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The article “Two Arteries, One Lifeline: Somaliland and Taiwan Talk Maritime Cooperation” argues that Somaliland and Taiwan are strengthening their relationship, particularly in maritime cooperation, as a strategic response to security threats posed by China.

Here’s a breakdown:

Shared Situation: Both Somaliland and Taiwan face challenges to their sovereignty and are not widely recognized as independent states. They see their relationship as a way to bolster their own positions.

Strategic Locations: Both are located near crucial maritime trade routes: Somaliland near the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, and Taiwan near the Taiwan Strait. These waterways are vital for global commerce.

China’s Threat: The article accuses China of undermining both Somaliland and Taiwan. It claims China supports rebels in Somaliland and exerts military and diplomatic pressure on Taiwan, attempting to isolate them internationally.

Maritime Cooperation: The core of the article focuses on the potential for increased maritime cooperation between Somaliland and Taiwan. A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) is being discussed, suggesting formal collaboration on maritime security and trade.

US Involvement: The article mentions potential U.S. involvement, suggesting the Trump administration is in talks with both Somaliland and Taiwan to counter China’s influence in the region. The Somali president’s request to “handover” the Berbera port to Washington is noted.

Sovereignty at Stake: The author emphasizes that the struggles of Somaliland and Taiwan are part of a larger global trend where the concept of state sovereignty is being challenged, and the stability of the international system is under threat.

Maritime Trade and China’s Debt-Trap Diplomacy: China’s debt-trap diplomacy in the Red Sea disrupts Western economic interests, secures China’s commercial and military interests in the Horn of Africa, whilst threatening to cut off Taiwan sovereignty via buying-out African states, with the exception of Somaliland.

In essence, the article frames the Somaliland-Taiwan relationship as a strategic alliance against Chinese aggression, emphasizing the importance of their locations for global trade and security, and highlighting the broader issue of sovereignty in a changing world order.

The complete piece is as follows:

Two Arteries, One Lifeline: Somaliland and Taiwan Talk Maritime Cooperation

Somaliland and Taiwan deepen ties amid Chinese pressure, defending sovereignty and maritime trade routes from Red Sea to East Asia.

By Gus Anderson 

Taiwan and Somaliland share more in common than one would understand.

Both states leverage their relationship with state actors, across two maritime arteries as a counterweight to security threats posed by China.

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In an era of international relations, where state sovereignty is on life support, the case for self-determination without external interference couldn’t be more relevant.

The Global Commons Flow Via Two Arteries

The Bab el-Mandeb and Taiwan Strait remain two of the most geostrategic maritime routes for trade and global security. The exchange of goods and the security of their trade routes can only be secure if state sovereignty is respected.

Sovereignty Under Threat: Bab el-Mandeb and Taiwan Straits

Yet what we see in today’s world is the misuse of power for imperial ambitions, whether by Beijing in the South China Sea and its bid to quell Somaliland self-determination, or Mogadishu with its ‘claims’ to Berbera port.

Either way, Beijing harnesses military and diplomatic pressure to keep the process of international recognition in limbo.

Just last week, Beijing reportedly cut undersea communication cables surrounding Taiwan whilst reports confirm Beijing’s ongoing support for SSC-Khatumo rebels in Somaliland’s eastern region of Sool, in response to Somaliland-Taiwanese ties since July 2020.

In similar fashion, the Somali President, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamed, wrote to U.S. President Donald Trump about Mogadishu’s “handover” of Berbera port to Washington as a means of countering “external threats.”

Ironically, talk of external threats, a.k.a China… one of Mogadishu’s foreign backers, threatens Somalia’s own sovereignty whilst the regime has no legal sovereignty over Somaliland: in fact, Somaliland sits outside of Somalia’s federal state structure.

This dichotomy, sovereignty versus annexation, represents what is at stake.

Two Arteries, One Lifeline, Somaliland and Taiwan Talk Maritime CooperationSecurity of Maritime Trade 

Both maritime passages account for high levels of global trade for the U.S., Europe, and BRICS: specifically, China, the United Arab of Emirates, and Iran.

According to the World Bank, 30% of global trade passes via the Bab el-Mandeb per annum whilst 24% of Chinese, Emirati, and Iranian exports (p.a.) pass through the Taiwan Strait.

