The enigma of the Western crusade against Ethiopia and the insidious face of racism

The enigma of the Western crusade against Ethiopia and the insidious face of racism

One thing that has been most incomprehensible for many Ethiopian observers, activists, and politicians is the barrage of one-sided criticisms coming from Western capitals since the eruption in November of an armed conflict between the federal government and the TPLF’s controlled northern region of Tigray. Directed exclusively against the federal government, the criticisms were soon followed by the implementations of various sanctions that elevated the surprise to the level of utter consternation. The deep differences over the direction of the country under the reformist leadership of Prime Minister Abiy constitute the underlying causes of the conflict. The immediate cause of the war, however, was the surprise attack of TPLF militia forces on the national defense forces stationed in Tigray. The Ethiopian government launched an all-out counter-offensive that it baptized “law enforcement operation,” which resulted in the quick and complete disbanding of TPLF forces. Unsurprisingly, severe humanitarian crises ranging from food shortages and killings of civilians to massive displacements into a neighboring country soon followed the military confrontation. 

From Disbelief to Consternation

In light of the sudden and unprovoked attack on the Ethiopian national forces, the expectation of the Ethiopian government and most Ethiopians was that Western governments and opinions would see the Ethiopian counteroffensive as a legitimate move of self-defense and law enforcement. The expectation never came to fruition. Instead, the Ethiopian troops were accused of a host of violations that included the killings of innocent civilians, the rapes of women, the deliberate destruction of properties, and, last but not least, the engagement in genocidal acts. To make matters worse, the involvement in the counter-offensive of Eritrean troops and Amhara militia forces, both reputed to be quite hostile to Tigrean leaders and elites, made the accusations of massive human rights violations even more credible. The end result of all this is that everything was turned upside down: the attacker was seen as the victim.

The Ethiopian surprise is all the harder to contain as Western governments did not show the same eagerness to express their condemnations during the 27 years of the TPLF’s horrific rule of Ethiopia. Even when repression became so intensified that it compelled the legislative branch of the US government to break the silence, not one single punitive measure was taken. To crown it all, President Obama described the TPLF’s government as a “democratically elected government” during his August 2015 visit to Ethiopia, even as all the 547 seats in the parliament were taken by its members and supporters and numerous activists and political leaders were languishing in jail where they were routinely tortured. Worse still, not one Western government expressed any outrage over the well-documented recent massacre in Mai-Kadra of scores of Amhara residents by the TPLF forces in the wake of their retreat from advancing governmental troops and Amhara militia forces. The silence extended to major Western media outlets, which otherwise gave extensive coverage to alleged atrocities committed by Ethiopian and Eritrean forces. After the pause of dismay, the only conclusion left for Ethiopians was to say that the TPLF remains the favorite ally of Western governments and that their open hostility toward the present government is an attempt to come to its rescue.

Western Dictates

For any impartial observer, the silence of Western governments on the far-reaching violations of human rights during the TPLF’s tyrannical rule of Ethiopia is proof enough that the accusation of systematic, widespread, and gross violations of human rights by Ethiopian, Eritrean, and Amhara armed forces is just a smokescreen for underlying geopolitical concerns. According to the Western assessment, not only is the bellicose relation between Tigray and the federal government aggravating the ethnic tensions internal to Ethiopia, but also the involvement of Eritrean troops will have a destabilizing impact on the entire Horn of Africa. In addition, the current dispute between Ethiopia, Egypt, and Sudan over the Nile dam and the looming war with Sudan over border disputes have the potential of igniting the flame of war across the whole region.

To prevent all these calamities from happening, the Western position prescribes the restoration of peace in Tigray through a negotiated settlement with the TPLF as the first necessary step, even though the TPLF, which started an unprovoked war, is severely incapacitated as a result of its crushing military defeat. The negotiation should be extended to all other opposing parties, with the goal of reaching “a wider national reconciliation process” in Ethiopia G7 Foreign Ministers’ Statement on the Situation in Tigray, Ethiopia, April 2, 2021).

