The Government of the Republic of Somaliland rejects the statement issued by the Failed Somalian Government regarding Somaliland’s sovereign diplomatic engagements.
Full Statement 👇🏾
https://t.co/WicbHj7KLJ
Ted Cruz spoke in the Senate today about Somaliand’s importance for U.S. national security” and praised the country as a “capable and willing partner" in a region where China “is aggressively expanding”
@IRIMFA_EN, Somaliland is a sovereign, stable democracy seeking peace & progress for its people & constructive dialogue with all nations. Our alliances are decided by us & our ties with Israel are unshakeable. THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER. @realDonaldTrump
PRESS RELEASE
The Government of the Republic of Somaliland Firmly Rejects Somalia’s Misleading Claims Regarding the Republic of Somaliland’s Sovereign Diplomatic Relations
https://t.co/OBte6qsd7o
@OGAA_NSHO Rest bro the world doesn’t revolve around failed state of somalia maybe when they talking about terrorism and corruption then they might talk about you
Trending in the Middle East
The people of Somaliland, their president
@Abdirahmanirro, vice president @AmbMohamedAli , flag & their defence forces, mashallah.
@inamakhtal
If that is the case, Mr. @POTUS, why do some countries insist that #Somaliland remain part of Somalia - rewarding prolonged failure and punishing a democratic and effective functioning state?
If Somaliland Signs the Abraham Accords: The Day the Horn of Africa’s Geopolitics Change Forever
If Somaliland were to sign the Abraham Accords in Washington alongside President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu, it would not be a symbolic gesture. It would be a geopolitical earthquake.
The Abraham Accords are not merely a peace agreement between Israel and Arab states; they are the backbone of a new strategic architecture led by the United States. They bind diplomacy, security, technology, finance, and regional order into one umbrella. For a small, unrecognised state to step into that framework is to step onto the front line of global power politics.
For Somaliland, this would mean one thing above all: recognition through strategy, not sentiment.
When the President of the United States signs an international agreement with the President of Somaliland in the White House, the debate about whether Somaliland is a “region” or a “state” effectively ends. International law is not shaped only by declarations — it is shaped by practice. A state that enters binding covenants with Washington and Tel Aviv, and is treated as a sovereign security partner, is a state in all but name. And once America moves, others follow.
Mogadishu’s claim would not collapse because of rhetoric, but because of irrelevance. The moment Washington treats Hargeisa as a strategic ally, Somalia’s narrative of “territorial integrity” loses its global audience. Power rewrites the map.
Economically, the Abraham Accords would unlock a different universe for Somaliland. This is not about aid; it is about integration into the Western economic ecosystem. Israeli technology, American defence cooperation, Gulf capital, and Western financial institutions would converge on Berbera and Hargeisa.
Ports become insured.
Projects become bankable.
Natural resources become investable.
For the first time, Somaliland would move from survival to acceleration — from a brave unrecognised polity to a regional economic hub linking the Red Sea, the Gulf, and East Africa.
Security is where the transformation becomes irreversible.
To join the Abraham Accords is to enter the U.S.–Israel security architecture. It sends a clear message to Al-Shabaab, hostile militias, and destabilising regional actors: Somaliland is no longer a grey zone.
It is now under the strategic umbrella of the world’s most powerful military alliance.
That is deterrence.
It also reshapes the Horn of Africa itself. Ethiopia gains a stable, Western-aligned maritime partner. The Red Sea becomes anchored by a pro-Western corridor. The Gulf gains a reliable African gateway. And the United States secures its northern Indian Ocean flank without deploying another war.
This is why the rumours matter.
If President Cirro walks into the White House to sign the Abraham Accords, Somaliland will not just be joining a peace agreement — it will be joining history.
For decades, Somaliland built a state without recognition.
The Abraham Accords would recognise the state because it already exists.
And in geopolitics, legitimacy does not come from sympathy.
It comes from strategic necessity.
If this happens, the Horn of Africa will never look the same again.
@SecRubio@US_SrAdvisorAF@Israel@IsraeliPM@AlArabiya_Brk@AlsisiOfficial@BarakRavid@AnitaAnandMP@dannydanon@KjetilTronvoll@globeandmail@RepOfSomaliland