Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – October 9, 2025: Ethiopia has formally accused neighboring Eritrea of actively preparing for military conflict in collusion with opposition forces, marking a dangerous escalation in Horn of Africa tensions centered on control of the Red Sea. The accusations, contained in a letter to UN Secretary-General António Guterres dated October 2, represent the latest chapter in a deteriorating relationship between two nations whose rivalry now threatens regional stability.
Foreign Minister Gedion Timothewos alleged that Eritrea has formed a military alliance dubbed “Tsimdo” with hardline elements of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), claiming both actors are “actively preparing to wage war against Ethiopia”. The letter specifically accuses Eritrea and TPLF commanders of directing armed groups including the Fano militia, which has been conducting offensives aimed at capturing strategic towns in Ethiopia’s Amhara region.
Geopolitical Stakes Beyond Border Disputes
The Ethiopia-Eritrea standoff reflects broader geopolitical fault lines across the Red Sea, where competing global powers have established military footholds. Djibouti hosts foreign military bases from the United States, France, Japan, China, and Italy, making it the only country in the world with at least five to eight foreign military installations. This militarization transforms local disputes into proxy theaters for great power competition.
Ethiopia’s push for Red Sea access represents both economic necessity and strategic vulnerability for Africa’s second-most populous nation. With a population of approximately 135 million people as of 2025, Ethiopia has been landlocked since Eritrea’s 1993 independence. The country spends between $1.5 billion and $2 billion annually in logistics costs through Djibouti’s ports, creating economic dependency that Ethiopian leaders view as unsustainable.
The timing coincides with intensifying global competition over Red Sea shipping lanes. Approximately 30 percent of global container trade transits through the Suez Canal via the Red Sea, making the Bab el-Mandeb strait—controlled by Eritrea and Djibouti—one of the world’s most strategic chokepoints. Recent Houthi attacks have demonstrated the vulnerability of this route, with shipping volumes dropping by over 50 percent in early 2024.
Regional Fractures and Military Escalation
The TPLF’s alleged involvement adds complexity to regional dynamics. The organization, which dominated Ethiopian politics for three decades before being sidelined in 2018, split following its 2022 peace agreement with Addis Ababa. One faction led by Getachew Reda works with the federal government, while another under Debretsion Gebremichael allegedly coordinates with Eritrea through the “Tsimdo” alliance.
Ethiopian government sources claim this alliance has directly supported Fano militia operations, particularly around the strategic town of Woldia in North Wollo. Recent fighting has intensified significantly, with Fano attacks increasing more than threefold between July and September 2025 compared to the same period in 2023. The Ethiopian National Defense Forces have responded with drone strikes and ground operations to counter these offensives.
Ethiopia’s letter warns that its military’s current “defensive posture” should not be mistaken for permanent restraint, stating “the policy is not one of indefinite restraint”. This language indicates growing frustration in Addis Ababa with what officials describe as Eritrea’s “decades-old effort to destabilize Ethiopia”.
The accusations represent Ethiopia’s second formal complaint to the UN about Eritrea in 2025, following a July letter to then-Secretary of State Marco Rubio accusing Asmara of similar destabilizing activities. However, current U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, confirmed in January 2025, has not yet publicly responded to these regional tensions.
The stakes extend beyond bilateral relations. A renewed Ethiopia-Eritrea conflict would destabilize the entire Horn of Africa, potentially creating refugee crises and disrupting vital shipping lanes through which 14 percent of global maritime trade passes. Previous border wars between these nations from 1998 to 2000 killed tens of thousands and left lasting regional trauma.
Ethiopia’s pursuit of “peaceful” sea access through “institutionalized economic integration” faces the reality that Eritrea views any Ethiopian maritime presence as a direct threat to its sovereignty. Meanwhile, the broader Red Sea region remains militarized by competing global powers positioning themselves regardless of local outcomes.
As Foreign Minister Gedion concluded in his UN letter, Ethiopia remains committed to pursuing sea access through peaceful means while warning that “Eritrea presents its hostile acts as preemptive defensive measures” to justify destabilization efforts. This diplomatic language barely conceals underlying tensions between two nations whose rivalry increasingly reflects broader great power competition across one of the world’s most strategic waterways.