At first look, the proposed solution seems to be a reasonable one in that negotiations and national reconciliation are usually conducive to the restoration of national peace. Unfortunately, one has to be totally or fraudulently ignorant of the situation in Ethiopia to propose such a remedy. The proposal to negotiate with a party that is widely abhorred for its atrocities and its use of ethnicity as a divide-and-rule tactic to achieve political and economic hegemony, even though it represented a region with only 6% of the Ethiopian population, is nothing short of a dreadful slap in the face of Ethiopians. As to the inclusion of other opposing parties, their own extremist, and sometimes even secessionist, ethno-nationalist ideologies prevent them from participating in the mainstream of Ethiopian politics. So that, the proposed negotiation has no chance of succeeding, still less of reinstating peace. On the contrary, it has the potential of intensifying ethnic clashes already underway all over the country, with the result that the country will be engulfed in an uncontrollable civil war. Clearly, the Libyan tragic experience of removing a government without a viable alternative has not yet wised up Western governments.

What, then, is preventing Western governments from seeing what is but obvious for so many Ethiopians? Since the concern for humanitarian crises is not believable, there remains the geopolitical interest of the West. In the eyes of Western governments, the scenario of an expanding war to neighboring states is quite present unless the Ethiopian government agrees to settle all its disputes by means of negotiations. More importantly, these negotiations will have any chance to succeed only if they are supervised by forces that are capable of putting real pressure on all the concerned parties, like the European Union and notably the US government.

Granted the logic of the argument, the hitch is that, as already stated, the suggested negotiated solutions have zero chance of achieving the goal of peace. The solutions do not take into account that the war in Tigray as well as the various clashes in different parts of the country are caused by groups that harbor extremist ethnonationalist ideologies. It is indeed strange to assume that these groups will negotiate in good faith and will commit to be responsible members of a representative government. By contrast, the right solution, that is, the solution that arises from the existing problems, would be to strengthen the exiting government so that it prevails over these violent forces and establishes a lasting internal peace. As to the external problems, the approach to intimidate Ethiopia only encourages Egypt and Sudan to become more intransigent, and so stands in the way of negotiated settlements. In short, the unbalanced intervention of Western governments does no more than seek the capitulation of Ethiopia; it does not facilitate negotiations. 

Consider, for instance, the Ethiopian government’s unilateral decision to declare ceasefire and withdraw its troops from Tigray. One would normally expect that Western governments and media sources would welcome such a decision. Unbelievable as it may seem, not only the expectation did not materialize, but also the decision became a springboard for another round of criticisms and threats of further sanctions. The reason for this unexpected reaction springs from the Western frustration of not being obeyed: the West wanted a negotiated settlement, not a unilateral ceasefire, as it excludes the TPLF and the ethnonationalist forces. Similarly, West governments drag their feet on recognizing Abiy as the legitimate Prime Minister of Ethiopia, even though he and his party obtained a resounding victory in the recent elections that many observers considered as relatively democratic––compared to all previous elections in Ethiopia—under very difficult circumstances. The reason for this hesitation is the same: the US government posited negotiations between contending forces and the government as a precondition for the holding of the national elections, even if among the contending parties that boycotted the elections, some were and still are prone to the use of intimidation and violent methods. Raising the democratic bar to an unprecedented level for a third-world country, we heard Secretary Blinken say, “Elections . . . are not in and of themselves a sufficient marker of democracy or genuine political reform.” Had it been another country than Ethiopia, we would have heard him say that the elections, as difficult as they have been, are a step in the right direction.

