David Styan
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Djibouti - Bridging the Gulf of Aden?
Balancing ports, patronage and military bases between Yemen’s war and the Horn
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This chapter examines intra-Gulf rivalry in the Red Sea and Horn of Africa through the prism of Djibouti’s foreign policy. As a member of the Arab League how does one of Africa’s smallest states defy diplomatic gravity; balancing intra-Arab regional competition alongside diverse local logistical and political pressures within the Horn of Africa; as well as global rivalry between US and Chinese naval powers? The text argues that part of the answer reflects the manner in which Djibouti’s leaders have generated political capital and lucrative rents from intensifying superpower surveillance of shipping lanes; piracy and Islamists in neighbouring Yemen and Somalia. Djibouti now hosts military bases of the US; China; Japan; France and the European Union. Recent Chinese rail and port projects consolidated Djibouti as the fulcrum of Asian; Arab and western commercial rivalry and geostrategic cohabitation in the region.

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The Gulf States and the Horn of Africa

Interests, influences and instability

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