Tag: Houthi

Somaliland Is Drawn Into a Perilous Middle East

Somaliland Is Drawn Into a Perilous Middle East

Israel’s recognition of Somaliland has given the nation long-sought visibility. It has also drawn it into the growing tensions reshaping the region.

Omar Ahmed and Ismail Bihaya are still a little dazed. In late March, the two hydrologists, both 32, were taking selfies on the esplanade of Jerusalem’s mosques, framed by the dazzling gold of the Dome of the Rock. The trip, the first of their lives, had long felt out of reach. Their country, the Republic of Somaliland, does not exist in the eyes of the world. “Our passport isn’t recognized anywhere. Except now, Israel,” Omar says with a grin, back in the lab where he and his colleague spend their days testing the water quality of Hargeisa, the capital of this breakaway region of Somalia.

Everything changed on December 26. That day, Israel became the first country to formally recognize Somaliland (formerly British Somaliland) as a sovereign state. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared in a video call congratulating Somaliland’s president, Abdirahman Abdullahi.

The backlash was immediate. Somalia, the African Union, the Arab League, and even the UN Security Council condemned the move, accusing Israel of violating the principle of territorial integrity.

In Hargeisa, those reactions barely registered. That night, crowds flooded the streets in celebration. For several days, Israeli journalists covering the event were greeted with cheers as they moved through the city, an almost surreal scene in a Muslim-majority country, and all the more striking in the immediate aftermath of the war in Gaza.

Downtown Hargeisa, capital of Somaliland
Downtown Hargeisa, the capital of Somaliland

 

To understand that joy, one has to go back to the late 1980s. A former British protectorate, Somaliland had actually gained independence in 1960 before voluntarily uniting with the former Italian protectorate of Somalia. The union soon began to unravel. Amid growing clan tensions, the Somalia regime in Mogadishu launched a brutal campaign against the northern region, culminating in the near-total destruction of Hargeisa in 1988. The civil war left between 50,000 and 200,000 dead. “Hundreds of thousands more were driven into exile,” recalls a businessman who returned years later. “It was apocalyptic.” In 1991, as Somalia descended into chaos, Somaliland declared independence.More than three decades later, that independence remains unrecognized. Except, now, by Israel.

Omar Ahmed, chief engineer, Somaliland, Ministry of Water
Omar Ahmed, chief engineer at Somaliland’s Ministry of Water, was part of a delegation of 25 experts sent to Israel in March to train in modern irrigation techniques

Israel’s Intentions

To inaugurate their new partnership, Israeli authorities invited 25 Somaliland hydrologists for training in modern irrigation and water management. Omar and Ismail were among them. They came back impressed. “The scale of their desalination plants is staggering,” Omar says. “They are global leaders in water management. With infrastructure like that, we could completely transform our country.” Cooperation has accelerated quickly. Beyond training programs, Israel has announced investments in Somaliland’s infrastructure. The two governments exchanged ambassadors in April. Still, few here believe Israel’s intentions are purely developmental.

Tel Aviv is widely seen as eyeing Somaliland’s strategic location: roughly 500 miles of coastline along the Gulf of Aden, through which around 12 percent of global trade passes — an ideal vantage point from which to project military power. According to Bloomberg, Israeli officials have already identified a potential coastal site for a future base, a claim Somaliland has publicly denied.

Whether Israel actually intends to establish a military presence remains officially unconfirmed. Asked directly, a senior official at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs dismissed the Bloomberg report as lacking “clarity,” without explicitly denying it.

 televised debate, MMTV, alliance, Somaliland, Israel
A televised debate on MMTV, Somaliland’s main television channel, about the alliance between Somaliland and Israel.

That ambiguity contrasts with what is said more privately. Several sources with close ties to the Somaliland authorities describe the project as an “open secret.” “Israelis want a base in Somaliland to monitor the Bab el-Mandeb Strait and the Houthis in Yemen. The government simply cannot confirm it yet, given the ongoing turmoil in the Middle East,” said a businessman with close ties to power.

In practice, no agreement has been announced and no infrastructure is visible on the ground. But the convergence of discreet diplomatic contacts, strategic logic, and local expectations has made the prospect of a base feel less like a distant possibility than a question of timing.

America’s Interests

Other countries are watching closely.