The Emotional Mixture

The attitude of Western governments is all the more incomprehensible the more we recall that, until not long ago, Ethiopia was considered as an important and reliable ally of the West. What then is the added element that explains the sudden shift of Western policy toward Abiy and his government? To see that the change was indeed sudden, we just have to recall the phone conversation that Secretary Blinken had with Prime Minister Abiy on February 5, 2021, and in which he “reaffirmed the United States’ commitment to Ethiopia’s reform agenda and support for the upcoming national elections.”

We have already discarded the humanitarian concern. Geopolitical reasons are not enough to explain the change, either, since when an ally is in trouble, the expectation is that you come to its rescue. The explanation jumps out when one puts into play the terms of the partnership between Ethiopia and the West, namely, the status of Ethiopia as a junior partner. From the persistent refusal of Ethiopian authorities to abide by the terms set by the West as a condition for the peaceful resolution of the war in Tigray and of the conflicts with neighboring countries, the West drew the conclusion that the junior partner no longer wants to play by the rules. Instead of playing the cards dealt with it by the West, the junior partner has adopted the viewpoint of what it considers to be its legitimate rights and interests. Western unfair criticisms and sanctions are punishments for the naughty behavior of a junior partner.

The point is that the Western reactions and measures cannot be justified in terms of geopolitical considerations. The best that they can achieve is to weaken the Ethiopian state, which so far has been the only reliable and stabilizing force in the Horn. Moreover, such a weakening can only give free rein to ethnonationalist forces within Ethiopia itself, thereby turning the specter of a widespread civil war into an unavoidable outcome. The reckless nature of the Western resolutions and measures is so tangible that one must infer that they stem from an emotional state of mind rather than from rational deliberations, the very emotional state at being rebuffed by a junior partner. Where obedience is expected, defiance must entail punishment, and this is all the truer when the junior partner belongs to a poverty- stricken continent that falls short of the capacity needed to govern itself.

For those who contest the racist overtone of the Western measures, I simply ask them to remember that what defines racism is not so much the hatred of the other as the expectation of unconditional obedience from the person ranked as inferior. Hate requires the recognition of some measure of parity, whereas racism is more sensitive to the lack of acknowledgment of superiority. As such, racism induces sentiments like anger, irritation, and even outrage, which are reactions to the breach of required submission, that is, to the hierarchical norms governing the relations between races. My contention is that the irrational and reckless nature of the Western reactions vis-à-vis Ethiopia compels us to admit the big part played by racist indignation at seeing the defiant behavior of Ethiopian authorities. The indignation also explains the moral smugness of the West, which not only gives so easily credit to all the stories of rape, indiscriminate killings, and genocidal acts concocted by the TPLF’s supporters, but also justifies intervention in the name of the obligation of “the morally superior” to tame those who still live in barbarism. 

Share this post

23 thoughts on “The enigma of the Western crusade against Ethiopia and the insidious face of racism

  1. While I obviously think what is happening in Ethiopia is not good, there is definitely biased reporting on the part of western media houses. Often times I struggle to reconcile the truth with those reports. Those journalists never bother to speak to just ordinary people who do not have an ax to grind! Many of the BBC, Aljazeera, Reuters, New York Times reports are actually ridiculous to Ethiopians or people who really know the situation. And institutions such as Crisis Group have the right to utter pointed judgments on Ethiopia, something which they don’t do to other countries. For instance, William Davison, the so-called Ethiopia analyst at Crisis Group said a few weeks ago that the federal government ‘humanitarian’ ceasefire does not look sincere.” This is incredible. Even for him, this is low.
    https://www.ft.com/content/17e3b3a4-94e1-4537-8316-b18298f85116

  2. This is a good look at from a prof who is very familiar with the cultures and psychology of bother worlds.

    It is very eye opening moment for Ethiopians and those familiar with the HOA policies. We are now compelled to rethink some of the narratives promoted by the west and the big media outlets about those who are accused of terrorism and all that. For the vast majority of Ethiopians, Tplf is the Taliban of the HOA. No wonder how the US was sponsoring the Mujahideen movement until they started to assert their independence and the rest is history.

