America’s Dream For Ethiopia Is Actually A Nightmare

America’s Dream For Ethiopia Is Actually A Nightmare
By Desta Heliso December 7, 2021

 

Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed addresses the World Economic Forum in 2019. Creative Commons photo.

(ANALYSIS) During my recent visit to Washington, my suspicion that the Biden administration wants to oust Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed from power was confirmed. This is extraordinary and would exacerbate many of the region’s challenges, including religious extremism.

Until recently, Ethiopia was the second-largest recipient of American aid in Africa, regarded as a reliable partner in the war on Islamic terror and a linchpin of peace and stability in a volatile region. All that has now changed.

Ethiopia is facing punitive economic sanctions from the U.S. Even more worryingly, America is engineering a regime change in Ethiopia through the media, aid agencies, human rights organizations, diplomatic channels and, more to the point, through supporting the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which had Marxist roots and ruled Ethiopia with an iron fist for 27 years between 1991 and 2018.

The U.S. government would deny this, of course, but anyone who fully understands the context and background of the Ethiopia-U.S. relations since the Biden administration came to power in January would treat such denial as simply untrue and duplicitous.

READ: Why Ethiopia’s Orthodox Synod Called Media, U.S. Sanctions On Tigray Conflict ‘Indirect Colonialism’

The U.S. response to Ethiopia’s conflict

Ahmed’s government is imperfect, like many other governments in the world. But of the four regimes I have lived through in Ethiopia, I can confidently say that it is the most democratic, culturally sensitive and economically liberal.

While Ahmed has made mistakes and taken some missteps during his three years of leadership, those mistakes and missteps are not comparable to the persecution, repression and suffering many Ethiopians endured under the past regimes. Nor are they comparable to all the good things he has achieved in the last three years.

And yet, Biden’s administration and its allies are seeking to have Ahmed’s government overthrown while knowing the dire consequences of such an unseating for Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa.

Part of the reason for wanting to oust Ahmed is that some key figures within the Biden administration have very close links with the TPLF, whose legacy of political repression, economic corruption and divide-and-rule policies continues to trouble the country. The TPLF’s relationship with Ahmed’s government broke down following his peace agreement with Eritrea, reforms for the military and the disbanding of a political coalition led and dominated by the TPLF.

Then, forces loyal to the TPLF attacked the unsuspecting Northern Command of the Ethiopian Federal Defense Force stationed in the Tigray region in November 2020. While the Trump administration acknowledged that TPLF started the fighting in order to “depose the prime minister from power and to reassert themselves to the prominent position that they had atop the Ethiopian political spectrum for the last 27 years,” there was no acknowledgement of that motive by officials of the Biden administration.

In fact, even before assuming the position of assistant secretary of state for African affairs, Susan Rice tweeted that the Ethiopian government’s military action amounted to “war crimes.” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken accused the Ethiopian government of “ethnic cleansing.”

On the other hand, there was no recognition of the Ethiopian government’s effort to rehabilitate Tigray’s infrastructure and provide food aid for a large segment of the Tigrayan population. The U.S. State Department took media reports — many based on misinformation or disinformation — and the manufactured #TigrayGenocide narrative at face value, repeatedly accusing the Ethiopian government of denying humanitarian access to Tigray and using hunger and rape as weapons of war.

READ: How Misinformation Is Fueling Diplomatic Tensions In Ethiopia

However, a joint investigation by the U.N. and Ethiopian human rights commissions found no evidence of “deliberate or wilful denial of humanitarian assistance to the civilian population in Tigray or the use of starvation as a weapon of war.” The U.N. team found that all parties involved in fighting in Tigray committed sexual violence, but it found no evidence of use of rape as a weapon of war.

Even after the Ethiopian federal forces withdrew from Tigray in June and the TPLF forces continued to advance into the Amhara and Afar regions, the Afar humanitarian corridor to Tigray remained open, and the Ethiopian government authorized the U.N. to operate humanitarian flights to Mekelle.

Also, when the Ethiopian government declared unilateral ceasefire and withdrew federal forces from Tigray, prominent U.S. officials referred to it as a “siege.” In so doing, they emboldened the TPLF to refuse to reciprocate the unilateral ceasefire. When TPLF forces went to the Amhara and Afar regions, committing mass killings, rape, looting and destruction of properties and blocking humanitarian aid, the Biden administration’s condemnation was muted.

