Geo-political
significance of the Horn
Superpower
involvement in the region
Soviet-Cuban
military intervention, 1977-78
Factor
shaping the Soviet realignment
Overview
In the space of three years (1977-80), the two rival superpowers exchanged allies in the Horn of Africa. In April 1977, Ethiopia, an old American ally, severed its military ties with Washington and established an alliance with the USSR. In November 1977, Somalia, angered by Soviet support from Mogadishu’s adversry, Ethiopia, ended its military alliance with Moscow. The superpower flip-flop was completed in August 1980 with the signing of the US-Somali military co-operation agreement.
Geo-political Significance of the Horn
The Horn of Africa in the 1970s comprised three countries – Ethiopia, Somalia and Djibouti. It was a target for external interest. The region flanks the oil states of Arabia, dominates part of the Gulf of Aden through which oil tankers pass, and overlooks the passages where the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean converge.
Superpower involvement in the Horn
In 1953, the US
obtained a 25 year lease on the Kagnew Communications facility in Asmara in
return for American diplomatic support in the UN for Ethiopian trusteeship over
Eritrea. Ethiopia was
regarded in Washington as the principal buffer against the spread of communism in black Africa. The USSR only
established a foothold in the region in 1963 when it became the major arms
supplier to Somalia. That relationship deepened after a military coup in
Somalia in October 1969. The event, however, that transformed superpower
involvement in the Horn was the Ethiopian revolution of 1974.
Soviet-Cuban
Military Intervention in the Horn
On 26 November 1977, the Soviets launched a
huge six-week air-and sea-lift to Ethiopia.
Altogether, the USSR ferried in over $1 billion worth of armaments,
about 15,000 Cuban combat troops, 1,500 Soviet military advisers and General
V.I. Petrov, First Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Soviet Grand Forces, to
direct the war. After the initiation of the Ethiopian-Cuban counter-offensive
in January 1978, the Somali forces were driven back. By March 1978, they had been forced right out
of the Ogaden.
Factors prompting Soviet realignment