    Ethiopia isn’t Libiya which you can demolish with a few bombs and Missiles. Ethiopians do know who their enemy is and they never will give chance for that enemy to be their government ever again. #TPLF is a terrorist group.

    1. International media coverage about Ethiopia has been championed by the BBC. Ordinarily, BBC’s coverage on Ethiopia is relatively broad, often citing the so-called British Ethiopia experts and analysts Alex Da Waal and William Davison. (The latter grew up as a privileged youth in apartheid South Africa). There is an extra bias, given the two person’s ties with TPLF. For this reason, the BBC people did have not much effort to provide fair, balanced, objective, and impartial coverage of the crisis. BBC focused on the plight of the Tigray region and TPLF, glorifying the TPLF, whilst framing and angling a demonized Abiy Ahmed and his government. Other Western media coverage such as the Voice of America (VOA), Radio Dutchwelle (RDW), Cable News Network (CNN), Fox News followed suites.

  3. Thank you Professor.
    Please keep on uncovering truth to the international community. I feel that my country is under attack by west.
    A humble request from Addis Ababa
    Agnchew Takele

  4. The UN, EU, & USA are doing very dangerous things. Their reporting is biased. They have never blamed TPLF for anything that they did while they committed massacres and started a war again and again. On the other hand, they are blaming the federal government who is working hard to build Tigray from the ground up. The west need to understand that we are over TPLF who took billions from ethiopia. And crazy enough one of the main terrorist leader is the general head of World Health Organization Tedros Adhanom. If anyone is interested check debertsion’s(TPLF Leader) net worth, He got 320Million Dollars. We know they have the money and power to buy the media and Lobby USA Leaders.

  5. Race as the “hermeneutical key“ to understand the brouhaha from the Western capitals against Ethiopia!

  6. One thing that remains an answered is the way the western media and the West behaved in tandem, quiet synchronously. What mechanism is to explain for this collective walk in the same direction against the TRUTH – in day light for such a prolonged time. One should add the UN to this party.

  7. A well written analysis of the crisis faced in the Horn of Africa. Thank you for bringing the underlining issue to the forefront even while the main stream media chooses different.

  8. Very good article. My opinion…Ethiopia, quit looking for a fair analysis of your situation from the Western Media. I don’t care what acronym the news outlet operates under. You are not going to get a fair deal. You are on you own and you are better off for it. With all you have been through, with the friends you have had in the West and the East over the past 60 years, who needs to look for enemies. Ethiopia can work through this. Quit looking for friends at the various embassies. Look to your neighbors in Africa. Help each other. You will be glad you did. Watch you back and play as fair as you can.
    Tenastelin

  9. Thank you prof.
    You uncovered the true face of the west. An elite like you, shall unleash African youths from such evil oriented motive of the west. Africa needs its scholars badly at this particular time. African states shall come together and create one strong unit in order to challenge the impacts of globalization. Please keep up unleashing us. Regards

  10. The trouble with Ethiopians is that they preoccupy themselves too much about the coverage of their country by western media. Journalists working for the New York Times, the Guardian, and others have little or no knowledge of the country’s history, politics, and culture. They rarely speak local languages nor travel widely to understand the situation on the ground. They should not be expected to provide thorough coverage about the country, the width of topics their coverage remains limited. There are always blind spots in the coverage about the country and they are full of stereotypes. Ethiopians should try not to give too much weight to them. Why would a Ferenji tell you about your country? You are not going to explain to him or her about American or British politics.

    1. I agree with you Melonnen except to ask where Ethiopian intellectuals have gone to when irresponsible and immoral western journalists cut and paste our history to advance the agenda of a terror group!

  11. Thank you for your excellent article. The world is a Hypocrite. Why did the world shouting about human rights remain silent about the Child, minors who were armed by TPLF Junta and put on the front lines? Now we can understand how much they care about Tigray people. But no matter what, Ethiopia will win. But this is a perfect lesson to the rest of Africa.