The U.S. officials instead pressured the Ethiopian government to allow humanitarian aid to be delivered through Sudan — knowing that Sudan is a hostile nation to Ethiopia, as it harbors and trains TPLF and allied forces, and that Port Sudan is over 1,300 kilometers (808 miles) away from Mekelle, whereas Djibouti is 750 kilometers (466 miles) away.

Furthermore, the U.S. declared probably the first free and fair — albeit imperfect — election in the history of Ethiopia as “flawed.” Ironically, Ethiopia is one of the countries not invited to Biden’s Democracy Summit, which is to take place this month. Even after human rights investigation established that there was no evidence the government of Ethiopia committed any act of genocide nor used rape and hunger as weapons of war in Tigray, the U.S. continues to isolate Ethiopia and maintain its punitive economic sanctions. Conversely, the U.S. authorities give little attention to TPLF’s aggression, atrocities, blockades of aid routes, looting of aid depots or theft of more than 800 aid trucks for its own war efforts.

READ: Were 750 Christians Really Massacred? The Truth About Ethiopia’s Recent Crisis

In addition to all this, the U.S. has been using psychological warfare and fear mongering through its embassy in Addis Ababa and media outlets. For example, when the TPLF took the towns of Dessie and Kombolcha, the U.S. and its allies advised their citizens to leave Ethiopia, claiming that Addis Ababa was about to fall to the rebels.

When I arrived in Addis Ababa on Nov. 5, all international media outlets had declared that the rebels were advancing to Addis. A CNN headline even read: ‘Tigrayan Troops Just Outside Addis Ababa.” It was fake news at its worst because Kombolcha and Dessie are more than 300 kilometers (186 miles) away from Addis. The U.S. has now gone further by sending its troops to the Horn of Africa “to protect U.S. citizens.” This, like iterations of the humanitarian concern by U.S. officials, is part of concealed ploys for regime change.

Why the Biden administration wants to oust Abiy Ahmed

There are several reasons why the current U.S. government wants Ahmed to be removed or forced to step down from power.

First, Ahmed’s close relationship to Eritrea’s President Isayas Afeworki is unacceptable to the U.S. To be sure, Afeworki is a dictator. But he is not any worse than the leaders of China or Saudi Arabia. Nor is he worse than the president of Egypt, whom former President Trump referred to as his “favorite dictator.” Rather than Afeworki’s authoritarian leadership, it is his sense of independence and firm stance against Western neocolonialism — promoted through the guise of aid and loans — that led many of the developed nations to portray him as the chief devil of the Horn.

Ahmed refused to demonize Eritrea’s president, and in so doing, tacitly rejected America’s double standards and its policy towards Eritrea. He compounded America’s annoyance by establishing a trilateral alliance with Eritrea and Somalia, which would enable the three countries to promote economic and military integration.

Second, Ahmed advocates Pan-Africanism, which would enable African nations to create a united voice in terms of social and economic policies. The result of this would be African nations having greater say over their natural resources and an end to multinational corporations’ unfair exploitation of them. Ahmed also introduced the idea of “African solutions to African problems.” All this has made Western governments extremely nervous and led them to intensely dislike Ahmed.   

Third, Ahmed insists that any global power should engage with Ethiopia as an equal partner and respect its sovereignty and national honor. While he recognizes the importance of America’s power and influence, he does not want his government to be a puppet to the U.S. or any power. He has openly declared that he would give his life for this principle. Biden’s interventionist government finds such an unwavering stance unacceptable and even offensive.

Fourth, Ahmed is working toward significantly reducing or even terminating the commercial import of wheat and Western food aid to Ethiopia. He seeks to achieve these by revolutionizing the agricultural sector and achieving food security. He also has a huge ambition to better manage the country’s raw materials and natural resources and make Ethiopia a manufacturing hub in Africa. This does not bode well for the American farming industry, multinational corporations and media and aid industries, which have all benefited from the misery of Ethiopia.

As Howard Nicholas, in his lecture on the role of economic policies and international institutions in the “underdevelopment” of Africa, and John Perkins, in his “The New Confessions of an Economic Hit Man,” have argued, the West must keep nations in sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and Latin America poor, underdeveloped, unstable and eternally reliant on Western aid and loans in order to exploit their resources and ensure the wealth and high living standards of those in North America and Europe are maintained.

