Global markets rarely reveal their vulnerabilities quietly. They do so when shipping routes are under threat, energy prices are rising or supply chains are disrupted. Few regions illustrate this reality more clearly than the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. These areas are currently among the most contested maritime corridors in the world. What unfolds along these waters is no longer local. It shapes the economic security of the entire Arab world and beyond.
However, despite the increased focus on this strategic corridor, one factor remains underappreciated. That’s Somalia.
For decades, Somalia has been viewed primarily through the lens of conflict and fragility. That story no longer reflects today’s reality. The country is undergoing a consequential transformation, emerging from a long period of instability, rebuilding state institutions, and re-emerging as a sovereign entity with increased regional relevance. Located at the crossroads of the Arab world, Africa, the Red Sea, and the Gulf of Aden, Somalia is not a peripheral region for regional stability. That’s the center of it.
Much of this importance can be explained by geography alone. Somalia, which has the longest coastline on mainland Africa, borders the Bab al-Mandeb Strait, which connects the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden and the wider Indian Ocean. A significant portion of the world’s maritime trade and energy transport passes through this corridor. Disruption along the Somali coast would therefore have immediate implications for shipping reliability, energy markets, and food security, and is of immediate concern to Gulf states and Arab economies.
For the Arab world, Somalia should be understood not as a distant terrain but as a front-line partner in regional security. Stability along Somalia’s coastline will help stop threats before they reach the Arabian Peninsula, such as violent extremism, illicit human trafficking networks, piracy, or the entrenchment of hostile external military outposts along Africa’s eastern flank.
Somalia is not trying to build stability from scratch. Despite ongoing challenges, tangible progress has been made. The federal government’s governance structure is functioning. National security forces are becoming increasingly professionalized. Public financial management has improved. On the diplomatic front, Somalia is reasserting itself within the Arab League, African Union, and multilateral forums. These achievements are accumulating day by day and reflect a clear commitment to sovereign statehood, territorial unity, and partnership rather than dependence. Somalia today seeks strategic alliances based on mutual benefit rather than charity.
Somalia’s relevance extends beyond security. Membership of the East African Community places the country in one of the world’s fastest growing regions in population and consumption. East Africa’s rapid population growth, urbanization and economic integration have positioned Somalia as a natural bridge between Gulf capitals and Africa’s growing markets.
There is a clear opportunity for Somalia to emerge as a logistics and transshipment gateway connecting the Gulf, Red Sea, East Africa and the Indian Ocean. Targeted investments in ports, transport corridors and maritime security can help Somalia become a key node in regional supply chains that support trade diversification, food security and economic resilience across the Arab world.
At the heart of Somalia’s potential is its dynamic population. More than 70 percent of Somalis are under 30 years of age. This generation is increasingly urban, digitally connected, and entrepreneurial. Somali traders and business networks are already active in southern and eastern Africa, spanning logistics, finance, retail and services. A large and dynamic diaspora across the Gulf, Europe, North America and Africa further extends this reach through remittances, investments and cross-border expertise.
But none of this momentum can be sustained without safety. A competent and nationally legitimate Somalia security sector is the foundation for enduring stability, investment confidence, and regional integration.
Therefore, for the Gulf states and the Arab world as a whole, supporting Somalia’s security sector is not an altruistic act. This is a strategic investment in a reliable stabilization partner. Somalia’s effective security institutions contribute directly to protecting the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden maritime corridors, countering cross-border terrorism before it reaches Arab states, protecting emerging logistics infrastructure, and blocking opportunities for external actors to exploit governance gaps. Such assistance must prioritize institution building, Somali ownership, and long-term sustainability, rather than short-term fixes and proxy competition.
The stakes are high. The Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden are entering a period of intensifying strategic competition. Partition along Africa’s coastline poses a direct risk to Arab collective security. Recent developments highlight this urgency.
Israel’s unilateral recognition of the northern Somali region of Somaliland, proceeding outside the international legal framework and without Somali consent, is widely seen as an attempt to secure a military foothold along these strategic waters and risks introducing the Arab-Israeli conflict into the Gulf security environment.
Even more troubling is the emergence of a new narrative advocating the forced relocation of Palestinians from Gaza, along with proposals to relocate them to Somaliland against their will. Such ideas, whether formally advanced or not, represent serious violations of international law and human dignity. Exporting the results of occupation and war onto African soil will not resolve the conflict. It will double.
This should be a wake-up call for the Arab world. Allowing external actors to divide sovereign states or use fragile regions as tools for unresolved conflict has long-term consequences. The unity and stability of Somalia is therefore squarely in line with core Arab strategic interests and long-standing Arab positions on sovereignty, justice and national self-determination.
Somalia is ready to be part of the solution. Coordinated strategic support, particularly in security sector development and logistics infrastructure, can enable Somalia to emerge as a cornerstone of stability in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, a gateway to East Africa, and a long-term partner of the Arab world.
The question is no longer whether Somalia matters in regional and global Red Sea and Gulf of Aden discussions and planning. The question is whether that region will act on that reality before others.
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial stance of Al Jazeera.
