Proxy war? The Ethiopia-Somalia conflict,

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Proxy war? The Ethiopia-Somalia conflict, 1977-78 HI277 | Africa and the Cold War Term 2 | Week 3 Anna Bruzzone Somali refugee camps during the Ogaden War

Lecture outline Somali irredentism Somalia in the 1970s The Derg and the threat of invasion The Somali invasion of Ethiopia The Soviets choose sides Cuban support to the Derg Somalia’s defeat and its consequences The fate of Ethiopian socialism A failure of US foreign policy? Towards the ‘second Cold War’ The post-Cold War Horn of Africa: a re-emerging hotspot

Somali irredentism Barre continued to support irredentism in Ethiopia and Kenya, despite Soviet opposition and despite a peace treaty with Kenya Formation of Western Somali Liberation Front (WSLF) in Ogaden in 1975 to fight for secession of the region Ethiopia responded by funding insurgency in Somalia from 1971 Somalia received support from the Arab world, especially as Ethiopia was supporting South Sudanese separatist movements

Somalia in the 1970s Aspirations of the Somali Democratic Republic to a greater regional role 1974 Somalia joined the Arab League 1974 Siad Barre chaired the OAU summit in Mogadishu Dependence on foreign aid – Barre’s attempts to diversify the country’s foreign support 11 July 1974: Somali-Soviet Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation 1976: Creation of the Somali Revolutionary Socialist Party to prove the regime’s socialist credentials A struggling economy; 1974-1975 severe drought Popular discontent

The Derg and the threat of invasion Somali army well equipped with Soviet weapons; had three times as many tanks as Ethiopia Somalia sought to exploit political turmoil in Ethiopia: early 1976, rumours of an imminent invasion Derg inherited imperial Ethiopia’s wars against Eritrean and Tigrayan separatists – spread Ethiopian army thin Failure of talks with Barre in Addis Ababa in January 1976

The Somali invasion of Ethiopia February 1977: 1,500 Somali troops invade Ogaden By July 1977, there were 40,000 Somali soldiers in Ethiopia

The Soviets choose sides February 1977 United States cuts military aid to Ethiopia Podgorny and Castro in Addis Ababa May 1977 Mengistu in Moscow: $350-450m arms deal (48 MiG aircraft, 200 tanks, anti-tank/-aircraft missiles) October 1977 Mengistu complained that Soviet Union still aiding Somalia Moscow ceased arms supply to Somalia Barre evicted Eastern Bloc and Cuban advisers November 1977 Soviet Union begins airlift of arms and aid to Ethiopia

Cuban support to the Derg Castro initially tried to act as a peacemaker – sought to create socialist confederation in region Cubans initially turned down repeated Ethiopian requests for aid… until they joined the Soviet airlift operation in November 1977 Problematic implications of Cuba’s aid for the Derg; Havana refused to support war against Eritrea and Tigray

Somalia’s defeat and its consequences November 1977 Soviet Union began six-week airlift and sealift Total $1-2bn arms and equipment 12,000 Cuban troops plus 6,000 advisors March 1978 Somalia withdrew from the Ogaden 30,000 Somalis taken prisoner April 1978 Attempted coup against Barre‘s regime 1980s By May 1980, one person in four in Somalia was a refugee from Ethiopia. Official figure was 1,400,000 refugees Plundering of Somalia‘s economy Rise of armed opposition movements. Ethiopian support to Somali Salvation Democratic Front (SSDF) and Somali National Movement (SSDF)

The fate of Ethiopian socialism Scorched-earth policy in the Ogaden; separatist guerrillas – Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), founded in 1984, seeks self-determination for ethnic Somalis in the Ogaden region Continued war within Ethiopia, against the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF) and Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) 1983-4 ‘Live Aid’ famine By 1986, 4.6m people were resettled in villagisation programme Moscow distanced itself from Addis Ababa after Gorbachev came to power in 1985

A failure of US foreign policy? President Jimmy Carter Zbigniew Brzezinski National Security Adviser Cyrus Vance Secretary of State …towards the ‘second Cold War’

The post-Cold War Horn of Africa: a re-emerging hotspot End of the Derg and flight of Mengistu, 1991 Independence of Eritrea in 1993 1998-2000 - Eritrea-Ethiopia war Rapid economic growth… but authoritarian government, unrest, ethnic/regional conflicts 2016-2018 – Mass protests demanding political reforms 2 April 2018: Abiy Ahmed becomes Prime Minister; he is the country‘s first Oromo leader. A new age of reforms? Fall of Barre and state collapse in Somalia American intervention and withdrawal – ‘Operation Restore Hope’ (1992-1994) failed – ‘Black Hawk Down’ Civil war - the rise of the Islamic Courts Union and the war in Mogadishu (2002- 2006), Ethiopian intervention (2006) and the rise of Al Shabaab Kenya’s invasion of Somalia (2012); African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) Repercussions of the US-Chinese competition and the Gulf Crisis on the Horn of Africa – a re-emerging hotspot

Domestic + regional + international politics Conclusions Why did Moscow intervene in the Horn? Was it successful? What were the consequences of the war for the United States? Was the Ogaden War a watershed moment in the Cold War? Did Ethiopia ‘win’ the conflict? Domestic + regional + international politics