gulf states influence horn of africa

All You Need to Know About Gulf States’ Influence in Horn of Africa Conflicts

Conflicts in the Horn of Africa have been greatly influenced by Gulf states, such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar. Their involvement has increased since the 2010s, with priorities frequently centred on regional dominance, strategic ports, and Red Sea security—sometimes at the price of local stability. Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti, and Sudan are among the impacted nations.

Important Gulf Influence Mechanisms: The UAE invests in Assab (Eritrea) and controls Berbera (Somaliland). In order to support anti-Houthi operations, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have bases in Djibouti.

Aid and Investments: Gulf states offer unconditional funding for infrastructure, mineral extraction, agriculture, and political alignment.

Proxy Support: While Qatar and Turkey support Somalia’s federal government and some Al-Shabaab-affiliated groups, the UAE supports Somaliland, Puntland, and Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces.

Gulf State Rivalries

The UAE and Saudi Arabia are now at higher levels of tension. Saudi Arabia uses alliances with Egypt, Turkey, and Qatar to counter the UAE’s aggressive investments and diplomacy. These divisions were further exacerbated by the fallout between Qatar, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia in 2017, when Qatar was active in Mogadishu and the UAE in Puntland.

Gulf StateKey AlliesInfluence Tactics
UAESomaliland, Ethiopia, Sudan, RSF, EritreaMilitary bases, port deals, covert arms
Saudi ArabiaDjibouti, Sudan (pre-2019), Egypt blocAnti-Iran operations, economic aid, counter-UAE moves
Qatar/TurkeySomalia federal governmentHumanitarian aid, military training, and anti-UAE mediation

Effects on the stability of the region

The Gulf’s involvement has made conflicts last longer, like the civil war in Somalia, the human rights problems in Sudan, and the tensions between Ethiopia and Eritrea. As of 2026, UAE-Saudi fights at AU summits and ongoing threats from Iran and the Houthis could spill over, making peace efforts even harder because there is less Gulf mediation.

FAQs

Q1: Why do Gulf states care so much about the Horn of Africa?

The Gulf is interested in the area because of its strategic ports, security in the Red Sea, and access to resources.

Q2: What effect do rivalries in the Gulf have on conflicts in the area?

They make proxy wars worse, strengthen factions, and make it less likely that people will agree to settle their differences.

Q3: Is it possible for countries in the region to fight Gulf influence?

Partly through regional coalitions, African Union mediation, and balancing foreign investments, though outside influence is still strong.

David Njoroge

David Njoroge is a sports journalist who covers African football leagues, athletics, and major continental tournaments. He shares inspiring stories of athletes and the growing sports culture across Africa.

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