Aerial view, port of Berbera, Somaliland, DP World
Aerial view of the port of Berbera, in western Somaliland, developed by the Emirati company DP World. Photo credit: DP World

Ethiopia, landlocked and eager for access to the sea, nearly finalized a deal in 2024 to secure a 12-mile coastal strip of Somaliland along the Gulf of Aden before backing down under pressure from Mogadishu. The United Arab Emirates, which normalized relations with Israel under the Abraham Accords, has also taken a keen interest in the region. Starting in 2016, its port operator, DP World, has built a major terminal in the Gulf port of Berbera.

“We’ve invested $400 million,” says Maftouh Harir, a DP World executive, standing high above the docks on a towering quay crane. “The goal is to serve Ethiopia, which has no access to the sea.” Out on the horizon, a control tower rises above the sea spray. Nearby, Berbera’s airport, whose runway is among the longest in Africa, is no longer open to the public. Abu Dhabi is now converting it into a military base.

Ultimately, however, Somaliland’s hopes rest largely in Washington.

Within parts of Somaliland’s establishment, support for recognition has been building. As early as 2021, the Heritage Foundation published a policy paper urging the United States to recognize Somaliland as a way to counter China’s growing influence in nearby Djibouti, where Beijing has established its only overseas naval base just miles from a US installation.

Port of Berbera, Somaliland, Emirati company, DP World
Aerial view of the Berbera, developed by the Emirati company DP World. Photo credit: DP World

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), a close ally of Israel, has emerged as one of Hargeisa’s most vocal supporters. During a Senate hearing on April 23, he emphasized Somaliland’s “growing strategic relevance” and suggested that Donald Trump could formally recognize the territory before the end of his term.

At the same time, several members of the House of Representatives introduced legislation in March directing the Treasury Department to identify legal barriers preventing Somaliland from accessing the US financial system. The goal is to integrate Somaliland into the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, or SWIFT network, a crucial step for dollar transactions. “Our banks cannot raise capital on international markets,” explains a Somaliland economist. “That forces them to charge prohibitively high interest rates. Access to SWIFT would be even more decisive than diplomatic recognition.”

For now, Somaliland’s government is trying to turn these diplomatic signals into economic gains. At the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Hargeisa, a delegation of Australian businessmen has come to explore opportunities in the mining sector. “What are your impressions of the country?” the minister asks, smiling broadly. “Very positive,” replies one of the visitors. “It was important for us to see things firsthand. We’ll be sending a positive message to our shareholders.”

“They can rest easy,” the minister says. “Somaliland is a haven of peace and stability. It’s the safest place in the Horn of Africa.”

‘A Functioning Democracy, the Most Advanced in the Region’

From the ground, Hargeisa bears the marks of a surprisingly dynamic African city. Cafés are filled with a stylish youth. Students snap selfies to celebrate the opening of a waffle shop. A new shopping mall of glass and steel is preparing to open its doors. Power outages are rare. The streets are clean. Markets are well stocked. And overlooking it all, the country’s first five-star hotel, which opened last August, glows at dusk.

market, Hargeisa, capital, Somaliland
A market in Hargeisa.

Despite lacking international recognition, Somaliland’s gross domestic product (GDP) per capita is about 50 percent higher than that of Somalia, and its poverty rate is roughly half. Even more striking is its political system.

“We are a functioning democracy, the most advanced in the region,” says Guleid Jama, a lawyer known for his work defending fundamental rights. “Since 1991, we’ve held six presidential elections, each followed by a peaceful transfer of power.” He is quick to add a caveat. “Our constitution, adopted in 2001, is relatively progressive. But our penal code still reflects the Mussolini-era legacy of Italian colonial law. Police frequently interfere with journalists and opposition figures.”

Marwo Sucaad, an opposition leader, confirms the mixed picture. “Our governments are elected democratically. There’s no doubt about that,” she says. “The 2024 campaign was vibrant, turnout was high. But corruption exists, and women remain largely excluded from power. No democracy is perfect, though.”

Marwo Sucaad, leading opposition figure, KAAH party, Hargeisa
The politician Marwo Sucaad, a leading opposition figure, at the headquarters of her Kaah party in Hargeisa.

Yet Somaliland’s stability rests on a delicate political balance. Power is largely concentrated in the hands of the central clan, which dominates the country demographically and territorially, particularly around Hargeisa. Other major groups in the west and the in the east, are integrated into the political system, but not without tension.

