For years, I have argued that the Horn of Africa is one of the key sites where Middle Eastern politics is being reconfigured, and recent developments continue to confirm this. As Somaliland marks another anniversary, one must restate a self-evident truth that many still pretend not to see: the Horn is neither a peripheral margin nor a mere diplomatic stage, but a strategic space where sovereignty, regional realignments, and climatic urgency now intersect. Having roots in this region and having long studied it, I recognize in it the continuation of a shift anticipated for years: ports, bases, and maritime flows preoccupy chancelleries, yet the real politics unfolds inland, around wells and herds.
Behind the celebrations lie weightier realities—infrastructural poverty, water insecurity, pressure on pastoral societies and local institutions—which demand sustainable responses if future generations are to retain any horizon of possibility.
In southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya, there are wells so deep that no one descends alone; chains of men link themselves together, braced against the walls, passing water upward by sheer physical effort toward the thirsty herds waiting in circles in the dust. With each hand that passes the bucket, a voice answers. With each rising bucket, a song ascends. These are rightly called “singing wells.” They are not postcard images. They are the tula, ancestral wells of the Borana pastoralists, in continuous use for nearly six centuries—hydraulic institutions older than the fall of Constantinople and more enduring than most of the states that now claim to govern the Horn of Africa.
The song is neither folklore nor ornament. The singing well constitutes a genuine customary constitution in the open air: it organizes access, establishes a hierarchy of watering rights between allied and subordinate clans, codifies labor obligations, appoints arbiters, allocates transhumance corridors, sanctions violations, and articulates the circulation of herds with seasons and rains—all without bureaucracy, cadastral systems, or external courts, yet with a political efficacy many postcolonial states might envy.
Among Somali pastoralists, the logic is similar. Studies of Somali pastoral work songs underscore that wells are dug collectively, guarded collectively, and used collectively; they fall under a regime of shared clan ownership in which rights are neither bought nor sold nor surveyed, but transmitted like memory—through alliance, descent, and reiterated oaths between lineages.
This is why drought in the Horn is never merely a meteorological datum. When the rains fail, it is not simply a season that disappears, but an entire order that trembles: livestock weaken, families fragment, migration routes intersect where they once avoided each other, wells become saturated, grazing corridors turn into zones of friction, and clan pacts are tested—what seemed, in times of abundance, an immemorial agreement becomes, in scarcity, an open dispute. The data confirms what elders already know. The FAO has documented the failure of the 2025 Deyr rains in northern and central Somaliland’s pastoral zones, the early depletion of pastures, accelerated migrations over unprecedented distances, and abnormal concentrations of herds along already saturated corridors. An anticipatory action plan for 2026, targeting Sool and Sanaag, warns, in measured yet unequivocal terms, that pastoralists’ direct dependence on water and pasture transforms any rainfall deficit into a compounded risk of livestock loss, food insecurity, forced displacement, and conflict over resource access.
The hydropolitics of the Horn cannot be reduced to its major rivers. Certainly, there is the Blue Nile, Gilgel Gibe, the GERD, colonial-era treaties, dam diplomacy, and disputes among Cairo, Khartoum, and Addis Ababa—an entire fluvial geopolitics well known to ministries and chancelleries, mapped in glossy charts and negotiated in international summits. But there exists another hydropolitics—more discreet, more capillary, more ancient—unfolding in aquifers, boreholes, cisterns, seasonal corridors, and customary rights. It is within this infrapolitics that the real legitimacy of power is forged or undone, day by day.
In Somaliland, water is sovereignty. This is not metaphor. Whoever controls wells, boreholes, reservoirs, transhumance corridors, and drought-response mechanisms exercises, in practice, an authority superior to that of the bureaucrat who stamps, the customs officer who weighs, or the diplomat who signs. Such control governs the very fabric of pastoral society, upon which depend the national economy, social stability, and ultimately the country’s political unity. It is precisely here that foreign powers almost universally err. They see Berbera—the deep-water port, extended quay, container terminal, tankers on the horizon; they see the Emirati military base, rivalry with Djibouti, maritime routes threatened by the Houthis, supply corridors to landlocked Ethiopia; they see Bab el-Mandeb, the Red Sea, submarine cables, fleets transiting between Suez and Aden—and yet they fail to see that Somaliland’s true foundation is not coastal but interior: it lies in wells, herds, elders, women who sustain households while men move with livestock, and pastoralists who negotiate access to scarce water under the watch of elders.
Serious cooperation on water is therefore not an option but a necessity. Israel, which has transformed a semi-arid territory into one of the most innovative hydropolitical systems of the century, possesses recognized expertise—drip irrigation, desalination, wastewater reuse, scarcity planning, aquifer modeling, sensor technologies. These are levers Somaliland could mobilize within an openly acknowledged bilateral relationship, provided such transfers are conceived not as exogenous grafts onto a pastoral body, but as negotiated adaptations respectful of customary rules, clan hierarchies, and the temporalities of transhumance.