Ahmed seeks to fight against such brazen and evil global economic injustice. American corporations and state organizations begrudge this approach because, again, it sets a dangerous precedent and negatively affects the current global economic order. 

Fifth, since November 2020, when the current war in Ethiopia started, the Biden government has insisted that Ahmed’s government should reach a negotiated settlement with the TPLF. Ahmed has refused to accept this proposal, because he sees the TPLF as a treasonous and destructive criminal enterprise. The Ethiopian Parliament has already declared the TPLF to be a terrorist organization.

When the U.S. decided to impose punitive economic sanctions on Ethiopia, Ahmed accused the U.S. of placing undue pressure on Ethiopia through an “orchestrated distortion of events and facts on the ground” relating to the conflict between the TPLF and federal forces, of failing to “openly and sternly reprimand the terrorist group in the same manner it has been chastising (his) government” and of continuously misrepresenting his government’s efforts to “stabilize the region and address humanitarian needs amidst a hostile environment created by the TPLF.” This has angered American officials.  

Sixth, the Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam is believed to move Ethiopia a step toward economic self-reliance. This, one would think, would be applauded by the whole world, but within the current global economic order, one of the poorest nations on earth being able to build the largest hydroelectric dam in Africa without securing loans from Western corporations could set a dangerous precedent in Africa.

The Trump administration understood this. A reliable source told me that when Trump assigned his Treasury Department and the World Bank to mediate between Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan, it was because Trump and his team were led to believe that the dam would negatively affect Egypt’s economy. Therefore, in their view, Ethiopia should compensate Egypt with billions of dollars through loans provided by the U.S. and the World Bank.

This would obviously disappoint Ethiopia’s economic ambitions and ensure the continuation of Egypt’s regional dominance. Ahmed withdrew from the U.S.-led mediation process, accusing America of bias, and then insisted that the African Union should preside over any future negotiations. He also successfully argued that powers such as the U.S. and European Union should be observers in the negotiation process. This was humiliating to the global superpower and could set another dangerous precedent in terms of Africa’s relations with the West.    

Finally, the U.S. is worried about China’s influence on Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa. China has invested heavily in the infrastructure, technology and industry sectors in Ethiopia. China also appears to be interested in the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, which forms a vital strategic link in the maritime trade route stretching from Yemen on the Arabian Peninsula to Djibouti and Eritrea in the Horn of Africa.

The U.S. sees controlling the strait as a means through which its dominance can be ensured in the Horn. However, this is becoming increasingly difficult due to competing powers, including China, the Persian Gulf countries, Russia and Turkey. Unless the Ethiopian government is friendly and obedient to the U.S. government, America’s dominance of the Horn will become a distant dream. So the current war in Ethiopia is a proxy war between the U.S. and its competing or rival powers with huge implications.

A man walks across the landscape of Ethiopia. Creative Commons photo by Rod Waddington.

Bringing down Ahmed’s government would exacerbate the already difficult situation, potentially fracture Ethiopia into smaller nations and further destabilize the Horn of Africa, fueling Muslim extremism. As is well known, Ethiopia’s religious and political history is very rich but extremely complex. Islam and Christianity have coexisted in Ethiopia for over 1,400 years. This coexistence has largely been peaceful, but the two religions have also faced some very serious relational challenges over the centuries.

In addition, modern Ethiopia is a melting pot of more than 80 groups, each with its own language and, in many cases, unique cultural expressions. This has left the country with internal ethnic and political challenges. Currently, for example, the country is torn between at least two irreconcilable political formulas and many in between.

On the one hand, the TPLF and some Oromo and other ethno-nationalist forces seek to maintain ethnic federalism, the vision of which is founded on ethnic-based and polarizing political formulas. On the other hand, Ahmed pursues a political vision that looks like democratic federalism and is founded on the principles of collective narrative and national identity while maintaining respect for ethnic identity and distinct cultural and linguistic expressions. These irreconcilable visions are at the heart of the current armed conflict.

READ: Ethiopia’s Increasing Vulnerability To Islamic Extremism And What That Means For The Horn Of Africa

Furthermore, Ethiopia’s geopolitical context is extremely complex. Egypt and Sudan have remained the most difficult neighbors for Ethiopia. They want a politically and economically weak Ethiopia that cannot harness its water and other resources, which would particularly ensure Egypt’s centuries-old dominance in the Nile region. Religiously, Egypt and Sudan contribute to the growth and revival of an extremist form of Islam that greatly endangers the political and religious future of the region.

