By Mustafa al-Labbad Translated from As-Safir (Lebanon).
In the coming years, Egypt and Ethiopia may be forced to fight a 
“water war” because Ethiopia’s ambitions contradict Egypt’s historical 
and legal rights in the Nile waters. Ethiopia can only be deterred by 
the regional and international balance of powers, which in recent years 
has favored Ethiopia.
For any Egyptian government, Egypt’s water share and securing the 
Nile’s headwaters are the top national security priorities, irrespective
 of the Egyptian government’s ideology or domestic policies. This fact 
is dictated by geography. For thousands of years, Egyptian rulers have 
been aware how important water is for Egypt. Water is the lifeline of 
Egypt (97.5% of Egypt is barren desert). Egyptian rulers have always 
used any means to defend their country’s historic rights to the Nile 
waters. As Greek historian Herodotus said, “Egypt is the gift of the 
Nile.” Egyptian civilization, which is one of history’s greatest 
civilizations, depends on the Nile. 
To illustrate the Nile’s importance,
 we should remember that Egypt is the largest desert oasis in the world.
 Life in Egypt is concentrated on the river banks where 90 million 
people live. In short, any Egyptian government should have one eye on 
the Horn of Africa — on Ethiopia, where the source of the Nile lies — 
and another eye on the Sinai Peninsula and the Levant, and the balance 
of power there. History has shown that most of Egypt’s invaders entered 
through that door.
Egypt’s sentries against the country’s internal and external foes 
have been sleeping on the job. Their first eye failed to notice the 
developments at the Blue Nile’s source in Ethiopia (the Blue Nile 
constitutes 86% and the White Nile 14% of the Nile water volume. The two
 tributaries meet in Sudan before flowing to Egypt). Their second eye 
had lost the ability to distinguish friend from foe. Now, with the 
worsening economic crisis and the political deterioration between the 
ruling Muslim Brotherhood and
 the opposition, the balance of power is more and more tilting toward 
Ethiopia, which may unilaterally increase its water usage. That will 
affect Egypt’s historic rights of the Nile water and cause a serious 
threat.
In the report below, we will try to shed light on the Nile conflict 
and on why Ethiopia’s negotiating position toward Egypt has improved. We
 will end with a recommendation.
The conflict over the Nile waters
The two groups fighting over the right waters are as follows: the 
first group are the downstream countries, it includes Egypt and Sudan. 
The other group are the upstream countries which includes Ethiopia, 
Eritrea, Uganda, Congo, Burundi, Tanzania, Southern Sudan, Rwanda and 
Kenya.
Egypt depends on the Nile River for 95% of its water needs for 
drinking, agriculture and electricity generation. The growing Egyptian 
population is increasingly dependent on Nile water. Egypt has historical
 rights to these waters under the Nile Water Agreement signed
 with Britain in 1929. It gave Egypt the right to veto any project in 
upstream countries affecting Egypt’s share of water flowing to it. It is
 worth mentioning that the 1929 agreement is binding for the three 
upstream countries — Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda — on the grounds that 
Britain, which colonized these countries, was their legal representative
 and could sign binding international agreements on their behalf.
Egypt codified its legal status in an agreement with Sudan in 1959. 
The agreement gave Cairo 55.5 billion cubic meters of water (or 66% of 
the total water flow), which would go to the Aswan Dam, and Sudan 
received 18.5 billion cubic meters (22%). The remainder, 12%, is lost to
 evaporation.
The downstream countries argue that they were not a party to those 
agreements at the time, and therefore do not recognize their legitimacy.
 The upstream countries want to modify the water-sharing agreement and 
keep more of the water by building dams, which will directly affect the 
water share of the downstream states, Egypt and Sudan.
The problem is compounded by the projected large population increase 
in the Nile basin. The UN projects that the population in the 11 basin 
states will reach 860 million people by 2050. This is pressuring both 
sides to try to improve their positions in the conflict over the Nile 
waters.
In May 2010, Ethiopia drafted the Entebbe Agreement to modify the 
historical and legal basis for the sharing of water. Most upstream 
countries supported the agreement but Egypt and Sudan refused it. It is 
true that the Entebbe Agreement is not legally binding for Egypt and 
Sudan, but it does show that Ethiopia is aware of the balance of power 
and its ambition to impose facts on the ground regarding the 
construction of dams, which will necessarily affect Egypt’s share in the
 Nile waters and thus represent an existential threat to Egypt. It is 
true that Ethiopia cannot force Cairo to sign, but the Entebbe Agreement
 shows that a major crisis between Cairo and Addis Ababa is on the way. 
