These past days Stratfor, a rather prestigious
global intelligence journal based in Austin, Texas, has circulated a report
entitled “Eritrea: Another Venue for the Iranian-Israeli Rivalry.” The uncharacteristic
shallowness and obvious intent of the ‘report’ does not elicit any serious
rebuttal. Yet, we found it appropriate to respond to it given the tsunami-scale
reproduction that it has generated.
In less than 48 hours since this piece was posted
in Stratfor website on December 11, 2012 at 11:15 GMT, the story was picked up
[as a quick search by the title yielded some 152,000 and another hour or so
later 269,000 results), from sites that range from blogs to established news
papers.
Some of the sites even gave the story a life of
its own. For instance, the UPI.com, which boasts “over 100 years of
journalistic excellence,” picked up the story as a special report (Dec. 11,
2012 at 1:52) under the title “Israel, Iran vie for control of Red Sea,” this
piece is full of quotes from the original piece but failed to quote the source.
The Eritrean Center for Strategic Studies (ECSS)
in its review of the ‘report’ found several areas of concern, beginning with
the intention, assemblage, and not to mention its unfounded accusations,
passing remarks and unsubstantiated conclusions.
Let us first focus on the easily verifiable
facts:
1. Eritrea
enjoys normative diplomatic ties with Iran. This is nothing extraordinary;
neither is the relationship particularly close or special. Indeed,
it is not different, by any measurable yardstick, from the warm diplomatic ties
that Eritrea enjoys with all other countries in the Middle East. Eritrea
has in fact resident embassies in Saudi Arabia, Yemen, the Emirates, Qatar and
Kuwait while it is represented in Iran by a non-resident Ambassador.
Furthermore, Iran has much deeper economic ties and resident embassies (which
is not the case in Eritrea) with all other countries in the Horn of Africa;
including Ethiopia, Djibouti and the Sudan. True, Eritrea had signed a
loan agreement3 worth 25 million Euros with Iran in April 2009,
during the visit of President Isaias to Tehran. But this amount is much
smaller than Iranian development assistance or investments in Ethiopia or the
Sudan. Furthermore, according to Eritrean Government sources, the loan,
which was essentially a commercial credit to buy construction materials and
other commodities from Iran, was not executed in time due to various
administrative delays and was dropped altogether later.
2. Eritrea
also enjoys diplomatic ties with Israel. Again this is not peculiar or
extraordinary in any sense of the word although both Israel and Eritrea have
resident ambassadors in each other’s capital. Investment and trade ties
between the two countries are not that significant.
3. Eritrea
has never granted Iran or Israel, or both of them as it is ridiculously
maintained by Stratfor, military bases or outposts in its inland territories or
waterways and islands. And yet, for reasons better known to its authors,
these wild stories have been circulating intermittently for some years
now. A couple of years ago, for instance, the London-based Sunday
Times quoted obscure Israeli Security officials to ascertain, in a rather long
article: “Israel is said to have two Eritrean bases, one a ‘listening post’ for
signals intelligence , the other a supply base for its German-built submarines
while … Iran has a naval base in the Eritrean port of Assab”. The Israeli
Prime Minister subsequently lamented Iran’s “increasing influence” in
Eritrea in an interview with Fox News shortly afterwards although he reportedly
retracted his statement later in an apologetic official communication to the
Government of Eritrea4.
4. How
Eritrea can be thought of simultaneously offering military bases and host two
mortal enemies in adjacent patches of its territory is really mind
boggling. One might argue that in abstract legal terms, Eritrea has, as a
sovereign state, every prerogative and right to enter into military and
economic alliances with any country of its choice and in accordance with the
exigencies of its national interests. The signing of bilateral or
multilateral pacts and alliances is indeed a matter of Eritrea’s sovereign
political choices. Various publications and official statements
nonetheless confirm that the Government of Eritrea does not subscribe to the
notion of providing military bases to major international or regional
powers. The public statement5 issued by Eritrea’s Foreign
Ministry in response to the Sunday Times article in fact emphasizes that
“Eritrea’s sovereign choice has always been, and remains, that of aversion to
dependency, polarized alliances and the suzerainty” of a big brother. In
any case, Eritrea would not be so foolhardy, reckless or myopic to mortgage its
land and territory as a battleground for two avowed enemies in exchange for
possible short-term gains.
In the event, why Stratfor ignored, without
serious research or validation, these well known facts and chose to
recycle the mendacious innuendos that are already available in the market
remains a mystery. Straftor did not, in fact, bring new information or
fresh and credible evidence to what it evidently considered was a “sensational
scoop”. And on the basis of this false presumption, it proceeded to
dissect the “plausible explanations of motive and environmental constraints”
that must have impelled the Government of Eritrea to play with fire! As
we shall briefly demonstrate below, these presumptions are even more tenuous
and flawed.
Straftor’s ‘analysis’ is anchored on “two key
geopolitical constraints and multiple security concerns,” that, in its view,
afflict Eritrea and that it has to grapple with as the new kid-in-the-block.