This is compounded by Saudi Arabia’s exportation of “Wahhabism” — which adopts a purist interpretation of the Quran with a political vision — through the provision of support to mosques, Quranic schools, imams, businesses and humanitarian projects.

In addition to all the above factors, the U.S.’s hostile position toward an elected government of Ethiopia and its overt and covert actions to enable the TPLF and its ethno-nationalist allies to overthrow this government will weaken Ethiopia as a nation and make the region a haven of religious extremism. A weakened or unstable Ethiopia cannot stop the ascendancy of political Islam, which is now attempting to penetrate the central parts of the country and gain a strong foothold in Ethiopia.

Proposal for renewed Ethiopia-US relations

How should the U.S. relate to Ethiopia? America, though the most powerful nation in the world, does not possess a universal panacea for all global problems. But it cannot be denied that what America does and how it relates to other nations matters for world peace, stability and development. So a good relationship between America and Ethiopia is beneficial for Ethiopia and Africa. But there is not a single principle agreed upon as to how powerful nations such as America should relate to poorer nations such as Ethiopia.

Some argue that powerful nations should intervene in the affairs of poorer nations in order to develop them, provide humanitarian support for them and protect their citizens from despotic leaders. Others argue that poorer nations are equally as sovereign as richer nations, so poorer nations should be left to their own devices to solve their own problems.

Admittedly, successive failures of the military missions of Western powers in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Syria have shattered the interventionist argument. Also, very few believe that Western interventionism is driven by a sense of moral responsibility, humanitarian concern or the desire to spread the gospel of democracy and freedom. In fact, many believe that Western intervention is driven by narrow self-interest that centers on global political and economic domination.

However, I still hold onto my faith in human goodness and that there are people in the West and within Western governments who firmly believe that all people of the world deserve to enjoy the kind of life and freedoms that Western democracies enjoy. Therefore, I suggest four actions:

First, the Ethiopian government should continue to insist on the principle of healthy partnership with the U.S., which is characterized by a reciprocal sharing of knowledge, expertise, experience and resources for mutual benefit. Ethiopia must resist the temptation to adopt an isolationist policy due to the current concerted attack on its sovereignty and history.  

Second, the Biden administration must abandon its assumption that it should employ American devices to find solutions for Ethiopia’s problems — including regime change. Instead, it must adopt a principle of healthy partnership in which the focus is on enabling Ethiopians to find Ethiopian solutions to Ethiopian problems through Ethiopian resources in a manner that is culturally sensitive and contextually relevant.

Third, the current U.S. government must realize that Ethiopia’s problems — and indeed, the problems of the Horn of Africa — cannot be solved through political, humanitarian and economic means alone. All attempts must include religious means and strategies.

Finally, I hope Americans are aware that the Biden administration is carrying out a neocolonial assault on the only uncolonized nation in Africa, led by a person with an acute sense of human dignity, freedom and justice not only for the people of his country but the people of Africa as a whole. The last 12 months have shown us how visible and invisible forces in the West can destroy a nation and its leader. But the recent #NoMore movement has equally demonstrated that Ethiopians will not allow political evil to triumph, their motherland to be sacrificed on the altar of foreign interests or their destiny to be determined by evil schemers, ill-advised diplomats and foreign “Ethiopia analysts.”    

Desta Heliso studied at King’s College London and London School of Theology and served as lecturer and director of the Ethiopian Graduate School of Theology in Addis Ababa. He currently resides in London but continues to coordinate the Center for Ancient Christianity and Ethiopian Studies at EGST. He is also a fellow of the Center for Early African Christianity in New Haven and a visiting lecturer at the London School of Theology.

Galloping a Dying Horse: the US and TPLF Gliding through a Blind Alley!

Galloping a Dying Horse: the US and TPLF Gliding through a Blind Alley!

Aregawi Berhe (PhD)

The unholy alliance between the US Administration and TPLF was made public in London in 1991 after long clandestine dealings of the two parties to subject Ethiopia to secret bidding. Thereafter, the former together with its junior partner, the UK Blaire party, devised an exit strategy for the dictator Mengistu H.M. and a gateway for the ill-humored dictator, the late Legesse (Meles) Zenawi.