So far, this equilibrium has held. Since 1991, Somaliland has avoided the kind of fragmentation seen elsewhere in the region by maintaining a relatively cohesive state structure and repeated peaceful transfers of power. But that cohesion is not immutable. In the eastern regions, territorial disputes persist. In Las Anod, clashes that erupted in 2023 between Somaliland forces and local militias aligned with Somalia in the south left hundreds dead and displaced tens of thousands, exposing the fragility of the territory’s hold over its eastern fringes.

Israel’s arrival may now complicate that fragile balance.

‘Now That We Are Allied With Israel, Could This War Reach Us?’

Gulf of Aden, coast, Berbera, Somaliland, port
Berbera, Somaliland’s main port city, sits on the coast of the Gulf of Aden.

Barely two months after recognition, Tel Aviv became embroiled in a confrontation with Iran whose consequences could extend into the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. On the set of Somaliland’s main television channel, MMTV, the tone of debate has shifted.

“Now that we are allied with Israel, could this war reach us?” a journalist asked a political analyst in early April. “We have nothing to fear,” the analyst replied confidently. “Since the attacks of October 7, 2023, Israel has gained the upper hand over its enemies. It has become the dominant power in the Middle East. This alliance will allow us to develop, just as Saudi Arabia benefited from US protection after World War II.”

Others are less assured. In Yemen, the Houthi movement declared on December 28 that Berbera had become a “legitimate target.” Somaliland has limited means of deterrence. Its military is largely equipped with tanks and rocket launchers captured from Mogadishu at the end of the 1980s civil war and has no air-defense capabilities.

patrol, Somaliland, coast guard, port of Berbera
On patrol with Somaliland’s coast guard at the entrance to the port of Berbera. With limited resources, they monitor nearly 500 miles of coastline facing Yemen.

“Somaliland is preparing for this kind of scenario,” insists a senior official at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. “Our generals are working day and night to ensure the country’s security.”

But for opposition figures, the greater risk lies elsewhere. “The eastern regions are still disputed,” worries Marwo Suad. “Somalia, backed by Turkey, China, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, could resume hostilities in response to Israel’s recognition. We are on the brink of another war.” Al-Shabaab, a powerful Somali insurgency group affiliated with al-Qaeda, has also vowed to fight any attempt by Israel to establish a presence in Somaliland.

“Only Washington can rein in Somalia’s backers,” says Marwo Suad. “That is the only protection that truly matters.” The government appears to share that view. In late February, it declared its readiness to grant the United States “exclusive access” to its mineral resources, as well as access to military bases. US military delegations visited Hargeisa and Berbera in June and November 2025. Still, there is little indication that Washington is eager to deploy troops, especially as the United States already maintains a base in Djibouti and cooperates with Mogadishu on counterterrorism.

On patrol, Somaliland, coast guard, Yemen
On patrol with Somaliland’s coast guard at the entrance to the port of Berbera. With limited resources, they monitor nearly 800 kilometers of coastline facing Yeme

For Somaliland’s leadership, however, recognition is only a means to a more immediate end: economic development. And here, the gap between expectations and reality remains stark.

Beneath Somaliland’s soil, geological surveys also suggest the presence of oil, gas, lithium, rare earth elements, and other minerals. Several foreign companies have already taken positions. The British firm Genel Energy has been exploring hydrocarbons since 2012. Taiwan’s Chang Development Company and Saudi Arabia’s Kilomass are looking into lithium. EAU Mining, the Australian company whose delegation visited Hargeisa, may soon follow. Yet beyond these early indicators, few deposits have been formally confirmed, and most projects are still at a preliminary stage.

Australian mining investors, foreign minister, Somaliland
A group of Australian mining investors meets with the foreign minister in Hargeisa

On the ground, investors are watching more than they are committing. The businessmen arriving in Hargeisa are not responding to a proven resource boom so much as to a political signal: the possibility that recognition could unlock access to international markets, financing, and legal protections that have long been out of reach.

Ahmed Osman Guelleh, a local industrialist, urges caution. “Mining is not how we will create the thousands of industrial jobs our youth need,” he says, standing in a warehouse stacked with crates of Coca-Cola bottled in his factory north of Hargeisa. “We need to focus on manufacturing, technology, and agriculture. Once we build that economic base, international recognition will follow naturally.”

For now, Somaliland faces structural constraints that recognition alone cannot resolve. Electricity is expensive, generated almost entirely from fuel oil. The workforce remains largely unskilled. Water is scarce in this arid climate. In the laboratory in Hargeisa, where he spends his days testing the city’s water, Omar Ahmed has been thinking about that gap ever since he returned from Israel.