One of these is described, in very hyperbolic terms, as “the existential threat
of invasion from Ethiopia.” Stratfor does not analyze and tell us, in the
first place, why and how a border war, that is fully resolved now to all legal
purposes and intents, morphs into an “existential and permanent threat of
invasion”. Surely, both countries can co-exist and cultivate mutually
beneficial ties of friendship, cooperation and alliance if both countries
subscribe to, and abide by, normative principles of international law.
Past and current Ethiopian regimes may not as yet be beholden to these
objectives although the new Government in Addis Abeba is going out of its way
“to talk the language of peace”. However this plays out in reality
in the months ahead, the border problem between Eritrea and Ethiopia does not,
objectively, fall into the category of “existential conflicts”.
But there may be external forces that are wedded
to, and are prodding, Ethiopian internal agendas that could trigger another
round of conflict and war. Stratfor’s report may be alluding to the
centrality of the external dimension when it confirms US endorsement of
Ethiopia’s past practices and perhaps inchoate agendas. Although Stratfor chose
to gloss over the issue, Ethiopia could not have managed to violate fundamental
pillars of international law to occupy sovereign Eritrean territories with
impunity without overarching US political and diplomatic support and
protection. But it is instructive to note that the report tacitly
legitimizes Ethiopia’s belligerent ambitions when it cryptically amplifies
Ethiopia’s drawbacks as “the largest landlocked country in Africa.” This is the
repackaging of the old ‘head-and-hectare-mentality’, which justified that
Eritrea, with small territory and population, should be sacrificed at the altar
of big regional [Ethiopia] and international [mainly US] interests. This old
strategic thinking has been repackaged to justify the possibility of another
Ethiopian attempt of re-invasion of Eritrea.
Stratfor’s gross anti-Eritrean bias is further
demonstrated when the report gullibly parrots the false narrative that “Eritrea
lost the war”. What criteria did Stratfor employ to reach such a conclusion?
There are much deeper issues that the ‘report’ needs to dig out regarding
the conduct of the Eritrea-Ethiopia war if it really wishes to form an informed
opinion. What transpired during those fateful three Ethiopian offensives
is now history. However, just to highlight the sloppiness of the report:
while categorically stating that “Eritrea had lost the war”, it simultaneously
asserts, in the next sentence, that Eritrea “repelled the Ethiopians and
safeguarded its independence.” Still, it wrongly insinuates the death
toll of 70,000 as the casualties suffered by Eritrea. Eritrea’s losses in
the war were less than a third of this figure even if this remains horrendously
high in terms of its population size. Ethiopia’s losses exceeded 70,000
by its own official admissions. But the central issue at stake is not the
arithmetic of each country’s human losses. War cannot be justified under
any conditions; there is no acceptable threshold as far as human losses in
either country is concerned and the unnecessary death of even a single person
cannot be condoned.
Stratfor further drifts into what it considers
geopolitical chess games to casually assert: “Eritrea has turned to the Middle
East for alliances and assistance.” And without factual evidences or
solid premises, it simply tells us that Eritrea has become a close ally of
Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt and then concludes that “Eritrea and its
waters have become another venue for Iran and Israel’s rivalry”. As we
intimated before, these assertions are not substantiated by facts and figures
that illustrate the depth of these “close” ties. They are not put in
regional perspective to gauge whether Eritrea’s ties with these countries are
on a higher plane than those of the Sudan, Ethiopia or Djibouti. There is
no investigation to find out whether these “close ties” begun after the war
between Eritrea and Ethiopia or whether they predate them and have thus no
correlation with the antagonistic relationships that obtain today between the
two neighboring countries.
In as far as Iran is concerned, the report
alleges that Eritrea had struck a deal with Iran “to maintain a military
presence in Assab - officially to protect the state-owned, renovated,
Soviet-era oil refinery there.” Straftfor does not provide us with the
plausible evidence that such an agreement ever took place. As described
before, the two countries did sign a commercial loan agreement in April 2009
and this document is in the public domain. Secondly, the Assab refinery,
which was built by the Soviet Union in 1968 has not been renovated in the last
twenty years and it has not been functional for almost ten years now.
Third, what would be the rationale for Eritrea to seek Iranian military
presence in order to protect a small, outdated, oil refinery?
How Stratfor can publish such a flawed and silly
report without checking its facts is really surprising. The more so as
the journal has earned a well-deserved reputation for insightful and original
analysis of issues and events of critical geopolitical importance.
Although we would not like to speculate without any substantial
information and thus fall into the same trap, we would nonetheless hope that it
has not been lured by tabloid considerations of publishing any “sensational
story” for commercial gains. We also hope that it has not served,
unwittingly, as a credible platform and conduit for some intelligence agencies
that may have an interest in planting a fabricated story in pursuit of their
sinister objectives against Eritrea. Whatever the case, there are no
military bases of Iran and/or Israel in Eritrea. Indeed, at this age of
preponderant cyberspace technology, the locations and details of these bases
would have long been publicly available with all the required resolutions and
precisions unless, i.e., they are mere phantoms that exist in the crooked minds
of the detractors and arch-enemies of Eritrea. These cannot, after
all, be matters of sheer speculation, sinister disinformation or seemingly
informed guesswork.
Released By:
Eritrean Centre for Strategic Studies
(ECSS)
Asmara, Eritrea.
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