Tuesday, 23 June 2026

Brewing Crisis on Red Sea and Horn of Africa

While global markets remain focused on the Strait of Hormuz and the economic fallout from the US-Israel war on Iran, another geopolitical risk is quietly developing along a different but equally important maritime corridor — the Red Sea and the Horn of Africa.

The region has historically been a crossroads of competition, conflict, and strategic interests. Today, rising tensions between Ethiopia, its northern Tigray region, and Eritrea are reviving concerns that a fragile peace could unravel. The Horn of Africa has endured decades of instability, and any renewed confrontation could create a new security challenge at a time when the world economy is already facing multiple disruptions.

The risks extend beyond national borders. Ethiopia’s internal challenges, Eritrea’s strategic ambitions, and the continuing civil war in Sudan are creating overlapping crises that could draw in regional and external powers. What begins as a local dispute can quickly evolve into a broader geopolitical contest when it involves a region located next to one of the world’s most important shipping routes.

The Red Sea is not merely a regional waterway; it is a lifeline of global commerce. Connecting the Indian Ocean with the Mediterranean through the Suez Canal, it carries a significant portion of international trade, including critical energy shipments and container traffic. Any disruption to ports, shipping lanes, or maritime infrastructure would add further pressure to global supply chains already strained by geopolitical uncertainty.

The timing makes the situation even more concerning. The world is already watching developments around the Strait of Hormuz, another vital energy corridor. A simultaneous crisis affecting both routes could create a serious challenge for energy markets, increase freight costs, raise insurance premiums, and intensify inflationary pressures.

For policymakers and businesses, the message is clear - geopolitical risks are no longer confined to battlefields; they directly influence markets, trade flows, and economic stability. The experience of recent years has shown that supply chains can be disrupted rapidly when strategic chokepoints come under pressure.

The Red Sea crisis may not yet dominate global headlines, but ignoring early warning signals could prove costly. In an interconnected world, stability in distant regions has become a direct economic interest for every nation.

The storm clouds gathering over the Horn of Africa deserve attention before they become another global crisis.

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