“The scale of what we saw there… it’s billions of dollars,” he says. “Our entire Ministry of Water runs on about $1.8 million a year. Agriculture gets barely $2.8 million. Even with help from NGOs, we’re talking about a few million here and there. What we actually need is on a completely different scale.”

He pauses. “That’s the real gap. We come back with the knowledge, but we don’t have the money to do anything with it.” In a country that does not officially exist, recognition may open doors. But it will not, on its own, build a future.

Ilhan Omar: The Shadow Ally of China, Sabotaging U.S. Interests in the Horn of Africa!

Ilhan Omar: The Shadow Ally of China, Sabotaging U.S. Interests in the Horn of Africa!

Ilhan Omar’s efforts to undermine a U.S.-Somaliland partnership represent a stark betrayal of American geopolitical interests. While openly championing Somalia’s agenda, she worked behind the scenes to block the U.S. from forging a strategic alliance with the stable and sovereign Republic of Somaliland. Her actions effectively handed China a golden opportunity to solidify it’s dominance in the Horn of Africa. Under Biden’s watch, this has only emboldened Beijing’s ambitions in the region. In a video addressing a Somalian audience, Omar openly boasted about her close ties to Somalia’s president and it’s regime, raising serious questions about her loyalty and whose interests she truly serves.


The timing couldn’t be better. After Ilhan Omar’s meddling undermined U.S. interests in the Horn of Africa, President Trump stepped in with a bold, strategic move that could shift the balance of power in the region. During his campaign, plans emerged to re-recognize the Republic of Somaliland – a state that has held its sovereignty since June 26, 1960, within his first 100 days in office. This wasn’t a symbolic gesture; it was a calculated response to China’s growing influence in Africa and a way to secure America’s position in a crucial geopolitical hotspot.

Yes, you read that right. This wasn’t just a symbolic gesture; it was a calculated move to secure a vital U.S. foothold in Africa as its position in Djibouti began to deteriorate.

Transactional Diplomacy? You Bet.

We all know Trump’s approach to foreign policy is far from traditional. His “transactional” style – make a deal, secure something in return, raises eyebrows but delivers results. So, what’s in this deal for the U.S. and Republic of Somaliland?

Here’s the play: Somaliland, a peaceful, stable country with a thriving democracy and a supreme strategic location, is offering the U.S. a military base in exchange for formal re-recognition. A U.S. base could not only strengthen the fight against China’s dominance in Africa, but it also puts the U.S. in prime position to counter Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen. It’s about securing key strategic maritime routes and maintaining U.S. power in one of the world’s most volatile regions and let’s face it – Trump knows exactly how to leverage situations to make a deal that works.

Somaliland: A Key Player in the Red Sea

Republic of Somaliland controls a crucial piece of the Red Sea, near the Bab El-Mandeb Strait – one of the world’s most important maritime choke points. Whoever holds sway here controls not just trade but power over oil shipping routes and naval movements in and out of the Mediterranean, Red Sea, and beyond.

But it’s not just about trade. It’s about military presence, global influence, and sending a message. By establishing a U.S. base there, the U.S. would disrupt China’s growing reach in the region, especially with China’s military base just a stone’s throw away in Djibouti. China has already set up its first and only military base outside its borders in Djibouti, directly facing Somaliland. This makes Somaliland strategic location even more critical for any country looking to maintain a foothold in the region. This is a much-needed counterbalance in an increasingly contested region. The significance of this choke point, China’s own foreign policy move to intimidate and coerce Republic of Somaliland into abandoning its ties with Taiwan has led to serious geopolitical flashpoints.

China’s Influence: A Game of Pressure

China is keen on limiting U.S. involvement and influencing Republic of Somaliland relationships. Their strategy? Pressure Somaliland to cut ties with Taiwan, halt its engagements with the U.S., and sow division in the region. Beijing knows that the more destabilized Somaliland becomes, the easier it is to curtail Western influence – and in particular, stop the U.S. military from gaining a foothold in a region of unmatched significance.

In 2023, the eastern regions of the Republic of Somaliland were plunged into a proxy war, one that China is still sponsoring it. But who helped trigger this geopolitical mess? Ilhan Omar. An outspoken advocate for a “Somalian-first” agenda, Omar didn’t just sit on the sidelines – she actively sabotaged the burgeoning U.S.-Somaliland partnership. How? She leaked confidential details about the U.S.-Somaliland partnership Act, which was making its way through Congress, directly to the Somalian government as a deliberate betrayal.

