How regional power shift has worked against Egypt’s bid to control Nile
As Egypt and Ethiopia continue with talks over the shape the controversial Renaissance Dam ought to take, it is apparent that while Egypt remains the biggest military power in the region, its internal crisis — the unfolding shift in the balance of power as well as emerging geopolitics — means that it has few options than to work with Ethiopia and other Nile Basin countries for mutually beneficial arrangements on the use of the river.
Egypt may also find itself ceding ground to the  other riparian countries that are determined to use increased volumes of  the Nile waters to cater for rising energy and food needs.
Egypt is in a precarious political situation and  is already using enormous resources to counter a highly disruptive  revolution. This has reduced its ability to coerce other basin states to  continue respecting its “birthright.”
On top of this is the fact that though Cairo  continues to receive the biggest financial aid from the United States,  the Muslim Brotherhood regime was not a darling of its benefactor, which  now finds itself unable to openly support or condemn the new regime  that came to power through a coup. 
The initial falling-out was the result of  suspicions that the government of Mohamed Morsy had worked towards  lifting the squeeze Hosni Mubarak had placed on the ability of Israel’s  militant neighbours to wage war on Tel-Aviv. 
Of more long-term importance to the security and  stability of the region is the fact that even before Ethiopia had  belligerently begun to construct the Grand Renaissance Dam, it was not  clear how much longer the other countries would have continued to honour  Egypt’s demands over the Nile. 
Rising populations and increased food and power  needs have fed the quest by other Nile Basin countries for more of the  water flowing in the tributaries of the Nile. The countries have also  been portraying a noticeable economic renaissance, with many now deemed  ripe for mega investments. 
As a result, many of the countries have entered  into agreements with either each other or with emerging global economic  powers to finance multi-billion-dollar projects, some of which will use  more of the Nile waters than ever before. 
Besides completing a 250-Megawatt hydroelectricity  project in 2012, Uganda, which has only irrigated 5,500 hectares, is  said to be eyeing Nile waters to irrigate some 220,000 hectares within  the Basin. 
Kenya’s National Water Master Plan identifies Lake  Victoria and its rivers as the sources of water the country needs to  irrigate 180,000 hectares. Kenya has also been toying with the idea of  taking Lake Victoria’s waters to irrigate its more marginal areas.
Besides the controversial dam, the Ethiopian Nile  basin’s irrigation potential is 2.3 million hectares. Yet it has  developed less than one per cent of this.
Although it has not happened on a massive scale,  the use of the Nile waters for irrigation by other Basin countries has  been, and continues to be, Egypt’s worst nightmare. Cairo may have so  far succeeded in preventing any large-scale water-use schemes in other  Basin countries other than Sudan, but does it have any more aces?
Military action, which was initially advocated by the  politicians, may not work. Its geographical position would make a direct  attack on Ethiopia or any of the other riparian countries highly  difficult. And waging a proxy war would be very costly for Cairo’s own  international interests mainly because some of the potential candidates  for such a proxy war are international pariahs.
While relying heavily on the West for military aid  and trade, Cairo cannot, for instance, support the Somali militants, al  Shabaab. Some of its benefactors and trade partners would even impose  biting sanctions to bring an end to the scheme. And other Nile Basin  countries may also gang up to deal with any potentially destabilising  eventuality, through regional bodies such as the Intergovernmental  Authority on Development (Igad) or the East African Community. 
Further, it would not be beneath Kenya and  Ethiopia to join forces to fight off such a threat. After all, the two  countries have demonstrated their decisiveness when each unilaterally  carried out military excursions in Somalia to root out the Islamic  militants.
But the other actor that Egypt needs to take into  account before taking any military action against Ethiopia is Israel,  which has not been happy with Cairo’s very public support of the Hamas.  Although it would be imprudent on the part of Israel to be seen to be  openly backing Cairo’s enemies, accusations have been made by Egyptian  politicians that Tel-Aviv and Washington back the Renaissance Dam  project. 
The proponents of this claim that the two powers  are out to force Cairo to reconsider arming Hamas and to close the  tunnels Palestinians have been using to reach Egypt from the Gaza strip.
Israel is said to have been eyeing the Nile waters  and, at some point, called for a review of the 1997 UN Watercourses  Convention so that it could be considered as a beneficiary of the Nile.  The convention is a global legal arrangement that establishes basic  standards and rules for co-operation between states on the use,  management and protection of international watercourses.
Egypt’s claim 
Egypt’s claim that it has a historical right over  much of the Nile waters is backed by the controversial 1929 Treaty that  was renewed in 1959. But the claim has been hotly contested by other  riparian countries, which feel that the treaties were unjust, unfair,  outdated and “colonial.” 
For many years now, other riparian states have  called for the scrapping of the treaty and enactment of a new one that  would lead to more equitable sharing of the water. 
That other countries have had no regard to the old  treaty was revealed in October 2003 when Kenya’s then Water Minister  Martha Karua told the media that the Nile Treaty was no more. The  statement was significant as Ms Karua made it in the company of the then  Egyptian ambassador to Kenya, Mermeen Wafik. 
At the same time, members of the East African  Legislative Assembly demanded that the treaty be reviewed to make Egypt  and Sudan pay for the water.
Indeed, under the auspices of the Nile Basin  Initiative, the 10 Riparian countries came together to negotiate a new  treaty through a long process that culminated in the 2010 Agreement.
