Exclusive: U.S. thinks Eritrea has joined Ethiopian war, diplomats say
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[December 08, 2020]
By Phil Stewart and David Lewis
WASHINGTON/NAIROBI (Reuters) - The United
States believes Eritrean soldiers have crossed into Ethiopia, despite
denials from both nations, a U.S. government source and five regional
diplomats said, as Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's government battles a
rebellious northern force.
Abiy and Eritrea's President Isaias Afwerki signed a peace pact ending
two decades of hostilities in 2018 and now regard the Tigray People's
Liberation Front (TPLF) as a mutual foe.
The U.S. assessment creates a potential policy predicament as Washington
views Ethiopia as a major ally in the volatile Horn of Africa but
accuses Eritrea of severe rights abuses.
Evidence of Eritrean involvement cited in the U.S. view of the
month-long war includes satellite images, intercepted communications and
anecdotal reports from Tigray region, five diplomats and a security
source all briefed on the U.S. assessment told Reuters.
A U.S. government source confirmed Washington's growing consensus, which
has not previously been reported but matches accounts by some residents,
refugees and TPLF leaders.
"There doesn't appear to be a doubt anymore. It's being discussed by
U.S. officials on calls - that the Eritreans are in Tigray - but they
aren't saying it publicly," the U.S. government source, who has been
privy to the internal calls, told Reuters.
A senior diplomat from another country concurred, saying "thousands" of
Eritrean soldiers were believed to be engaged.
The U.S. State Department did not confirm the U.S. conclusions, though a
spokesman said it would view any proven Eritrean involvement with great
concern and that its embassy in Asmara was urging restraint to
officials.
Contacted by Reuters on Saturday, Eritrea's Foreign Minister Osman Saleh
Mohammed said: "We are not involved. It's propaganda."
Ethiopia has denied its old foe entered the conflict, though Abiy did
say last week some government troops retreated into Eritrea early in the
conflict and were given assistance. His spokeswoman told Reuters queries
should be directed to Eritrea.
Claims by all sides are near-impossible to verify because most
communications to Tigray are down, and the government tightly controls
access.
Abiy won a Nobel Peace Prize last year for making peace with Eritrea,
but the presence of Eritrean troops on Ethiopian soil would alarm
Western allies. Ethiopia hosts the African Union; its security services
work with Western allies, and its troops serve in peacekeeping missions
in South Sudan and Somalia.
Eritrea has for years faced accusations of large scale rights abuses,
including jailing opponents and forcing citizens into lengthy military
or government service. It accuses Western powers of smear campaigns and
luring Eritreans abroad, which they deny. [L8N2ID2YQ]
POLICY CONUNDRUM
Ethiopia-Eritrea ties were mostly icy under the TPLF-dominated
government that ruled Ethiopia for nearly three decades in increasingly
autocratic fashion before Abiy took office in 2018.
Cameron Hudson, a former CIA officer and director for African affairs at
the National Security Council, said the U.S. government was divided
about speaking publicly over Eritrea.
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"That is, I think, due to a divide within the State Department
between those seeking to maintain access to Abiy and those willing
to call his own abuses," said Hudson, now senior fellow at the
Africa Center at the Atlantic Council think tank.
The TPLF claims to have killed and captured large numbers of
Eritrean troops in the last month, but has provided no evidence. It
has fired rockets into Eritrea at least four times, the U.S. State
Department says.
Eritrean troops are believed to have entered Ethiopia in
mid-November through three northern border towns: Zalambessa, Rama
and Badme, two of the diplomats told Reuters.
The diplomatic sources and the U.S. government source did not have
information on the numbers Washington believes have crossed, nor
their weapons or role in the war.
Mesfin Hagos, a former Eritrean defence minister who broke with
Isaias, said in an article for online publication African Arguments
that the Eritreans sent in four mechanised divisions, seven infantry
divisions and a commando brigade, citing sources in the defence
ministry, opposition and personal contacts.
Some Ethiopian refugees in Sudan told Reuters they saw Eritrean
soldiers in the north of Tigray, and that the border town of Humera
had been hit last month by rocket or artillery fire from the
Eritrean side of the border.
"People died, and they were scattered," said a barber from Humera,
adding that he saw about 40 bodies after one barrage and helped bury
some of them.
Soldiers suspected to be Eritreans were also spotted in the regional
capital Mekelle, said a resident and two diplomats in touch with
inhabitants. Some were reported to be in Eritrean uniforms, one of
the diplomats said. Others wore Ethiopian uniforms, but spoke
Tigrinya with an Eritrean accent and drove trucks without license
plates, the resident said.
The United Nations has expressed concern about reported violence
against 96,000 Eritrean refugees in Tigray.
TPLF leader Debretsion Gebremichael told Reuters that Eritrean
soldiers had raided two camps and abducted some residents but
provided no evidence.
Eritrea's Osman denied that, saying: "We are not repatriating
Eritrean refugees. If Eritreans want to come back, they can."
A U.N. security team trying to visit one of the camps on Sunday
encountered uniformed Eritrean troops, two diplomatic sources told
Reuters. The team - including two international staff - was denied
access, shot at and detained, they said.
U.N. officials declined to comment. Officials in Ethiopia and
Eritrea did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Ethiopian officials have accused the TPLF of manufacturing fake
Eritrean uniforms to bolster their claims and increase pressure on
the government to accept international mediation.
The TPLF denies this.
(Editing by Andrew Cawthorne, Alexandra Zavis and Nick Tattersall)
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