January 27, 2014by Amanuel Biedemariam
On
 January 15, 2014, ESAT reported that the Ethiopian People’s 
Revolutionary Front (EPRDF) conducted organizational evaluation and 
quoted Bereket Simon, former Ethiopia’s Information Minister and new 
advisor to Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalgen, on how he characterized 
the differences amongst the EPRDF leaders during their deliberations. He
 said:
Before we replaced Revolutionary Democracy with Developmental Democracy, the Front has been divided into three groups. One group of the leadership had argued that our problem was internal and that we need to first check that, while the other group held that our problem was Shabia/Eritrea and that we need to fight them first, but the third position which said that after fighting Shabia/Eritrea, we should then look at our internal problems had become the winning idea.
According to the statement, the 
EPRDF is no longer a Revolutionary Democracy. It is now Developmental 
Democracy (whatever that means). In order to come up to that 
determination however, the group was divided to three camps but the 
final outcome was a decision to fight “Shaebia/Eritrea” as a primary 
focus and address their issues later.
The irony, 
one prerequisite to development or any progress for any nation is peace.
 When a nation ensures relative peace then there is a foundation for 
progress. The decision by the EPRDF to “Fight Shaebia/Eritrea” as a 
prerequisite to their developmental democracy is simply absurd, 
laughable and dangerous at the same time.
After a 15 year period 
that started with a border war and morphed into the current so called 
No-War No- Peace strategy; the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front 
(TPLF/EPRDF) decided to continue on the same path albeit with a 
dressed-up name. The question is, at what cost? Who paid for it 
initially? Who is responsible for the last 15 years? The TPLF evaluation
 did not entertain peace with Eritrea; does that mean they have no 
intention to make peace with Eritrea ever? Furthermore, on what grounds 
does Ethiopia’s current regime, the TPLF/EPRDF is trying to continue the
 path of hostility? What is the ultimate goal? How will Eritrea deal 
with the intransigent TPLF? And ultimately, what constituency of 
Ethiopia will support this intransigence?
Moreover, how did 
Ethiopia do without peace with Eritrea? Could it have done better?   How
 have the people of Ethiopia and Eritrea fared? Is the past 15 years a 
model by which two neighboring countries should conduct their affairs 
for the future? Who pays for all these? Who paid for the past?
The
 key question, why did Bereket Simon come-out now and made these absurd 
statements? Moreover, why now, when many particularly the US, for the 
first time in over 15 years is talking peace did Bereket Simon roll-out 
this war agenda? The questions are endless.
The answer to all 
these questions are found on a statement one astute Eritrean political 
figure made a while back. When asked to respond about outrageous 
repeated statements by the TPLF against Eritrea, he answered, “When a 
dog barks uncontrollably disturbing peace, the best option is to talk to
 the owners of the dog.”
There are three key reasons why Bereket Simon decided to come out and declared the continuation of the hostilities.
1)
 The current chatter that the US is on the verge reestablishing ties 
with Eritrea is a concern and they are crying for some attention. They 
want to make sure that the US does not abandon them. Ambassador David 
Shinn’s comment that we will not have relations with Eritrea at the 
expense of our important ally Ethiopia is designed to do just that; 
allay concerns. That however, is not working because the reaction to 
Ambassador Shinn has been very harsh.
2)
 Improved Eritrea US relations are a serious concern for the pocket 
books of the minority regime. Ethiopia has provided boots for the West 
that funds its military. In turn the TPLF controls its army with the 
billions in funding received from the West specifically the US by using 
it as incentive. Those who are loyal are rewarded by assignments on 
peacekeeping missions for lucrative pay. That means there is a security 
dimension to it as well because the funds pacify multi ethnic military 
that could turn on them.
3) Peace is 
the greatest threat to the very existence of the TPLF/EPRDF. Therefore, 
they must perpetuate these conflicts particularly with Eritrea. The TPLF
 is using the border issue to control the people of Ethiopia by 
misleading them as if the border is a negotiating ploy hence continues 
the declared No-Peace No-War agenda indefinitely.
Time the enemy
The
 TPLF/EPRDF has run out of time. There has been tremendous regional and 
global changes that lead to change of attitude and approach in dealing 
with the countries of the region. Their strategy to subdue Eritrea 
failed. To the contrary all economic signals indicate that Eritrea is 
forging ahead independently. The US waited for over a decade and half to
 bring regime change in Eritrea using Ethiopia and failed.
China’s
 influence in the region is forcing changes on US Africa policy. The 
changes on Western global Geo-Strategic shift away from Middle East to 
Asia plays a factor. Military and other budget cuts in the US will 
certainly affect changes. In addition, the death of Meles Zenawi and, 
the power transition that ensued has created a precarious power- sharing
 leadership arrangement that generated a great deal of uncertainty.
Moreover,
 countries in the region are working for their interests diligently. 
Recent activities by countries in the region particularly Egypt, Sudan 
and Eritrea are something to pay attention to for many reasons.
To Conclude
The
 US holds the key to Eritrea Ethiopia future relations simply because 
Ethiopia as a client state and dependent on US for political, 
diplomatic, economic, food and military support/aid is amenable to US 
demands. Thus, when and if the US decides it is on the best interest of 
the US for the TPLF to create peace with Eritrea then there will be no 
choice left but to acquiesce to US demands. That is the reality.
The
 question however remains, after paying dear lives of over 20,000 
Eritrean souls, thousands more wounded; after having millions displaced;
 after decades of hostility that impacted families negatively in many 
ways; in short, after Eritrea paid the price with dear blood why on 
earth will the people of Eritrea throw a lifeline to the TPLF? Will 
they?
That simply means the neck of the TPLF is on the table. The 
US is at a critical point where they have to make a choice whether to 
save Ethiopia or the TPLF. When an organization with no constituency and
 according to Bereket Simon not clear about the future-direction of the 
nation  decide to place their fate on hostilities with a neighboring 
country Eritrea; the US has a lot to worry about.  When the perception 
remains Bereket Simon is the key figure rendering Prime Minister 
Hailmariam Desalegne as a figurehead, the US has a lot to worry about. 
Is TPLF/EPRDF Ethiopia?  These are some sticky points. Ambassador David 
Shinn tried to address these conundrum but no takers. He said,
“Although
 the United States might decide to try again to improve relations with 
Eritrea, it will not do so at the expense of its ties with Ethiopia.”
The
 statement above said Ethiopia, not TPLF/EPRDF. The US is cognizant of 
these complexities. The US at this stage is desperate to save Ethiopia 
because the current states of affairs are unsustainable.
Ambassador
 Hank Cohen’s approach is therefore commendable as he is trying to 
thread a thin line to save a nation from embedded 
ethnic-political-system that can spell disaster with long term 
consequences for the region and US long term interests.
Eritrea therefore holds the key.
Awetnnayu@hotmail.com

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