Top image credit: Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar and Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi participate in a joint press conference during Saar's visit to Somaliland on January 6, 2026. (Screengrab via X)
Israel’s push for Somaliland base raises fears of wider war
March 12, 2026
Bloomberg reported Wednesday that Israel is in talks with Somaliland officials to form a strategic security partnership, which might include granting Israel access to a military base or other security installation along the Somaliland coast from which it can launch attacks against Yemen’s Houthi rebels.
With war raging in the Middle East, the Horn of Africa is a particularly important geoeconomic and geopolitical puzzle piece. Its location near the Bab el-Mandeb strait, which connects ships traveling through the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean, makes it a strategic location from the perspective of global shipping, 10% to 12% of which travels through the strait annually.
For Israel, Somaliland’s strategic importance stems from its close proximity to Yemen. Israeli military officials have long sought to destroy the capability of Houthi rebels to attack Israel as well as its assets in the region. The Houthis’ aggression has grown since the start of the Gaza war in October 2023; the group has conducted nearly 500 attacks against ships and against Israel in the years since.
Although the Houthis have thus far stayed out of the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, the group’s close relationship with Iran — from which it receives arms, military equipment, and training — keeps it in Israel’s crosshairs.
News of Israeli-Somaliland security talks comes less than three months after Israel became the first country in the world to recognize Somaliland’s independence, which has been contested by Somalia ever since the breakaway region claimed full sovereignty in 1991. Upon Israel’s recognition on December 26, Somalia’s president claimed, without evidence, that the normalization of relations between Israel and Somaliland came with a quid pro quo to open an Israeli military base on Somaliland soil.
In an interview with Bloomberg, Somaliland’s minister of the presidency denied that any negotiations had occurred between his country and Israel on the question of a military base, but didn’t close the door to the possibility of one. “We haven’t discussed with them if [the security partnership] becomes a military base, but definitely there will be an analysis at some point,” said Minister Khadar Hussein Abdi.
An Israeli military base or other security presence on Somaliland would risk significantly expanding the war in the Middle East to the fragile Horn of Africa region, which is already home to plenty of factionalization, armed violence, and proxy conflicts.
Alliances are forming on the question of Somaliland’s independence, with the United Arab Emirates joining Israel in supporting the breakaway state (though the UAE still doesn’t recognize it). Some experts say the UAE — which built and operates the commercial-military Berbera port on the coast of Somaliland — helped facilitate this recognition. Turkey, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, have thrown their support behind Somalia, including through security arrangements and arms sales. Turkey’s largest base outside its own territory is in the Somali capital of Mogadishu.
Questions now abound over whether the United States might also recognize Somaliland independence, something President Trump has reportedly contemplated, and a policy position being pushed in Washington by a Somaliland lobby, as reported by Drop Site.
Beyond Somalia’s intense disagreement with Somaliland over the latter’s independence, the Somali government is also in a decades-long fight against the al-Qaeda affiliate al-Shabaab, which has made some territorial gains in recent months. Since the presidency of George W. Bush, the United States has engaged in heavy counterterrorism activity in Somalia, and President Trump has conducted more air strikes on the country than his three predecessors combined.
Meanwhile, directly to the west, Ethiopia and Eritrea are preparing for what could be another military confrontation between the two.
Neighboring Sudan, meanwhile, is in the middle of a brutal civil war that has forced the displacement of 14 million people, more than any other current conflict in the world. This civil war has become a major proxy conflict, with different African and Middle Eastern players supporting opposite sides. South Sudan is also at risk of returning to civil war, as violence between the government and opposition forces intensifies; the latest clash in early March left at least 169 people dead.
Extending Israel’s military presence to Somaliland is only likely to exacerbate these already intense regional crises and proxy conflicts, and bring the widening Middle East war to African soil.
