Ethiopian Consulate in Jerusalem |
Ethiopia–Israel relations are foreign relations
between Ethiopia and Israel.
Both countries re-established diplomatic relations in 1992. Ethiopia has an
embassy in Tel Aviv;
the ambassador is also accredited to the Holy See, Greece and Cyprus.
Israel has an embassy in Addis Ababa; the ambassador is also accredited
to Rwanda and Burundi.
Israel has been one of Ethiopia's most reliable suppliers of military
assistance, supporting different Ethiopian governments during the Eritrean War of Independence. In 2012, an
Ethiopian-born Israeli, Belaynesh Zevadia, was appointed Israeli ambassador to
Ethiopia.
Royal Era
During
the imperial era, Israeli advisers trained
paratroops and counterinsurgency units belonging to the Fifth Division (also
called the Nebelbal, 'Flame', Division). In December 1960, a section of the Ethiopian army
attempted a coup whilst the Emperor Haile
Sellassie I was on a state visit in Brazil.
Israel intervened, so that the Emperor could communicate directly with general
Abbiye. General Abbiye and his troops remained loyal to the Emperor, and the
rebellion was crushed.
In
the early 1960s, Israel started helping the Ethiopian government in its
campaigns against the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF). The Ethiopian government portrayed the Eritrean rebellion as
an Arab threat to the African region, an argument that convinced the Israelis
to side with the Ethiopian government in the conflict. Israel trained counter-insurgency forces and the
Governor General of Eritrea, Asrate Medhin Kassa, had an Israeli Military
Attaché as his advisor. An Israeli colonel was put in charge of a military
training school at Decamare and the
training of the Ethiopian Marine Commando Forces. By 1966, there were around 100 Israeli military
advisors in Ethiopia.The Ethiopian-Israeli cooperation had impacts on the
discourse of the Eritrean rebel movements, which increasingly began to use anti-Zionist rhetoric.
It also enabled the Eritreans to mobilize material support from the Arab and
Islamic world.
The
Israeli perception of the war in Eritrea as part of the Arab-Israeli conflict
was reinforced when reports of links between the ELF and Palestine Liberation Organization emerged
after the Six Days War
Parallel
to the war in Eritrea, Israel was accused of aiding the Ethiopian government in
crushing the Oromo resistance
In
1969 the Israeli government had proposed the formation of an anti-Pan-Arab alliance
consisting of the United States, Israel, Ethiopia, Iran and Turkey. Ethiopia
rejected the proposal. In 1971, the Israeli Chief of Staff Bar Lev made
a visit to Ethiopia, during which he presented proposals for deepening of
Israeli-Ethiopian cooperation. The Ethiopians turned down the Israeli proposals
but nevertheless, Ethiopia became internationally accused of having given
concessions to Israel for setting up Israeli military bases on Ethiopian
islands in the Red Sea. Ethiopia consistently denied all such accusations.
Israel
offered Ethiopia military assistance in the event of a Yemeni take-over of the
islands, but Ethiopia turned down the offer fearing a political backlash.
Still, Ethiopia was attacked at the 1973 OAU summit in Addis
Abeba by the Libyan delegation,
accusing Ethiopia of allowing the build-up of Israeli bases on its territory.
At the summit the Algerian president Houari Boumediène called on Ethiopia to
break its relations with Israel. In return, Boumediène offered to use his
political leverage to freeze Arab support for the ELF.
The
allegations of possible Israeli military bases on the islands of the Eritrean
coast surfaced again soon thereafter, at a summit of Foreign Ministers of
Islamic countries, held in Benghazi, Libya. The Benghazi meeting condemned
Ethiopian-Israeli cooperation, and pledged support for the ELF.
Ethiopian
Prime Minister Aklilu Habte-Wold began seeking political
support for breaking relations with Israel after the OAU summit. After long
discussions, the cabinet voted to sever diplomatic links with Israel. The decision
was however censored by a veto from the Emperor. At the time of the October 1973
war, many African states severed their relations with Israel. This,
and Arab threats of a crippling oil embargo, put pressure on the Emperor to
withdraw his veto, and on October 23, 1973 Ethiopia severed its diplomatic
relations with Israel. The break of relations with Israel caused the United
States to tone down its support to Imperial rule in Ethiopia
Mengistu
rule
Even
after Ethiopia broke diplomatic relations with Israel in 1973, Israeli military
aid continued after the Derg military junta came to power and included spare
parts and ammunition for U.S.-made weapons and service for U.S.-made F-5 jet
fighters. Israel also maintained a small group of military
advisers in Addis Ababa.
In
1978, however, when the Israeli Minister of Foreign Affairs Moshe Dayan admitted
that Israel had been providing security assistance to Ethiopia, Mengistu Haile Mariamexpelled all Israelis
so that he might preserve his relationship with radical Arab states such as Libya and South Yemen. Although, Addis Ababa claimed it had terminated its
military relationship with Israel, military cooperation continued. In 1983, for
example, Israel provided communications training, and in 1984 Israeli advisers
trained the Presidential Guard and Israeli technical personnel served with the
police. Some Western observers believed that Israel provided military
assistance to Ethiopia in exchange for Mengistu's tacit cooperation during Operation
Moses in 1984, in which 10,000 Beta Israel (Ethiopian
Jews) were evacuated to Israel. In 1985 Israel reportedly sold Addis Ababa at least
US$20 million in Soviet-made munitions and spare parts captured in Lebanon.
According to the Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF),
the Mengistu regime received US$83 million worth of Israeli military aid in 1987, and
Israel deployed some 300 military advisers to Ethiopia. Additionally, the EPLF
claimed that thirty-eight Ethiopian pilots had gone to Israel for training.
As
Mengistu's allies in the Socialist
Bloc went into a state of crisis and division, Ethiopia began
to put more emphasis on relations with Israel. In 1989 formal diplomatic relations were reinstated. In late 1989, Israel reportedly finalized a secret
agreement to provide increased military assistance in exchange for Mengistu's
promise to allow Ethiopia's remaining Beta Israel to immigrate to
Israel. In addition, the two nations agreed to restore diplomatic relations and
increase intelligence cooperation. Mengistu apparently believed that Israel,
unlike the Soviet Union, whose military advisers emphasized conventional
tactics, could provide the training and matériel needed to transform the
Ethiopian army into a counterinsurgency force.
During
1990 Israeli-Ethiopian relations grew stronger. According to the New
York Times, Israel supplied 150,000 rifles, cluster bombs, ten to twenty
military advisers to train Mengistu's Presidential Guard, and an unknown number
of instructors to work with Ethiopian commando units. Unconfirmed reports also
suggested that Israel had provided theEthiopian Air Force with surveillance
cameras and had agreed to train Ethiopian pilots
Commercial
relations
Trade relations between Ethiopia and
Israel have grown over the years. In the early 1980s, Dafron, an Israeli
notebook manufacturer, won a government contract to market 2 million notebooks
to Ethiopia. Israel imports Ethiopian sesame, coffee, grains, skins
and hides, spices, oilseed and natural gum.
Ethiopian
Jews
In return for this aid, Ethiopia
permitted the emigration of the Beta Israel.
Departures in the spring reached about 500 people a month before Ethiopian
officials adopted new emigration procedures that reduced the figure by more
than two-thirds. The following year, Jerusalem and Addis Ababa negotiated another agreement
whereby Israel provided agricultural, economic, and health assistance. Also, in
May 1991, as the Mengistu regime neared its end, Israel paid US$35 million in
cash to allow nearly 15,000 Beta Israel to emigrate from Ethiopia to Israel. Read more here
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