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The Geopolitical Dilemma of the Horn
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11639 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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9 / 1986 |
2,280 Words |
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Edmond J. Keller Edmond J. Keller is professor of political science at the
University of California-Santa Barbara and the author of
several books on African politics, including Afro-Marxist
Regimes, edited with Don Rothchild. His most recent book is
Revolutionary Ethiopia. |
The Horn of Africa lies beneath an "arc of crisis" which stretches from Libya in the west all the way to Afghanistan in the east.
As long as regional or domestic conflicts in this zone persist, they have the potential to expand into global conflict involving the superpowers. Nowhere is this more true than in the Horn where over the past decade the United States and the Soviet Union have been actively engaged in supporting client states with military aid. Consequently, what had historically been mere tensions and low-grade conflicts between and within countries in the region have become serious threats to international peace and security.
In large measure this turn of events can be attributed to the fact that the Soviet Union and the United States have each pursued foreign policies in the Horn that are guided exclusively by their own national interests, rather than by a clear reading of regional concerns and their global implications.
Who's Leading Whom?
The African countries in the region are far from being the mere pawns of their superpower patrons. They have domestic and regional policy objectives of their own and often manipulate their relations with their patrons, as well as the tensions between the superpowers, according to their own policy objectives.
Ethiopia's military regime, for example, places a premium on its own survival as a ruling class and, in 1977, severed relations with the United States when U.S. military aid became uncertain,
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