  12. While it’s plausible that the Western media have their own agenda, it’s obvious that the Ethiopian government have their own as well. They too need to be held accountable just as TPLF for their incompetence leading up to the conflict. While you argue that negotiations won’t do much, it is the only way forward as otherwise other groups will feel abandoned and basically slaves to the federal government.

    Truth is the Ethiopian government is not always objective, quick to lash out at Western Media and not to the plight of their own citizens. One must ask: Are we being given all information from the Government or only what they feel makes them appear good?
    Until there is transparency and accountability from Abiy’s administration, then they have no moral high ground to accuse others

  13. The article basically repeats the arguments of the Ethiopian government that are based on twisting the facts. Some points: “In light of the sudden and unprovoked attack on the Ethiopian national forces…” – I understand that this is a sensible issue, but it sounds like Tigrayans had nothing to do. There were no rising tension before, no fierce anti-Tigrayan campaign, no blockade of Tigray? “Instead, the Ethiopian troops were accused of a host of violations that included the killings of innocent civilians, the rapes of women, the deliberate destruction of properties… ” – does the author mean, they did nothing and accusations are false? If they are not, what do you expect from western countries? “The 27 years of the TPLF’s horrific rule of Ethiopia” – oh, really horrific? There were problems and tensions, but the last 15 years before Abiy were rather successful for Ethiopia and marked by positive dynamics, as it has been commonly recognized. “The 547 seats in the parliament were taken by its members…” – this is funny, in the current election isn’t is more or less the same? “TPLF, which started an unprovoked war, is severely incapacitated as a result of its crushing military defeat…” the author should check the facts. And so on.

    1. ‘Horrific’, that depends for who. If you were in ‘jail Ogaden’ in crowded jails, with a dozen detainees sharing a single 10 feet by 10, then the word ‘horrific’ did not do justice. If you were close to the regime, and if you were sent on scholarship abroad, then was a wonderful time. But the question was that was for how many? Do you know what it is like to have nostalgia for the apartheid system? Apartheid was a harsh, repressive system that benefitted few.
      Your questions about what to expect from western countries, it is strange. Are you speaking on behalf of them? then to tell them to shut up their mouth.

    2. To start with, it was the TPLF itself that boasted, on its regional TV, the preemptive attack that it took against the National Defence Force on November 4, 2020. No sane nation would sit on its hands while such betrayal unfolds. Second, you said “there were problems and tensions, but the last 15 years before Abiy were rather successful for Ethiopia … as it has been commonly recognized”. It is ironic that it were the maladministration, corruption, and gross human rights abuses that led the TPLF to its demise. So in what way were the last 15 years of the TPLF successful? You may say economic development. Of course the country has seen economic developments but the economic development did not address the unemployment problem. Plus, the last five years of the TPLF were its most oppressive years in terms of freedom of expression and democratic reforms. Moreover, pure logic doesn’t support your argument. Or are you telling us that all the protests between 2014 and 2018 were carried out by overly indulged youth who were bored with the freedom, work opportunities, and full plates they were offered by the TPLF?

  14. A really great tour de force. What is sad in this politically sickening situation is the pivotal role played by “native informants” /Bandas in the US to blame the Government for TPLF’s self-inflicted wound. Ethiopians are always at war with themselves.But rape isn’t part of their cultural tradition nor deracination. One shouldn’t go too far to learn from Somali soldiers,ELF and EPLF who were engaged in a ferocious war for over decades to verify this facts. One cannot imagine in a nauseous hospital raping a patient woman who hasn’t taken a bath for weeks. This is highly unlikely given the cultural background of both Eritreans and Ethiopians. But the Imperialist propaganda and the jihadist Al-jazzera in their desperate effort to put in power the once-and-for-all toppled TPLF make this accusation for those who cared to listen to their raciest and corrosive propaganda.

Comments are closed.