement signed last month.
Ethiopia was deeply angered by the move that it said would destabilise the Horn of Africa region and take it into “unchartered waters”.
Egypt and Somalia have forged closer relations since landlocked Ethiopia signed a preliminary deal with the breakaway region of Somaliland this year to lease coastal land in exchange for possible recognition of its independence from Somalia.
Somalia called the Ethiopia-Somaliland deal an assault on its sovereignty and said it would block it by all means necessary. It has also threatened to send home an estimated 10,000 Ethiopian troops who are in Somalia as part of a peacekeeping mission to fight Al Shabab militants, if the deal is not cancelled.
Egypt has said it plans to apply to the African Union to be part of a new peacekeeping force in Somalia. However, it is not clear whether the Egyptian troops already on the ground in Somalia will serve as the nucleus of its peacekeeping contingent. Media reports in Egypt have spoken of plans to deploy as many as 10,000 troops in Somalia.
There has been no official announcement in Cairo on the deployment and the sending of arms to Somalia. But the security officials explained that besides bolstering Somali defences, the troops would train Somali forces and help protect state installations and key political figures.
The deployment of Egyptian troops in Somalia would place them near Ethiopia's peacekeepers in the country and across the border in Ethiopia itself, raising the spectre of clashes between the two.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El Sisi has repeatedly said the impact of the dam on his country amounts to an existential threat that cannot be ignored or taken lightly. Talks between the two countries have failed to reach a diplomatic solution.
A possible outbreak of hostilities between Egypt and Ethiopia would further destabilise the Horn of Africa, as well as the larger East Africa region, already shaken by a 16-month civil war in Sudan that has created a severed displacement crisis, with two of the 10 million displaced having fled to neighbouring nations.
Attacks on Red Sea shipping by the Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen, in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza, have contributed to the instability in the region, with world powers vying for a foothold in the strategic stretch of water.
The attacks on shipping have also significantly reduced Egypt's foreign currency revenue from the Suez Canal, a strategic waterway that links the Red Sea to the Mediterranean and earns Egypt billions of dollars annually in transit fees.
Egypt, a mainly desert country with a population of 106 million, depends on the Nile for almost all its freshwater needs. Considered one of the world's driest nations, it claims any reduction in its share of the Nile waters would upset its delicate food balance and wipe out hundreds of thousands of agricultural jobs.
Ethiopia says the dam is essential to the country's development and has repeatedly assured downstream Egypt and Sudan that no harm would come to them from the Gerd, which is being built on the Blue Nile.
The majority of the river's waters that reach Egypt come from the Blue Nile, which joins the White Nile in Khartoum, the Sudanese capital, before flowing north into the deserts of Sudan and Egypt.
“The government of Egypt … stands ready to exercise its right to defend and protect the rights and interests of the Egyptian people, in accordance with the UN Charter,” Egypt told the Security Council in Sunday's letter.