For the Ethiopian people, it was only a change of a brand of dictators – a transition from one unruly dictator to vicious one. Since then, Ethiopia had been a play-ground for the Western hypocrites, save prudent diplomats such as Senator Jim Inhofe and a laboratory of ethnic politics spearheaded by TPLF leaders. For almost three decades, the two High Contracting Parties (the US Administrations and TPLF) never cared about the incessant repression and unbridled abuse of public power that subjected Ethiopians to miserable circumstances. Instead, their treacherous relations persisted in a manner that was devoid of standard diplomacy commensurate with incredible norms of international relations and codes of conduct.

Diplomacy as a field of inter-state relations is a normative exercise of interaction between two nations of which the smooth conduct of relations was set by the Vienna Congress in 1815, and as Satow adds “it is the application of intelligence and tact …” in this regard. US-TPLF close rapport, however, has been marked as clearly inimical far from customary norms in the conduct of smooth and standard inter-state relations. It was mainly underpinned by the quest for promoting self-serving corporate and personal interests that complicated the longstanding diplomatic relations between the two countries. As a consequence of their unwarranted behaviors and attendant practices, the Ethiopian people were forced to bear the brunt of the heat due to widespread conflicts, rampant corruption, recurring famine episodes, unbridled outmigration, and abject poverty and degradation. As if this was not enough, this unholy alliance culminated in triggering the recent conflict that is currently devouring the lives of Ethiopian youth mainly from Tigray.

Why the war in the first place?

This question must be answered in no ambiguous terms by calling “a spade a spade” despite the dispositions of various interest groups that strive to take the country into horrible mess. To begin with, there was no need to go to war had it not been for the evil intentions TPLF leaders for Ethiopia had more than its fair share of incidences of war during its long history of existence. For 27 years, the TPLF kleptocratic clique took the helm of power in Ethiopia only to enrich its inner circle by establishing a patronage system for embarking on unbridled corruption that drove millions to joblessness and destitution. Despite the rhetoric of “miraculous growth”, the realities on the ground in Ethiopia depict that very little, if any, had trickled down to the ordinary people. All that happening under the watchful eyes of the American and British friends of the TPLF leaders dubbed as diplomats. Hence, Ethiopians were left with no other option but resort to the politics of protest prompting the TPLF-led regime to impose rounds of state of emergency. As a result, a series of unrelenting uprisings broke the iron grip of the TPLF leading to the advent of a new pro-reform leadership in April 2018 to which the TPLF leadership consented at the meeting of  the EPRDF Council.

Subsequently, the TPLF leaders lost no time to show their rejection of the change that was enforced by the storm of protests of the people though formalized by their representatives’ own vote during the said meeting. Hastily, they withdrew from Addis Ababa and regrouped at Mekelle, the capital of Tigray to start preparations for war against the federal government on which they had presided until their removal. The question then is should one with sane mind opt for war to dismantle an established state of one’s own making? – While all options of power sharing through negotiation were tabled by the incumbent government.

Tigray, a region so far neglected by the extravagant TPLF clique, suddenly became an arena for war preparations leading to digging trenches along the borders of neighboring regions like  Amhara and Afar, recruited minors as old as ten and eleven years while their counterparts in the rest of Ethiopia are going to school. Still worse, they secretly organized a new army composed of ex-active and retired members of the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) who were earlier recruited by the Front. The forging of an army within an army that has a multi-ethnic composition was thus designed to promote an all-out evil purpose from the outset. The unprovoked cowardly and treacherous assault upon the ENDF in Tigray on the night of 4 November 2021 bragging that the act was a preemptive thunderbolt strike by cold-bloodedly committing treason against their former comrades-in-arms featuring as an ethicized crime that is tantamount to genocide punishable by law. This was how the conflict started, simple and plain.

There are indications that the US Administration was aware of such heinous crimes since the criminal group had close contact with its former and current diplomats who were accomplices of the TPLF clique. To this day, TPLF and its supporters serving at various levels in the Administration maintained warm relationship defying internationally accepted diplomatic norms despite the existence of a new democratically elected peace-loving leadership in whose premier was awarded  the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019. Under such obvious circumstances, it is disconcerting to see that the US and its allies are bent on an archaic supposition: “Better a familiar devil than an unknown angel”. This is nothing but, diplomacy and personal ties are blended intrinsically at best! Here is one latest illustration of US bias towards the elected Ethiopian government: In his briefing to the world press on 23 Nov. 2021, Jeffrey Feltman, U.S. Special Envoy for the Horn of Africa said,

“The TDF and TPLF leaders that we have engaged tell us that their top priority is to break the de facto humanitarian siege that the Government of Ethiopia has imposed on Tigray since July. We shared that objective as well”. And adds “The government must remove the shackles that are hindering humanitarian relief …” (emphasis added).