What follows is an explanation of the Ethiopian diplomatic attack on 
Egypt and Sudan.
The geopolitical framework strengthens Ethiopia’s position
In recent years, the geopolitical framework has clearly shifted in 
Ethiopia’s favor, and it shifted the balance of power between Ethiopia 
and Egypt. The geopolitical changes that favor Ethiopia can be seen in 
six key indicators:
First, the disintegration of Somalia,
 Ethiopia’s traditional rival with which it fought a tough war over the 
Ogaden region, removed the geopolitical balance facing Ethiopia’s 
political ambitions in the region. Ethiopia exploited Somalia’s 
disintegration to strengthen its regional presence in the Horn of 
Africa. For years, Ethiopia has been “fighting terrorism” emerging from 
Somalia. Ethiopia has been doing that under an American umbrella from 
2006 to 2009 and then again since 2011 until now.
The second indicator is represented by the partition of Sudan into 
two states: Sudan and South Sudan. That development has weakened Sudan 
(and thus Egypt) in the Horn of Africa and allowed Ethiopia to 
participate, since 2012, in the UN peacekeeping forces in the Abyei 
region, which is disputed between Sudan and South Sudan.
The third indicator is the following: the weakening of Sudan has 
shifted the balance of power in Ethiopia’s favor. The crisis in Darfur 
and the international isolation of the Sudanese president (an
 international arrest warrant was issued against him by the 
International Court of Justice in The Hague in 2009) has significantly 
limited Khartoum’s ability to maneuver in the Nile conflict.
The fourth indicator is the improved relationship between Ethiopia 
and the West in general, and between Ethiopia and the US in particular, 
after Addis Ababa emerged as a reliable partner in the Horn of Africa. 
Every year, Ethiopia gets $4 billion in military, development and food 
assistance. But the matter is not limited to direct aid. The West has 
started looking at Ethiopia differently in regard to development 
projects, such as the construction of dams in Ethiopia. The West had 
opposed such projects for decades because they were considered a threat 
to regional security.
The fifth indicator is about China. China is Ethiopia’s primary trade
 partner and Beijing has expressed willingness to finance a dam 
construction in Ethiopia and offered Chinese expertise in building large
 dams. China wishes to have a foothold in the region. There is oil in 
South Sudan and the Congo has mineral resources.
The sixth indicator is the weakening of Egypt’s political weight in 
the Horn of Africa. Egypt has no role in Somalia and was not even a key 
party in the negotiations between Sudan and South Sudan. Egypt’s 
preoccupation with internal matters is weakening its ability to confront
 regional and international players, such as China.
 Even though Egypt is
 the biggest market for Chinese goods among the 11 basin countries, 
China has favored other considerations over Egyptian priorities and 
Egypt’s rights in the Nile waters. So much so that China has offered its
 technological expertise in constructing dams, which is a complete 
disregard to Egyptian rights. What will Egypt do about all that? Only 
God knows.
A recommendation
In the coming years, Egypt and Ethiopia may be forced to fight a 
“water war” because Ethiopia’s ambitions contradict Egypt’s historical 
and legal rights in river waters. Ethiopia can only be deterred by the 
regional and international balance of powers, which in recent years has 
favored Ethiopia.
The government of Hisham Qandil (an
 irrigation expert, not a diplomat, legal expert or strategist) seems 
unable to manage such a complex issue with legal, political, economic, 
military and international aspects. His government is unable to solve 
everyday problems that are less complex, such as security, traffic, and 
fuel and food supplies. This portends dire consequences for Egypt.
What is needed is a way to manage the crisis and use Egyptian soft 
power toward Ethiopia, especially the Coptic Orthodox Church, which is 
the Ethiopian Church’s mother church. It is necessary to form a fixed 
Egyptian team to manage this highly sensitive issue. The team should go 
beyond party affiliation and include leading Egyptian Nile specialists. 
Ideological or religious affiliation should not be a factor in choosing 
that Egyptian crisis team. What is important should be the capabilities 
and competencies of the team members, who will come from the “clay” of 
the country, not from a particular group, party or political current. 
Clay, to those who don’t know, is what Egyptians call their country’s 
soil, which is a fertile soil resulting from the mixing with the Nile 
water.
Will Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi realize the seriousness of the
 situation and deal with that issue as a major national matter and 
quickly implement the required policies and procedures, or will he 
hesitate, as usual, and go down in history as someone who squandered the
 historic rights of Egypt and its future generations?
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