Is Ethiopia bracing for war?
April 23, 2026
The political situation in the Horn of Africa continues to be dominated by tensions between Ethiopia and Eritrea. Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has left little doubt: During a television appearance earlier this week, he emphasized that it is "not feasible at any time" to continue viewing Ethiopia as a landlocked country.
The country lost its access to the Red Sea when Eritrea gained independence in 1993 after decades of war. Initially, an agreement allowed Ethiopia to import goods duty-free through the Eritrean port of Assab.
But a renewed border conflict in the late 1990s ended this arrangement. Today, a large portion of Ethiopia's trade passes through Djibouti — a costly undertaking for the landlocked nation.
Resistance to Ethiopian expansion
Abiy Ahmed wants to reduce this dependence, according to political analyst Abdurahman Sayed.
"The reason he is pushing for this right now is not because there is no access to the Red Sea or to ports near Ethiopia," he told DW.
While access is already possible via neighboring Djibouti and Somalia, Abiy Ahmed wants direct, Ethiopian control, which coastal states are resisting, Sayed said.
The 2018 peace agreement between Ethiopia and Eritrea would have offered a good opportunity. On this basis, Sayed said, Ethiopia could have secured easy access to the sea with some guarantees for sustainability and security.
The peace efforts earned Abiy the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019. Now, however, signs point once again toward confrontation with the neighboring country.
Sayed suspects Ethiopia's push for access to the sea "is heavily driven by external interests outside the Horn of Africa region, and that the Ethiopian government is merely implementing these interests as part of its own agenda. Otherwise, access would have been secured back then."
Ethiopia's partners under pressure
Sayed was referring to Ethiopia's geostrategic partners, primarily the United Arab Emirates.
But the UAE is currently under pressure, said Sayed. "Due to the conflicts in the Persian Gulf, the UAE will sooner or later be forced to reduce their presence and involvement in the Horn of Africa to focus on the problems in their own country."
This means Ethiopia can expect less support in the event of a potential war against Eritrea.
Prime Minister Abiy has been demanding separate access to a seaport for Ethiopia since 2023. His rhetoric on the matter has intensified over the years, said Guido Lanfranchi, a researcher at the Netherlands Institute of International Relations Clingendael.
Earlier this year, several news agencies reported Ethiopian government soldiers and fighters from Tigray were stationed along the region's 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) border with Eritrea.
Yet the situation has not broken out into war so far.
Tensions between Ethiopia and Eritrea have been escalating for over a year and have remained at a fairly high level, said Lanfranchi.
"Now it seems as though the danger has passed and war has been averted — which is due, among other things, to problems such as fuel shortages in the region linked to the crisis in Iran," he told DW.
Threat of civil war in Ethiopia lingers
"However, this does not mean that the international community should reduce its focus on this crisis, as the underlying causes of the rivalry between the two parties still exist," said Lanfranchi.
According to Lanfranchi's Clingendael colleague Amanuel Dessalegn Gedebo, Eritrea itself has never had much interest in a direct conflict, given its weaker economic and military position.
Instead, there have been indirect maneuvers such as strengthening ties with the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) and providing some support to armed groups like the Amhara ethnic militia Fano. Eritrea has also strengthened its ties with Ethiopia's regional adversaries, particularly Egypt.
The Iran war affecting oil-producing regions has caused transportation and food prices in Ethiopia to rise. It has made an already fragile economic situation worse, and a new military operation currently unfeasible.
However, the current "pause" is only a postponement, Amanuel Dessalegn Gedebo told DW.
According to analysts, the central conflict in Ethiopia is the ongoing fragile situation in Tigray. This has persisted, even though the two-year civil war in the northern Ethiopian region was officially settled with an agreement in November 2022.
Since then, Tigray has been governed by an interim administration appointed by Addis Ababa, whose mandate was extended for another year in April — despite criticism from the TPLF.
In response, the TPLF recently announced the reinstatement of a regional parliament. An election for this body was one of the triggers for the Tigray war in 2020.
Observers fear armed conflict between the Ethiopian government and regional forces could flare up again.
War not inevitable in Ethiopia
Gerrit Kurtz of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) told DW that while external and geopolitical factors have exacerbated the conflict in Ethiopia, the multiethnic state cannot be reduced to the interests of partners.
Kurtz said it would be an escalation if Tigray were to establish a rival government. He added that while war is not inevitable, it is a matter of both sides maneuvering for dominance.
While the TPLF may view Eritrea as a partner, the extent of that support in the event of a war with Ethiopia remains uncertain, he said.
Upcoming parliamentary elections on June 1 in Ethiopia are important for Abiy Ahmed's ruling Prosperity Party to secure legitimacy. According to analyst Lanfranchi, the Prosperity Party inherited the political dominance and economic network of its predecessor, the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front.
He believes the opposition has little chance in the election. "From Abiy's perspective, it makes little sense to postpone the elections ahead of a military operation," said Lanfranchi.
This article was originally written in German.
Correction, April 24, 2026: An earlier version of this article misspelled the names of Amanuel Dessalegn Gedebo and Abdurahman Sayed. DW apologizes for the error.