Eritrea After 25 Years of Independence: Q&A with Amb. Herman J. Cohen
Justin L. Wilson - International Policy Digest Ambassador Herman J. Cohen (Ret.) served in the U.S. Foreign Service for 38 years and has dedicated his entire professional career to African affairs. During his tenure as Assistant
Justin L. Wilson – International Policy Digest
Ambassador Herman J. Cohen (Ret.) served in the U.S. Foreign Service for 38 years and has dedicated his entire professional career to African affairs. During his tenure as Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs during the first Bush Administration, and through his role at the NSC in the Reagan White House, Cohen worked to bring about peaceful transitions of power in South Africa and Namibia, and helped to end conflicts in Angola, Ethiopia, and Mozambique. Over the years, Cohen grew to know every first-generation African leader – from Mandela, to Mobutu, to Moammar Gaddafi.
Last week marked the 25th anniversary, or “Silver Jubilee,” since the East Africa nation Eritrea gained independence from Ethiopia in a conflict that lasted three decades. Ambassador Cohen worked closely with leaders of both nations and in 1991 brokered a peace accord that was to establish a framework for future mutual progress. International Policy Digest interviewed Amb. Cohen to learn his thoughts and insights on Eritrea’s recent history and path forward.
For most African nations, gaining sovereignty has meant ongoing hardship and conflict, although there was a time when both Ethiopia and Eritrea seemed to have a viable future ahead. Is it surprising to you that we find Eritrea and Ethiopia in the economic situation they are in? How would you describe their Cold War today?
I am both surprised and disappointed. Until the stupid and unnecessary war broke out in 1998, the two nations were benefitting from a virtual common economic union. While they were separate sovereign nations, they shared the port of Assab and enjoyed free trade. After the war was over, it has been impossible to reconcile the two and return to normal relations.
My experience over the past two years is that Eritrea is ready to normalize as soon as various arbitration decisions are implemented, especially about the common border delineation. It appears to me that the Ethiopian government is currently not interested in normalization, especially with respect to the implementation of arbitration decisions. This may be due to the fact that the Ethiopian people have never approved of Eritrea becoming an independent country.
What can the U.S. and multilateral organizations do to improve the relations between the two nations?
The U.S. and the international community have been encouraging normalization between Eritrea and Ethiopia, but to no avail. The so-called “Cold War” between the two nations apparently is favored by both sides for their own internal political reasons.
(Download an Infograph on Eritrea by clicking here)
Is there anything the international community can do to help open the ports to food aid or otherwise assist with the drought and famine that the region faces?
U.S. and multilaterals need to play a more forceful role in order to do whatever is necessary to bring help to badly undernourished people, especially those in the northern region of Ethiopia. For this region, the closest port is Assab in Eritrea. Right now, the only port being used to bring in famine relief is Djibouti via a long railway. That port is overcrowded, with long waiting periods for ships to unload. Use of the Eritrean port of Asab would alleviate some of the pressure. I know that the Eritreans would agree to open their port if asked. It is clearly the Ethiopians who do not want to ask, regardless of the negative impact on their people.
After the 1991 peace accord that you brokered, were there steps that in retrospect should have been laid out as a roadmap to strong independent nations?
During the London conference of 1991, the two leaders, Meles Zenawai of Ethiopia and Asayas Afwerki of Eritrea, agreed to separate as sovereign nations but to maintain close economic ties. Everything was going well to the benefit of both nations until Zenawi decided to teach Eritrea a lesson with a major military assault in 1998. Both nations are less well off in different ways as a result. It is hard to make sense of it for those of us looking from the outside.
Were there steps that the international community could have taken over the years to ease the tension between Eritrea and Ethiopia?
