Another motivation was to obtain the lifting of UN sanctions after having tried everything in previous years, in vain. Not that they concern the relationship with Ethiopia - the United Nations Security Council accused Eritrea of supporting Somali armed groups and not seeking to resolve its conflict with Djibouti - but a rapprochement was a sign of goodwill and above all a means of recruiting Addis Ababa to lift sanctions: this is exactly what happened.
Finally, like Abiy, Isaias also sees peace as a way to marginalize the TPLF, his historical enemy. Defeated by Abiy, withdrawn to Mekele, it is trapped. There is an objective alliance of Isaias and Abiy against what remains of the TPLF, and more broadly a common concern to avoid the rise of a Tigrayan independence feeling.
For all these reasons, because peace is in the interest of both parties, it should last - and even survive the heads of state. If Abiy was murdered (he has already escaped a grenade attack on 23 June 2018), or if Isaias died from illness or was overthrown by a coup d'état - scenarios that must be considered - the previous reasons would still be relevant. The worst for Ethiopia, already surrounded by Somalia and southern Sudan, would be the "somalization" of Eritrea, in other words the collapse of the state, the fragmentation of the territory and the emergence of a jihadist hotbed. It will therefore be prepared to make concessions if necessary, to avoid this dark scenario.
What are the links between China and Djibouti, and what is the Chinese strategy that Washington is trying to counter?
The United States has been one of three regional supporters of Ethio-Eritrean peace, along with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Saudi Arabia. Everyone had their reasons. In the American case, the first and foremost objective is to counter Chinese ambitions in the region. China has a strong presence in East Africa in general, but Djibouti is a special case, as it hosts the first Chinese military base overseas. This allows Beijing to increase its projection capacity in the Indian Ocean and Africa, Djibouti being at a strategic location at the entrance to the Strait of Bab el-Mandeb, at the crossroads of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. China is not the only one to have understood this, since many other states have a military presence in Djibouti (France, United States, Japan, Italy, Germany, Spain), which constitutes an important financial windfall for this small state, one of the poorest in the world.
The Chinese base is subject to much speculation about its actual size and function, which seems to be moving away from what was initially presented as a "logistics base". In particular, it has an impressive underground complex that would cover approximately 23,000 m2, connected to a network of tunnels and bunkers. We are talking about a theoretical capacity of 10,000 men, even if it has much less now. For Beijing, this base is only the first milestone in a network of ports for at least dual use (initially civilian but potentially military) all around the Indian Ocean, known as the "String of Pearls" and which worries not only the United States but also India, which considers itself the victim of an encirclement strategy.
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