Chinese capital investment in Djibouti, Eritrea, and now Somalia contributes to China’s debt-trap diplomacy model with Chinese-owned ports, such as Doraleh port in Djibouti, raking in significant profits from transit fees as smaller Chinese shipping firms launch new routes to capitalize on higher rates because of the Houthis’ ‘Al-Aqsa’ campaign.

Therefore, China’s tacit debt-trap diplomacy of Red Sea states disrupt Western economic interests, secure China’s commercial and military interests in the Horn of Africa, whilst threatening to cut off Taiwan sovereignty via buying-out African states, with the exception of Somaliland.

All Roads Lead to the White House: Trump, Hargeisa, and Taipei

Amidst Trump’s review of U.S. policy in the Horn of Africa, talks are ongoing between the White House, Hargeisa, and Taipei.

Undisclosed reports suggest ongoing talks between Somaliland officials and the Trump administration as Somaliland’s Foreign Minister, Abdirahman Dahir Adan, arrives back in Hargeisa soon whilst President Irro is set to return to Abu Dhabi in coming weeks. 

Simultaneously, diplomatic sources, in Hargeisa, told the Daily Euro Times of deepening cooperation between Hargeisa and Taipei with a scheduled delegation to visit Hargeisa ahead of the Taiwanese Foreign Minister in the coming months. This comes as the Somaliland Ambassador to Taiwan, Mahmoud Adam Jama Galaal, arrived in Taipei last week, in the first set of meetings to deepen relations and prepare for a deeper bilateral agreement penciled in soon.

Two Arteries, One Lifeline, Somaliland and Taiwan Talk Maritime CooperationBilateral Relations Set to Deepen in 2025

Ties date back to 2020, when Taipei and Hargeisa made relations official, yet current discussions should be put in context.

Taiwanese-Somaliland relations are a crucial node of support in D.C. amongst Democrats and Republicans, some of which are ‘China hawks’, or hardcore neoconservative realists interested in one thing only: American business.

According to diplomatic sources close to the Foreign Ministry, a Memorandum of Understanding is in the early stages of development with bilateral cooperation on maritime cooperation possible.

Beijing’s reaction to any such MoU could be significant as Beijing ratches up military pressure on Taipei whilst extending its diplomatic support for Mogadishu and secessionist militia fighters in eastern Somaliland.

Only Eswatini and Somaliland hold official relations with Taiwan whilst Chinese lobbying, under the Belt and Road Initiative, has courted African states to cut off contact with Taipei.

Following the visit by Taiwan’s deputy foreign minister, François Chihchung Wu, who visited Somaliland to attend the inauguration of the newly elected president, Abdirahman Irro, China’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Mao Ning, urged all parties to “uphold the one-China principle” whilst referring to Mogadishu’s “territorial unity”. 

Two Arteries, One Lifeline, Somaliland and Taiwan Talk Maritime CooperationStrategic Small State Diplomacy: Maritime Trade & Security

Taipei’s talks with Hargeisa are strategic in nature, as two unrecognized yet autonomous states in the international community deepen collaboration amidst wider attacks on state sovereignty, bound by Chinese-backed aggression.

Ongoing discussions between D.C., Hargeisa, and Taipei will determine the future of state sovereignty for small states in a world upended by a wave of unilateralism.

Somaliland recognition, alongside deeper cooperation with its East Asian ally, offers a real defense for sovereignty at a time when it is under threat.

Existential Threat: Sovereignty

Recognition of Somaliland and Taiwan represents something much bigger than inter-state competition and national interests.

Sovereignty, as a mainstay of state security, is very much on trial and with it the stability of the international system.

This article was written by the Editor-in-Chief of The Daily Euro Times, Gus Anderson. 

Diplomatic sources used in this article that refer to bilateral relations between Somaliland and Taiwan, are confidential.


Author

Gus Anderson

The Editor-in-Chief of the Daily Euro Times. Gus has worked as MENA Editor for The Oxford Diplomatic Dispatch, Editor for The Palestine-Israel Journal (East Jerusalem), Arab Institute for Security Studies (Jordan), and Pamela Steele Associates (Kenya). Gus has a keen interest in the Arabic language, rentier state theory, and GCC diversification strategies. Gus holds a MPhil in Modern Middle Eastern studies, with Arabic (Fusha & Levantine), from the University of Oxford.