The singing wells remind us of a simple yet grave truth: the Horn of Africa has never lacked hydraulic forms of knowledge. For centuries, it has possessed its own water institutions, jurisdictions, collective labor liturgies, and mechanisms of peace among thirsty clans. The contemporary challenge is not to import a model, but to protect these knowledges against the dual peril of climate change and geopolitical predation—both of which, though advancing under different banners, display the same indifference to local logics.
For Somaliland, drought is not merely an environmental crisis. It is a matter of sovereignty, social peace, food security, and national survival. As long as foreign capitals continue to look at the sea rather than the land, the port rather than the well, the base rather than the pasture, they will understand nothing of a country they court without seeing, covet without knowing, and hope to influence without ever having heard its song. There, beneath the rising bucket, the nation breathes.
But one must go further still.
For the well, in the Horn of Africa, is not merely a site of social organization; it is an apparatus of political truth. It reveals, in stark clarity, what classical theories of sovereignty struggle to grasp: that authority does not primarily derive from the demarcation of an abstract territory, but from the concrete capacity to render life possible within a constrained environment.
In pastoral spaces, sovereignty is inscribed neither in borders nor in written institutions; it circulates. It follows the rains, adheres to grazing cycles, and moves with herds. It is mobile, relational, and continuously negotiated. The well becomes the paradoxical point where this fluid sovereignty temporarily stabilizes—not to freeze, but to become legible, arbitrable, and contestable. Around the well, the political ceases to be an abstraction.
It takes the form of a queue, an order of passage, a conflict resolved before escalation, a word given under conditions of scarcity. It also takes the form of a body: men descending, arms pulling, voices marking collective effort. Law here is never disembodied. It is carried, sung, repeated—and it is precisely this performative dimension that gives it force.
One then understands why attempts at the abrupt statization of water so often fail in these regions—not due to lack of technical means, but due to a deficit of anthropological intelligibility. Where the state sees a resource to administer, pastoral societies see a relationship to sustain. Where the engineer calculates flow, the herder evaluates relations—between clans, generations, humans, and livestock. Introducing mechanized boreholes without integrating these logics produces not water security but political disorder: destabilized hierarchies, contested access rights, fragmented solidarities.
Here the question of international aid becomes critical. Humanitarian intervention, by operating in urgency, tends to short‑circuit slow institutions. By distributing water via tanker trucks or installing infrastructure without customary mediation, it temporarily suspends conflict while weakening, in the medium term, the mechanisms that once contained it. Free water, in a system where access is regulated, is never neutral: it silently redistributes power.
The paradox is stark. The more climate crisis intensifies, the more external intervention becomes necessary; yet the more necessary it becomes, the more it risks dissolving local regulatory forms that once ensured resilience. Hence the need for a different approach—not a hydropolitics of export, but a hydropolitics of translation: translation of technologies into local social languages; translation of customary norms into international cooperation frameworks; and translation between two rationalities—technical and relational—which do not oppose each other, but neutralize one another when left unarticulated.
In this perspective, Israel—often invoked for its technological excellence—could only be a relevant partner on the condition that it recognizes its own success rests on a finely institutionalized management of scarcity: not merely through technology but through the social discipline it entails—pricing, planning, and the prioritization of uses. Transposed without mediation, such measures would be perceived as impositions; reworked through clan logics, however, they could resonate in unexpected ways.
At root, there is a convergence between the hydraulic rigor of a modern state confronting aridity and the customary rigor of pastoral societies facing the same constraint. In both cases, the challenge is to organize scarcity without destroying the social body. But where one proceeds through written institutions, the other proceeds through living memory.
It is precisely this memory that must now be preserved—not out of romanticism, but out of strategic lucidity. A society that loses its informal institutions of water management becomes dependent on external actors for its most elementary survival. In losing its wells, it loses a portion of its real sovereignty—the kind not proclaimed in capitals, but exercised in the capacity to endure.
Thus, beneath the well, there is not only water. There is a political archive.
Each song, each order of passage, each silent arbitration between lineages is a trace of that archive—a way of articulating law without writing it, of holding together groups that nothing but necessity compels to cooperate. Perhaps this is the most decisive lesson for anyone seeking to understand the Horn of Africa: sovereignty there is not a given. It is a practice.
A daily, fragile, ever‑renewed practice—suspended from the level of water in the well, the rhythm of rains, the fidelity of alliances. A practice invisible from ports, military bases, or satellite maps, yet one that conditions everything else. To ignore this is to remain confined to surface understanding.
To listen to the well, by contrast, is to enter the political depth of the pastoral world—where the state, if it is to exist as more than a façade, must learn not to impose, but to anchor itself. For in the Horn of Africa, sovereignty does not descend from the sky. It rises, slowly, through the strength of human arms.




















