The Journal of Modern African Studies (1998),
36:611-643. Cambridge University Press.
Copyright © 1998 Cambridge University Press
The United States, Ethiopia and the 1963 Somali-Soviet arms
deal: containment and the balance of power dilemma in the Horn of
Africa
Jeffrey A. Lefebvre a1
fn1
a1Department of Political Science, University of
Connecticut, Stamford, CT 06903, USA
Abstract
The early years of the East-West Cold War in sub-Saharan Africa
are remembered for the violence surrounding the 1960-1 Congo
crisis. While the crisis in the Congo threatened to spin out of
control, on 6 January 1961 Nikita Khrushchev delivered his secret
'sacred wars of national liberation' speech, which suggested that
Moscow intended to undermine Western influence in the region by
fanning war and subversion. Despite the nasty turn of events in
the Congo and Khrushchev's blustery rhetoric, Soviet activities in
sub-Saharan African remained limited in scope and within the
bounds of 'peaceful coexistence'. Moscow sought to challenge
Western hegemony in the region by offering economic and military
assistance to developing countries, 'free from any political or
military obligations'. Although Moscow first targeted the radical
West African governments in Ghana, Guinea, and Mali, as part of
his break with Stalinist orthodoxy Khrushchev was also willing to
extend Moscow's 'friendly hand' to moderate African countries.
Moscow achieved an important strategic breakthrough within the
moderate African camp in November 1963, when the Republic of
Somalia announced that it would accept a $30 million military aid
offer from the Soviet Union, thereby foiling an attempt by the
West to preclude Soviet military aid to Somalia. During 1962-3, a
consortium of Western powers, led by the United States, had
presented a series of arms packages of increasing value to
Mogadishu. This was done over the strong protests of Washington's
long-time ally in the Horn of Africa, Ethiopian Emperor
Haile-Selassie. But in the end, Moscow won the bidding war for
Somalia by raising the arms 'ante' to a level which the Western
powers were unwilling to match, owing to Washington's fear that to
do so would jeopardise strategically vital US base rights in
Ethiopia and provoke Haile-Selassie to adopt a less moderate voice
in African affairs.
Although students of the Cold War in Africa are familiar with
this general outline of the 1963 Soviet-Somali arms deal, scant
attention has been paid to the behind-the-scenes manoeuvres and
bureaucratic conflicts arising over the efforts of the Kennedy
administration to dissuade Somalia from accepting military
assistance from the Eastern bloc. A more probing analysis of this
event is instructive in furthering our understanding of future
developments in the Horn of Africa.
Article Text
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fn1 The author is grateful to the JFK Library
Foundation for providing a grant to conduct research at the John
F. Kennedy Library.
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Bibliography -- Somalia Chapter 1 Abir, M.
"Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa." Pages 537-77 in
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--http://rs6.loc.gov/frd/cs/somalia/so_bibl.html