Ethiopia Ethiopia's Border Politics
Africa Hall headquarters of the Economic Commission for
Africa, Addis Ababa. The Organization of African Unity
conducted its first meeting at this site.
Courtesy United Nations
As the Mengistu regime attempted to consolidate its rule,
it had to cope with serious border problems, particularly
with Somalia and Sudan. The point at issue with Somalia was
the Ogaden region, an area that Mogadishu claimed as part of
the historical Somali nation that had been seized by the
Ethiopians during the colonial partition of the Horn of
Africa. In fact, Ethiopia's only undefined boundary was the
border it shared with the former Italian Somaliland. On maps
drawn after 1950, this boundary is termed "Administrative
Line" (see
fig. 1). Upon gaining
independence
from European
colonial rule in 1960, the inhabitants of the Republic of
Somalia nurtured the hope that all Somali eventually would
be united in a modern nation-state. Somali claims to the
Ogaden, Djibouti, and parts of Kenya, however, had been
consistently rejected by the UN, the OAU, and most of the
world's sovereign states. Still, Somalia's leadership
remained unwilling to forsake these claims publicly.
In 1961, less than a year after Somalia gained
independence, its troops clashed with Ethiopian soldiers
along their common border. In 1964 renewed tensions erupted
into a minor regional war. In both cases, Somalia was
defeated. Ethnic Somali in Kenya's northeast also
unsuccessfully challenged that country's new government in
the early 1960s. Pan-Somalism, then, served as a basis for
the continuance of cooperative relations between Nairobi and
Addis Ababa, despite the change of regime in Ethiopia. The
two countries first signed a mutual defense agreement in
1964 that resulted in the creation of the Ethiopia-Kenya
Border Administration Commission.
The Ogaden War (1977-78) was the most serious border
conflict between Ethiopia and Somalia (see
The Somali, ch.
5). Beginning in the early summer of 1977, SNA units and
WSLF guerrillas, a movement of ethnic Somali opposed to
incorporation in Ethiopia, occupied vast tracts of the
Ogaden and forced the Ethiopian army into fortresses at
Jijiga, Harer, and Dire Dawa for almost eight months. The
intention was to separate the Ogaden from Ethiopia to set
the stage for ethnic Somali in the region to decide their
own future.
It was only with Soviet and Cuban assistance that the Derg
regained control over the region by early 1978. The Soviet
Union not only provided massive amounts of military
equipment but also advisers, who trained Ethiopian soldiers
and pilots. Moreover, Cuban troops spearheaded the
counteroffensive that began in March 1978. Cuban and
Ethiopian troops quickly defeated the SNA and WSLF once the
counteroffensive began. Many WSLF fighters returned to their
villages or took refuge inside Somalia. In addition, some
650,000 Somali and Oromo fled from southeastern Ethiopia
into Somalia by early 1978 to escape unsettled local
conditions and repression by Ethiopian armed forces. After
the defeat, Somali opposition reverted to sporadic guerrilla
ambushes and occasional acts of sabotage.
On April 4, 1988, after several preparatory meetings,
Ethiopia and Somalia signed a joint communiqué that
supposedly ended the Ogaden conflict. According to the
communiqué's terms, the two countries committed themselves
to withdrawing their military forces fifteen kilometers from
the border, exchanging prisoners of war, restoring
diplomatic relations, and refraining from supporting each
other's antigovernment guerrilla groups. Reportedly, a
separate secret accord contained a Somali renunciation of
all claims to the Ogaden region. From Mengistu's point of
view, the joint communiqué secured Ethiopia's southeastern
border, thereby enabling Addis Ababa to devote more
resources to the struggle against the EPLF and TPLF in
northern Ethiopia.
Nevertheless, by 1991 it had become evident that Ethiopia
had failed to honor the provisions of the joint communiqué.
The Mengistu regime allowed the anti-Siad Barre Somali
National Movement (SNM) to maintain offices in Addis Ababa
and Dire Dawa and to operate five training camps near Dire
Dawa. Additionally, the Ethiopian government still provided
matériel and logistical support to the SNM. Despite these
violations, Somalia refrained from reinitiating hostilities
with Ethiopia.
Relations between Ethiopia and Sudan were generally good
until the mid-1980s, when the Sudanese People's Liberation
Army (SPLA) emerged to challenge the hegemony of Khartoum.
Emperor Haile Selassie had been instrumental in mediating an
end to the Sudanese civil war in 1972. However, Ethiopia
regularly expressed disappointment that the Sudanese
government had not prevented Eritrean guerrillas from
operating out of its territory. Sudan attempted to negotiate
an end to the Eritrean conflict in 1975 but was
unsuccessful. When Ethiopia turned to the Soviet Union and
away from the United States, Sudan's government became
concerned. Sudanese president Jaafar an Nimeiri had accused
the Soviet Union of having inspired coup attempts against
his regime in 1971 and 1976. Sudan recalled its ambassador
to Ethiopia in January 1977, and for several years serious
border tensions existed between the two countries.
Ethiopia's turn toward the Soviet Union caused Sudan to
seek the support of new allies in preparing for the
possibility of external invasions sponsored by Khartoum's
regional enemies. Nimeiri decided to openly support certain
Eritrean liberation movements. In addition, he supported
Somalia during the Ogaden War. Nimeiri claimed that he
wanted to build a "high wall against communism" in the Horn
of Africa and agreed to participate with the United States,
Kenya, Egypt, Somalia, and Oman in the development of the
RDF. By 1980 the tensions between Sudan and Ethiopia had
abated, however, with the signing of a peace treaty calling
for the mutual respect of the territorial integrity and
sovereignty of the two countries.
The 1981 tripartite agreement among Ethiopia, Libya, and
South Yemen undermined relations between Addis Ababa and
Khartoum. For some time, the Libyan government had been
trying to overthrow Nimeiri. Now Ethiopia appeared to be
joining the Libyan effort. Border tensions between the two
countries also increased after Ethiopia started supporting
the SPLA.
After Nimeiri was overthrown in 1985, Sadiq al Mahdi's
regime made it clear that it wanted to improve relations
with Ethiopia and Libya. Supposedly, this was the first step
in the resolution of Sudan's civil war. The change in
regimes in Sudan also prompted a deterioration in United
States-Sudanese relations, manifested by Khartoum's
cancellation of the agreement calling for the participation
of Sudanese troops in the Operation Bright Star exercises.
Despite Sudan's estrangement from the United States and
Mahdi's growing closeness to Libya after 1985, there was no
substantive improvement in Ethiopian-Sudanese relations. The
problem continued to center on Sudan's support for Eritrean
rebels and Mengistu's continued support of the SPLA. By
1989, following the overthrow of Sadiq al Mahdi, Khartoum
and Addis Ababa had offered to negotiate their respective
internal conflicts, but nothing tangible came of this.
Data as of 1991
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