The U.S. relationship with Ethiopia has been dominated by the need to fight the ISIS surrogate in Somalia, al-Shebab. The Ethiopian military has been in the forefront of the African Union’s effort to destroy the al-Shebab menace. As a result, the U.S. has not emphasized any other subjects such as human rights and the relationship with Eritrea. U.S. relations with Eritrea are essentially non-existent because it was the U.S. that proposed UN Security Council sanctions against Eritrea due to alleged assistance to al-Shebab. At the present time, the U.S. refuses to allow the Security Council to lift sanctions against Eritrea despite the fact that there is every indication that Eritrea has absolutely no contact with al-Shebab, much less provide any sort of assistance to them.
However, I believe the U.S. will increase its effort to bring about better relations between Ethiopia and Eritrea for two reasons. First, improved economic relations will help diminish the outflow of young Eritreans who are joining the refugees pouring into Europe from the Middle East. The people from Syria and Iraq are political refugees escaping war. The Eritrean refugees are economic travelers looking for jobs. Secondly, Eritrea is in a very significant geographic location with regard to instability across the Red Sea in Yemen. Right now, naval ships from the United Arab Emirates are using the Eritrean port of Asab as a base from which to carry out acts of war in Yemen. The U.S. should have a place from which to view these activities. But because of our bad relationship with Eritrea, we are not able to take advantage of Eritrea’s geography.
Thanks so much for taking the time to participate in this enlightening conversation on the state of affairs in Eritrea and the region.
Thank you for the opportunity to shed light on what has thus far been a rarely-discussed international issue.
Wedi Hagher November 20, 2016
“The Eritrean refugees are economic travelers looking for jobs. ”
Ambassador Herman J. Cohen (Ret.)
?????
k.tewolde November 20, 2016
Correct! you read it right Wedi Hager,how ironic.Look at that picture,do they look like people who care about the interest of the downtrodden masses of the two poorest nations in the world,time is revealing the truth one day at a time.This is where it all started the power brokerage,the conspiracy,the behind the curtain deal………. unfortunately,the people of both nations where nowhere in the agenda. My oppressed masses! take matters into your own hands and rise,don’t leave it into the hands of these twisted characters to bail you out ,they will sell you out instead.Time to smart up and put up.
andom November 20, 2016
How much was he given by iseyas to fabricate these lies. The cause for the war was iseyas to deliberately stale the implementation of the constitution ratified by the people. Eritrea was found to be the violtor and paid millions of dollars to ethiopia. Second, he should be ashamed to describe the young eritreans who have never owned their life as economic travellers. Is cohen somehow linked to bisha?
sol November 21, 2016
How much was he given by iseyas to fabricate these lies
እንድዒ ታቡርኩታ ግን እምኒ ኣላታ
PH November 20, 2016
I know little about the content of London’s summit in 1991 but seeing two countries leaders side by side and even the us ambassador Herman j. Cohen effort was great. But the problem remained on the the issue of who dominate power. We eritreans accepted for good neighborhood with ethiopian brothers but there was no moderation at all. now. The cause of Tigray is triggering all out of war not even us policy could handle it.
andom November 20, 2016
“Weyane refused demarcatin b/s ethiopians never aproved eritreas separation” so the problem are the ethiopian people and not weyane.
He got that right. Where would be the stand of the the fox “birhanu nega aka patriotic ginbot 7. He also missed the “fact” that eritres is now more developed than ever before according to iseyas thanks to the hard work of higdef. Awet nhafash or cohen.
andom November 20, 2016
Correction
Awet nhigdef widket nhafash feshfash or gebar denbar.
AHMED SALEH !!! November 20, 2016
Mr. Cohen stated the cold-war between Eritrea and Ethiopia favored by two ruling parties for their own internal political process reasons to stay in power . Hmmm , it is true sometimes facts lead us to go through confusion
& deep thinking . Matter of fact the majority pay the price while selected few take advantage for personal gain .
PH November 20, 2016
Attend Prego, Nefahito will start soon.
Simon G. November 20, 2016
DId he forget to disclose this guy is HGDF’s lobbyist? This guy was never in favor of Eritrea’s independence and now he is preaching the opposite.
I would never trust whatever this guy wrote. Period.