Before sharing the fabrications of his TPLF friends, Mr. J. Feltman, should have asked himself what it means when the TPLF gang confiscated 446 trucks full of relief supplies dispatched to Tigray by the federal government – trucks which could have brought more supplies to the needy people, and isn’t this hindering humanitarian relief? Isn’t this a de facto humanitarian siege (using his words) imposed by TPLF? Is it plausible for a government to send trucks of relief to a region it enforced “humanitarian siege”?  So, who should remove the shackles that Mr. Feltman has alluded to? Is it the TPLF leaders who commandeered relief trucks or the government that has nothing to do with the disruption? What a sham diplomatic overture?

It is not only the so-called diplomats who are surfing with the dead-ducks. The pretentious Western media and its well-paid agents who recast their profession as human rights activism to journalism or those involved in  academia-cum cadre-ism are also tuned to the same drum-major. The likes of Alex de Waal, Kjetil Tronvoll, William Davidson, and Martin Plaut, to mention but a few, are intentionally confusing the international community by misrepresenting the realities on the ground. It is not for the first time that they turn around when strident calamities befall Ethiopia. They were accomplices of the TPLF/EPRDF government in many of its vile undertakings like the massacre of 2004 of Agnuak civilians in Gambella, the shooting of 193 peaceful demonstrators in Addis Ababa, and the cover up of TPLF’s diversion of the 95% relief aid to their military projects and the ensuing of famines in Tigray in the 1980s, among others. Recently, following the attack at the EDF posts in Tigray including Mekelle, these ballpoint mercenaries preferred not even to mention either the abhorrent stab on the back or the confiscation of 446 vehicles loaded with food aid sent by the Federal government to the needy people in Tigray despite knowing that the vehicles are deployed to boost the military adventures of the TPLF while the ordinary people of Tigray continue to suffer from hunger.

Recently, another TPLF gimmick transpired at the seat of the US administration. The TPLF henchman Berhane Gebre Kaisi, spokesman for the TPLF gang together with his friend Prof. Ephraim Isaac hosted a zoom-meeting that included some ten elders who allowed themselves to be confused by false narrations of current events in Ethiopia. B.G. Kaisi based his fiction on two theatrical issues: “encirclement” of Tigray and “genocide”. He has created in his mind two factors that do not exist in reality, but perhaps created from his fear that forced him to flee from Ethiopia shamefacedly. Who and why should anybody encircle the poor people of Tigray? If TPLF leaders fear encirclement as a consequence of their dreadful deeds, does it mean the people of Tigray are encircled? When and where has genocide taken place? If there is anything that qualifies as genocide, it was the recent massacre in Mykadra perpetrated by TPLF tags known as Samri that is still on the move to repeat the same. It is to cover up the misdeeds that the TPLF gang has perpetrated that caused the experienced mishaps forcing the group to concurrently to play victim. In this, its collaborators with semblance of diplomatic service remain mute for the sake of personal ties based on extortion. Lucky them, they have succeeded momentarily confusing the international community including the UN Security Council, but their sinister designs has no chance to recreate the TPLF/EPRDF unbridled hegemony.            

A Hopeless Military Gamble!

Indeed, war is a political venture by other means i. e. militarily, but when the politics is deranged, so shall be the military drive. That had been the case in Germany of the 1940s, Viet-Nam in the 1960s, Somalia in the 1960s, and Ethiopia in the 1970s. Sadly though, TPLF leaders and their associates do not look back to learn from history. Thus, they have miserably failed from their inception when they contemplated to come back and rule the people by whom they were rejected overwhelmingly. No matter what, without the consent of the people of Tigary in whose name war is waged, there is no doubt that the war is already bound to collapse.