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Iranian-Americans in the age of Trump, the Travel Ban, and the Threat of War
Most Iranian Americans want diplomacy with Iran: poll
March 11, 2026
Recent data released by the National Iranian American Council (NIAC) suggests that a strong majority of Iranian Americans support diplomacy to resolve tensions between the U.S. and Iran — a finding at odds with the dominant conversation online suggesting that most Iranian Americans are in favor of the Iran war.
The data was collected through a survey of 505 Iranian Americans conducted by Zogby Analytics between Feb. 27 and March 5. Among the most notable results were that a clear majority of Iranian Americans — 61.6% — support diplomacy to move toward de-escalation and a negotiated path forward.

“If anything, a lot of people were surprised because they thought Iranian Americans overwhelmingly favored this war,” NIAC president Jamal Abdi said in a Wednesday press briefing. “In fact, it is divided in half. There was really no mandate for the war.”
As Abdi noted, the survey results show that Iranian Americans were nearly evenly divided on whether the U.S. should have initiated war with Iran, with 49.3% opposing the attacks and 48.9% supporting them.
Those who oppose the war are primarily concerned with harm inflicted on innocent civilians and the potential for further destabilization of the country, while those in support hope the war will make regime change more likely and reduce threats imposed by Iran’s nuclear program, according to the poll.

During the press briefing, Abdi also said that prominent Iranian Americans have attempted to “shape public perceptions about this war” by “proclaiming that war is the only path that anybody who disagrees is an Iran regime lobbyist.”
The reality is much more nuanced. This newly released data attempts to dispel some of the misinformation surrounding the opinions of the Iranian American community — a community that has faced trauma and division, Abdi said.
“This trauma has been preyed upon by outside interests who want war,” Abdi said during the press briefing. “We think it's really important to end this predatory relationship and expose to the public where our community actually stands, and encourage members of our community to stand up and be vocal and feel that they can be a full participant in U.S. democracy without fear of political violence or online cancellation or death threats and attacks.”
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Top image credit: New Zealand reinforcements on their way to the front lines during World War I. (Archives New Zealand/ CC BY 2.0)
Are we on the precipice of World War III?
March 11, 2026
Shortly after U.S. and Israeli bombs and missiles began falling in Tehran, Iranian missiles flew in all directions at U.S. bases in Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and others. The people living in these countries were justifiably terrified, which was a likely objective of those Iranian leaders who survived the first assaults. Tehran’s strategy may be to persuade America’s regional allies to reconsider their security alliances.
In 2010, most people shook their heads when a now-infamous map of Afghanistan’s various societal, governmental, and tribal interests went public. The counterinsurgency (COIN) spaghetti chart was terribly complex – and intractable. One PowerPoint slide shows how challenging it can be to understand how a stimulant in one corner can produce a response in a seemingly tangential sector. And this is just a single country.
Imagine a chart depicting the world’s alliances, treaties, trade agreements, cultural bonds, and religious ties today. It would be so complex that no one could fully understand how everything fits together and interacts. Should one player choose to escalate the conflict, there is no telling who else might get involved. In an age of nuclear weapons on hairpin triggers, events can rapidly spin out of control before any of the key players has a chance to truly understand what is really happening. Our civilization could end in minutes, and it will only be a matter of luck if any human beings survive. If any people do survive, it is likely that they will never really know precisely how the end of the world started.
The global situation is eerily similar to 1913. In the years leading up to World War I, European leaders created an intricate system of alliances. France and Russia signed a mutual defense pact. Germany and Austro-Hungary had a similar arrangement. The Russians also had a cultural bond with their fellow Slavs in Serbia.
So, when Franz Ferdinand and his wife were murdered by a Serbian nationalist in June 1914, the resulting diplomatic crisis and war declaration by Austria-Hungary against Serbia pulled Russia into the war. The Russian mobilization prompted the Germans to mobilize. In quick succession, the Germans declared war on Russia, France, and Belgium. When German troops entered Luxembourg and Belgium, Great Britain declared war on Germany, and World War I began for real. The international network established by those early 20th century leaders was so precarious, it only took a relatively minor jostle in a forgotten corner of Europe to bring the entire system crashing to the ground.