 

Omar, a key member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, had deep personal ties to Somalian interests. She saw herself as a self-appointed defender of Somalian nationalism in the U.S. Congress. Yet, her actions, working behind the scenes with the Somalian government, allowed China to exploit the situation by backing a militia to start its proxy war against Somaliland eastern regions. Why? Because Somalia, seeing the growing U.S.-Somaliland ties, feared it would threaten its own grip on U.S. foreign aid and regional influence. Somalia has long blackmailed the U.S., portraying any strategic partnership with Somaliland as a destabilizing force that could topple their fragile, failed state – forgetting that Somalia’s failure has been a decades-long saga that couldn’t possibly get any worse. (ISIS, Al-shabaab, Piracy, ties with the Houthis & Iran) This blackmail strategy, propped up by the failed and non existent “One Somalia” policy championed by Democrats and cemented by Hillary Clinton’s legacy which recognized the Somalian non existent government back in 2012 – despite its lack of legitimacy and no meaningful authority on the ground – the U.S. became a source of endless handouts funneled through corrupt UN offices, ATMIS forces, and the Somalian artificial government, all siphoning billions of U.S. taxpayer dollars with no real return or tangible benefits. By undermining that partnership, Omar knowingly allowed China to step in and tighten its hold in the Horn of Africa.

 

The Ilhan Omar Factor: A Complex Political Puzzle

Ilhan Omar’s actions in 2022 raise serious questions about her loyalty to U.S. interests. Her personal and intimate visit to Somalia as a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee and interference with the U.S.-Somaliland partnership helped China tighten its grip on the Horn of Africa. By blocking a strategic U.S. alliance, she effectively aligned with Somalia’s and China’s agendas, sabotaging American geopolitical goals.

 

The real question now: Should the Trump administration investigate whether a sitting congresswoman is putting America’s national security at risk to serve foreign powers? These aren’t just political missteps. They could be a betrayal of U.S. interests.

 

Stopping the Houthi Threat – Before It’s Too Late

The situation in Yemen continues to deteriorate, as Iranian-backed Houthis fire missiles at international vessels. With Somalia still struggling and the U.S. trying to fight from across the region, Somaliland offers a closer, more strategic base to push back against the Houthis’ expansion. This is security at its finest – stopping regional instability before it spreads and threatens vital trade routes.

Is Somaliland the U.S.’s Most Strategic Geopolitical Ally in the Horn of Africa? Absolutely.

For critics of Trump’s transactional diplomacy, here’s a quick reality check: in international relations, pragmatism is often a game-changer. Somaliland isn’t just another “breakaway region” trying to get recognized; It’s an emerging power in a strategic location, its statehood has never been in question, dating back to June 26, 1960 and has never ceased to exist. This state is aligned with international law, maintaining its credentials of independence and demarcated boundaries in accordance with the African Union’s 1964 borders. The U.S. and 30+ countries first recognized it. Trump isn’t changing history; he’s re-recognizing Somaliland, a key player in the Horn of Africa with undeniable geopolitical importance.

Somaliland’s own leadership understands the importance of this offer. It’s a classic win-win: Somaliland gets re-recognition, while the U.S. gets a military base on Africa’s most critical stretch of coastline.

Trump’s Legacy: A Foreign Policy Revolution?

What Trump has on the table could change the entire dynamic of U.S. power in the region. If his administration re-recognizes Somaliland, it shifts U.S. alliances in Africa and puts America’s interests first. It’s not about feeling good about some hypothetical nation’s failures – it’s about winning the strategic game. Trump’s re-recognition of Somaliland would act as a warning shot to adversaries while also affirming that global alliances should be based on mutual, actionable interests.

The Bottom Line:

The U.S. needs Somaliland, and Somaliland needs the U.S. But this isn’t just a political gesture – it’s a bold, savvy, and strategic move that signals a new era for American foreign policy. The world needs to recognize the shifting tectonic plates of geopolitics – and if President Trump capitalizes on this opportunity, it could redefine U.S. influence in Africa and beyond.

The real question is: will the U.S. act before it’s too late, or let this opportunity slip through its fingers? The time for re-recognition is now

Author

A geopolitical writer, analyst and a researcher advocating for Somaliland recognition