To make matters worse, after their ejection from the Ethiopian power-politics in 2018, the treacherous TPLF leaders reinvented their secessionist political agenda contrary to the edict of Emperor Yohannes IV (1872-1889) that still reverberates: “Dear children of Ethiopia, this country called Ethiopia is 1st your mother, 2nd your wife, 3rd your daughter, 4th your crown, 5th your burial tower of silence; … so follow me to wipe out the invaders”. Deceitful of this standing message, the narcissist dream of the TPLF band is to break-away Tigray from Ethiopia where they aspire to preside as masters of unbridled power and unlimited privileges they lost in the rest of Ethiopia. This gamble aims at recreating the defunct supremacy at least in Tigray, if not in the entire Ethiopia.

This egocentric pursuit again infuriated the entire Ethiopian populace which is still haunted by the last 27 years ordeal. As the TPLF warlords that deploy child-soldiers when advancing towards central Ethiopia viewed as their military success, they are increasingly surrounded by hostile people who want to avenge for past infliction. The further they advance the massive the engulfment ought to be, where eventually retreat would be impossible and annihilation becomes inevitable. The beginning of this scenario has already unraveled in the battle fields where military operations are ongoing. At this point in time, it should be clear that, the US or any major power for that matter, cannot rescue the moribund TPLF from total disarray. Galloping a dying horse would not take any one anywhere but only bite the dust.       

What’s Next on TPLF’s War in Ethiopia?

Since PM Abiy announced and joined to lead the war on November 23 against the TPLF,  the war  is turning in favor of Ethiopia and no doubt against the TPLF .  The TPLF’s loss in the last couple of weeks has been the biggest since the ENDF push back began.
The TPLF war began shortly after June 28 when a unilateral cease-fire  by the Ethiopian government was declared . Rather than do the same, the TPLF refused to take the opportunity to reciprocate by declaring a cease fire and giving peace a chance. It continued its onslaught with a promise to dismember the nation.

The TPLF’s foray into the Amhara and Afar regions and the pillage and mayhem that it created capturing several cities and towns in these regions seriously hurt the nation in blood and treasure.
The  internal displacement of millions in the conflict regions not withstanding, the TPLF declared it was poised to March and enter Addis Ababa and dislodge PM Abiy’s elected government. Today, that seems unlikely and the TPLF has began what it calls a “strategic”  retreat from its march towards Addis, the Amhara and Afar fronts.


The latest developments in the war began with the ENDF , special forces and militia freeing the Chiffra and Bati fronts in the east (Afar) sealing the TPLF’s attempts to capture and choke the  Djibouti rail and road line. 
Also, the TPLF’s aspiration to break and open a corridor into Sudan has failed and most likely will not happen anytime soon. 

PM Abiy‘s military leadership on the war front has galvanized the nation and increased the moral of Ethiopa’s forces and enabled reversing TPLF’s advance and hastening its retreat. Most of the towns and cities held by the TPLF are now under ENDF forces and in some areas local administrations have been reinstated.

The TPLF forces are now Mekele bound and the war the TPLF started after June 28, 2021 is slowly losing steam strangling its ambition and dangerous gambit.

PM Abiy Indicated that the war is practically over and his description of what is left now sounded more like moping operations in these regions.

 In a recent appeal to Tigrean mothers, PM Abiy implored them to question the TPLF on the whereabouts of their children and why they are dying in vain in a needless confrontation led by the TPLF leaders.

Furthermore, Ethiopians are now asking what’s next? If the current pace of the war leads to an end and  the terrorist chieftains in the TPLF surrender and give themselves  up to the Ethiopian law-enforcement authorities peacefully , then the nation will be spared from a long drawn out and unnecessary bloodshed in Tigray.

Some considerations of what should come next in Tigray are : 

1) instituting a sizable command post to temporarily govern the Tigray Killil until it is secure and the safety of the Tigrean people is assured . The command post should direct the disarming of  all the war combatants, criminals and suspects.

2) Similar search and seizures of arms and munitions in Mekele and suspected areas should be conducted…(like the one conducted in Addis Ababa) to insure security

3) a respite period should be declared to enhance a moratorium on all hostilities allowing the Tigray people to decide on who their new regional leaders should be.

4) The Federal government should, through the National Election Board, conduct a regional election in Tigray like it has done in all the other Killils in Ethiopia in due time.

5) The Federal government should provide assistance to the Tigrean people in their move toward a peaceful governance and ensure safety, stability and development of the Killil.