The News: Ethiopia assumed the chairmanship of the African Union Peace and Security Council for April 2026 — its first time chairing since rejoining the Council in April 2025. This chairmanship coincides with sweeping U.S. travel warnings advising citizens against travel to most Ethiopian regions due to intensifying internal conflicts. At the same time, the Ethiopian-Somali dispute over sea access continues to escalate following Addis Ababa’s memorandum of understanding with the self-declared breakaway region of Somaliland — a move Israel exploited to extend formal recognition to Somaliland, prompting Arab League Secretary-General Abu al-Gheit to condemn “the unprecedented unilateral recognition” during a joint session with the United Nations.
Why It Matters to America: The Red Sea carries roughly 12% of global trade. Any redrawing of borders or shift of influence in the Horn of Africa — whether by Ethiopia or Israel — directly affects the American strategic balance in the region. Israel’s growing presence in Somaliland alarms Egypt and reinforces Cairo’s defense agreement with Mogadishu. This triangle — Washington, Addis Ababa, Mogadishu — requires careful management from an administration whose attention is almost entirely consumed by Iran.
Consequences: Ethiopia’s PSC chairmanship gives it a diplomatic card to shape the African agenda around peace files and apply pressure on Somalia. The American travel warning signals a serious internal security deterioration that contradicts Ethiopia’s self-projected image as the continent’s peacemaker. Al-Shabaab is exploiting the Somali sovereignty crisis to recruit fighters and present itself as a defender of national integrity.
Three Scenarios:
- Mediation: Turkey succeeds in converting the Ethiopian MOU into a purely commercial port access agreement through official Somali terminals, defusing the crisis without a sovereignty concession.
- Stalemate: Diplomatic tension continues without military escalation, leaving the region in an uncertainty that sustains Al-Shabaab.
Escalation: Israeli recognition and its growing military footprint internationalize the crisis, turning Somaliland into a piece on the larger geopolitical board.