Grar November 20, 2016
Is this the Eritrea our people paid a heavy price after 25 years? Why are Eritrean Christians suffering this much humiliation in the bloody hands of the Jihadi Islamic Arab world? This is horrible that some Jihadi apologists would like to skip or cover under their prayer rags.
http://icevikings.blogspot.com/2016/11/eritrean-woman-who-escaped-from-isis.html
AHMED SALEH !!! November 20, 2016
It looks as expeected our NEFAHITTO appeared .
Z, Hagos November 20, 2016
Mr. Cohen explained that, “The people from Syria and Iraq are political refugees escaping war.” However, stating that “The Eritrean refugees are economic travelers looking for jobs,” is partially true. The Eritrean comparison could have been better with that of the Somalis because both the Somalis and Eritreans are fleeing failed states. Even compared to the Somalis, the Eritrean refugees’ ratio is higher relative to the size of the Eritrean population. Such big ratio of refugees, especially the young generation, is a threat to the future statehood and economy of Eritrea as a country.
..
As regards the disinterest of the Ethiopian people in normalizing relationship with Eritrea, the cause is Isayas. So long Isayas is in power, the Ethiopians are against normalization. Even the world represented by the UN is against normalization with Eritrea so long Isayas is committed to the destabilization of the region. The best recommendation of the UN under its COIE is that Isayas set the Eritrean people free enabling them to speak for themselves through their elected representatives to negotiate normalization of relationship with Ethiopia and the UN. That empowerment of the Eritrean people comes through implementation of the approved constitution. Until then no one in the world is interested in any kind of normalization. Even the Eritrean people, so long their monies in the bank confiscated and their kids conscripted forever, they are not ready for normalization with Isayas. The day Isayas steps down, normalization with Ethiopia and the UN will be immediately effective without any precondition.
Teclay November 21, 2016
ኢሱ ተጋግዩ ፣እቲ እንኮ ሓንጎል ዝውንን ሰብ ኣብ ባሕረ ነጋሲ ተጋግዩ። ንዓና ተጎተቲ ኣእምሮ- ኣልቦ ድማ ሒዝና ናብ ገድል ኣትዩ።እንታይ ረኸቦ ኢሱ ??ኣሕዋት ጀርመናውያን ድሕሪ 45 ዓመታት ዳግማይ ኣብ ዝሓብርሉ ግዜ ብናይ ጽዓዱ ሽምግልና ሓበሻ ምክፍፋል ???
ብዝኾነ ዘይወጽእ ጣዕሳ እዩ። ኣብ ክንዲ ናይ መላእ ኣብስንያ ንጉስ ኮይኑ ከም በዓል ተድሮስ የውሃንስ ናይ ታርኽ ቦትኡ ሒዙ ኣፍሪቃ ዘምሓድር ፣ኣብ ጽምዋ ሓጽቢ ክስርሕ ይውዕል ኣሎ ,ምስ እዚ ኩሉ ሓንጎሉ።
እንተ እቲ ስእሊ ግን ዘገርም እዩ።ነቲ ስእሊ ሪኢኻ ናይ ካንፓኒ ሓላፊ እንበር ካብ ሳሕል ዝመጸ, 90ሽሕ ባረዩ ወይ ሸፋቱ ዝውንን ሰብ ኣይትብልን ኢኻ።
Wedi Hagher November 21, 2016
ነቲ ስእሊ ሪኢኻ ናይ ካንፓኒ ሓላፊ እንበር ካብ ሳሕል ዝመጸ, 90 ሽሕ ባረዩ ወይ ሸፋቱ ዝውንን ሰብ ኣይትብልን ኢኻ።
Teclay
Barya nisikha ikha
AHMED SALEH !!! November 21, 2016
Teclay problem is his rage clouded negative judgment . Obviously he represent
haters because he doesn’t know better . His unhealthy comments don’t have other option than to infest himself with his own mental disease .
Habesha -Habesha blabla , go ahead to serve your chauvinistic and feudalist idealism that left a scar of hardship life on your people . Eritreans have nothing to do with your past history to call us names .