The world today is vastly more complex. In 1913, there were approximately 61 sovereign states, but the key players were the major European empires like Great Britain, Russia, France, and Germany. Today, there are 195 countries, each striving for their place on the world stage as they pursue their national interest. It is impossible to calculate the potential number of black swan events capable of jostling the geostrategic network sufficiently to collapse it on top of itself.
Consider this as well: we may already be in the beginning stages of a global war. Victor Davis Hanson wrote about how World War II only looks like World War II in hindsight. For the people living through it, especially in the beginning, World War II looked like a series of rather ordinary border conflicts and territorial conquests. The Japanese invaded Manchuria in 1931 and then further expanded the conflict with China in 1937. Italy invaded Ethiopia in 1935. Germany remilitarized the Rhineland in 1936, annexed Austria in 1938, and occupied the Sudetenland six months later.
Today, Russia is still fighting in Ukraine. Gaza remains an open wound. The United States captured the president of Venezuela in an audacious military raid. Now the Iranian regime has been decapitated, but the remaining officials appear bent on provoking a larger war by lashing out at every country in the region that hosts U.S. military facilities.
This raises the uncomfortable question: are we now on the precipice of the next Pearl Harbor moment?
With the capture of President Maduro in Venezuela, the United States disrupted the flow of oil to China. Now, with the fall of the Islamic Republic of Iran, China appears poised to lose another important source of oil. Does anyone remember what prompted the Japanese to strike the American Pacific Fleet and then declare war against the United States? Those who answered the loss of access to key commodities, notably oil, due to actions by the United States responded correctly.
The same leaders who developed the pre-World War I international system also spent the years before Sarajevo engaged in a decades-long arms race. Most of them had read Alfred Thayer Mahan’s writing about the importance of seapower, so several countries invested huge amounts of capital building dreadnought ships. Hiram Maxim inspired a slew of weapon designers to develop more effective machine guns. The world’s aviators were just beginning to imagine the warfighting potential of the airplane.
No one in 1913 understood quite how the industrial age had changed warfare. The leaders were all still playing by the old international rules that sufficed while armies fought in rank and file on relatively limited and distant battlefields. Had those early 20th century leaders foreseen the trenches and poison gas, they almost certainly would not have celebrated the war’s beginning. Many of the key players also lacked any direct experience with war, which tends to encourage recklessness. The last major European war was the Franco-Prussian War that ended in 1871. Before that, the last truly significant European battle had been Waterloo in 1815.
No leader in any country today has any experience with war on a global scale. World War II ended more than 80 years ago. The relatively few remaining World War II veterans are all centenarians or soon will be. No one can truly know how the next world war will unfold. If, by some miracle, the next war is not fought with nuclear weapons, it is still impossible for anyone to know for certain how a conventional war between superpowers will be fought.
Policymakers around the world must take the time to reflect on the state of the world today. We may be living through the early days of what future historians will call World War III. Of course, that depends on there being any future historians. With every bomb dropped, every missile fired, and every warship torpedoed, events creep ever closer to the single jostle, the 21st century Sarajevo, to topple the fragile network. It will only take one minor miscalculation, one bomb to miss and fall on another country’s embassy, one airliner to be accidentally shot out of the sky, or any other of a million incidents to trigger an escalation leading to a full nuclear exchange.
There may be time left to prevent such a scenario. The administration and the U.S. military deserve credit for planning and executing two spectacular displays of martial prowess in less than two months. But they should also bear in mind that victory is far from guaranteed. Luck, fate, and the enemy have a say in the outcome of any conflict. It is easy to believe that modern military technology has eliminated war’s uncertainty. But war will always remain a human endeavor, serving human ends.
The administration must bring the current operation with Iran to a quick end. It can celebrate its successes but should not push their luck any further. Every military operation is the geostrategic version of Russian roulette.
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