How Tehran infiltrated Africa, undermined security
Africa
can be considered of a major importance for any country interested in expanding
its influence in the Middle East for its strategic location that has the
ability to control maritime navigation in the Red Sea.
Iran
is interested in the Horn of Africa, given the intensity of the political and
military conflict between it and some regional countries, including Saudi
Arabia and the Emirates, and the conflict with the Arab coalition in Yemen.
Djibouti:
Tehran
sought since 1999 to boost its relations with Djibouti, especially after
President Ismail Omar Guelleh came to power. It has been working since the
beginning of last decade to establish a number of centers to promote Shiism.
Eritrea:
The
beginning of Iranian-Eritrean relations dates back to the border conflict
between both Ethiopia and Eritrea, which culminated in 2008, when Eritrean
President Isaias Afwerki visited Tehran and stated there what he called the
importance of benefiting from the Iranian experiences.
In
2009, Tehran launched a naval base in Eritrea at Bab al-Mandab, which is
currently being used to support the Houthi militia in Yemen.
The
Assab Port is considered one of the most important points of the Iranian
presence in that region, as it was installed in 2009 by a large number of
long-range and medium-range missile launchers and anti-aircraft missiles.
Somalia:
August
2011 was the official start of the Iranian presence in Somalia, as former
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi went to Mogadishu. Iran also built
and equipped an integrated hospital and set up a camp with millions of dollars
in famine-stricken Somalia.
Salehi
made a second visit in November 2012, during which the Iranian minister
affirmed that his country would reopen its embassy in Mogadishu after more than
two decades.
In
2012, former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said that his country was
committed to defending the Somali people, and the Iranian ambassador to the
United Nations sent a message to the Secretary-General that Iran would send two
ships to patrol the Somali coast and the Gulf of Aden for a period of five
months to fight pirates operating in the region and to protect Iranian cargo
ships.
Iran and al-Shabaab al-Mujahideen:
Tehran
mounted al-Shabaab al-Mujahideen terrorist jihadist group to achieve its
strategic purposes in the region, as UN reports said Iran is using the group to
carry out its terrorist operations that undermine the security of the Red Sea
in order to threaten international maritime navigation and the interests of the
United States in particular.