Jump to navigation

Djibouti

US military influence faces growing pressure

President Biden seeks Kenya’s support in the region as he withdraws troops from Niger and the Gaza war complicates America’s presence in Djibouti

The influence of the United States and its military base in Djibouti is likely to be a hot topic for President Joe Biden during Kenyan President William Ruto’s state visit to the White House this week.

After agreeing with the military junta in Niger to withdraw its contingent of 1,000 troops by mid-September, the US base in Djibouti, Camp Lemonnier, home to more than 5,000 deployed service members, and to the US Africa Command, will assume greater importance. However, the US base exists along with a plethora of international players (AC Vol 58 No 7, Saudi wants one too).

The US military presence in Djibouti has been complicated by the war in Gaza. President Ismail Omar Guelleh’s government is walking a diplomatic tightrope to retain its neutrality since the Israel-Hamas conflict tipped into nearby waters. In the meantime, the Djiboutian government has had close relations with the European Union’s rival Operation Aspides, which was set up as a sign of disassociation from the US-led operation against the Houthis known as Prosperity Guardian.

Guelleh’s government has warned Washington not to use its territory to confront Houthi militants in the Red Sea despite missiles fired by Houthi militants from Yemen at commercial ships in the Red Sea falling close to Djibouti’s coast.

The Yemeni militant group controls much of the north of the country and part of its Red Sea coast. Several of the group’s officials have claimed in recent weeks that it will attack US interests or military forces in Djibouti, Eritrea or Somalia.

The biggest issue facing the White House in the Red Sea is not the Houthi threat but the Biden administration’s isolation. Biden will likely look for Ruto’s support and leverage with a fellow East African state.



Related Articles

Saudi wants one too

Saudi Arabia looks certain to join the growing band of nations with military bases in Djibouti, Africa Confidential can reveal. On 12 July, Deputy Chief of General Staff of the Sau...


One man, one vote

Once again President Guelleh will win an election with no credible opposition and his Western allies will continue to operate discreetly in his country

Moves by the ruling Rassemblement populaire pour le progrès to squash opposition protests, coupled with the expulsion of an electoral observation group, Democracy International (DI...


Transatlantic tryst

Clinton's White House and Mandela's Tuynhuys have a special relationship

Washington now has closer relations with the African National Congress government than with any other in Africa, including the governments of Egypt and Morocco. The institutionali...


Senate for Morocco

About a month after the United States Senate passed a bill that, very unusually, affects the disputed territory of Western Sahara, Washington lobbyists Gray Global Advisors reveale...


Guelleh quells opponents

Human rights campaigners and a main opposition party are targeted by a severe crackdown overseen by President Ismaïl Omar Guelleh amid apparent international indifference.