Although they participated in the talks, Egypt and Sudan refused  to sign the new treaty. The two share the basin with Rwanda, Burundi,  Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia,  Eritrea, South Sudan and Sudan.
There have been claims that Egypt has not been  “responsible” in the way it has been using the billions of cubic metres  of the Nile water that lands in its territory. 
Other Nile Basin state have been unhappy with the  fact that though Egypt has worked tirelessly and consistently to prevent  them from using the water, it diverted huge amounts to an elaborate  land reclamation programme covering about 6 million acres in the  Northern Sinai desert, west of Suez Canal, which is not part of the  basin. There were also claims that after Egypt entered into a peace  arrangement with Israel, it made plans to sell some of the water to the  latter.
Before the May 7, 1929 treaty, there were  agreements made in 1889, 1891 and 1902 between the British and the  Italians. Although the other riparian state were not party to it, the  treaty required them to respect Egypt’s “natural” and historical rights  to the Nile waters and to seek Cairo’s consent before putting up  irrigation or hydroelectric power projects along its course. 
A section of the latter Treaty reads: “Without the  consent of the Egyptian government, no irrigation or hydroelectric  works can be established on the tributaries of the Nile or their lakes  if such works can cause a drop in water level harmful to Egypt.”
The Treaty secured, for the exclusive use of the  Egyptians, 48 billion cubic metres while Sudan was given 4 billion cubic  metres. The other riparian states got nothing. 
In the 1950s, Sudan, which had not been satisfied  with its share, negotiated with the government of the late Gamal Abdel  Nasser and signed the 1959 Agreement which, interestingly, increased  Egypt’s share to 55.5 billion cubic metres and Sudan’s to 18.5 billion  cubic metres. This enabled Egypt and Sudan to irrigate 6 million acres  and 2.75 million acres respectively. As with the earlier agreements, the  other basin countries’ water needs were ignored. 
The Treaty forbids Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda from  even using the waters of Lake Victoria, which is the source of the  White Nile. It says: “Save for the previous agreement of the Egyptian  government, no irrigation or power works are to be constructed or taken  from the River Nile or on the lakes from which it flows, so far as all  these are in the Sudan or in countries under British administration.”
Ethiopia’s complaint
Over the years, Ethiopia has demonstrated a marked  resistance to this arrangement. According to some sources, as Egypt and  Sudan negotiated to renew the treaty in the mid 1950s, Ethiopia  complained that the two were making an agreement on water that mainly  came from its territory. 
It also informed Egypt and other riparian states  in 1956 and 1957 that it deserved the right to use the Nile waters. In  June 1980, Addis Ababa threatened to block the flow of the Blue Nile,  following an attempt by the then Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to  divert Nile waters to the Sinai desert. This created tension between the  two nations which almost degenerated into a full-scale war.
Indeed, when Ethiopia made public its intention,  Egypt started preparing for war. Ethiopia had also indicated a  willingness to got to war to defend its right to use the Nile. It made  it clear that no one could ever stop it from implementing projects along  the Blue Nile. 
In 1998, Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin said there  was no “earthly force” that would stop his country from benefiting from  the Nile. Later in 2004, the Prime Minister, the late Meles Zenawi,  warned that nothing short of occupation would stop Ethiopia from  exploiting the Nile waters “and no country on earth has done that in the  past.” 
Ethiopia’s anger, it seemed, was because while  Egypt continued to expand the land under irrigation, it maintained a  hard-line stance against other basin countries’ efforts to increase food  production using the water.
On its part, Egypt’s readiness to go to war over  the Nile was encapsulated in early 1988 by a former Foreign Affairs  Minister, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, who later became the UN  Secretary-General. Mr Boutros-Ghali said, “The next war in our region  will be over the waters of the Nile, not politics.” This war-mongering  was later reiterated by President Sadat, and most recently by Morsy.
But is Cairo’s hard-line position justified? 
David Shinn, a professor of international affairs  at the George Washington University, says that 95 per cent of Egyptians  live in the Nile Valley and depend on the river for all their fresh  water needs. “Egypt is not being alarmist when it says that (the) Nile  water is a life or death issue for the country,” he says. This need is  not as stark as it is in Ethiopia or the rest of the basin countries. 
Ethiopia, Prof Shinn says, has mountains that trap  moisture arriving by winds from the west and south; Uganda is endowed  with a good climate and arable lands while 20 per cent of Kenya is  agriculturally rich. 
Rwanda and Burundi have far much better climate than Egypt and Sudan. 
Egypt’s anti-Ethiopia moves
Though Egypt has not been into any war with  Ethiopia, it has gone out of its way to interfere with Ethiopia’s  stability hoping to weaken its ability to exploit the Nile. 
Prof Shinn notes that when Ethiopia sought to have  Eritrea as part of its empire in late 1950s and 1960s, Egypt opened a  small military training camp for Eritreans opposed to Ethiopian rule and  permitted the rebels to use Radio Cairo to undermine Haile Selassie’s  government.
“Egypt allowed the predominantly Muslim Eritrean  Liberation Front (ELF) to establish an office in Cairo… Egypt saw this  policy as useful in diverting Ethiopia’s attention away from efforts to  develop Nile water projects.” 
During its conflict with Ethiopia by training Somalia’s army and providing it with military hardware. 
But the current impasse requires a more balanced  approach than what global powers have adopted so far. For one, the US  needs to reconsider siding with Egypt.
 
 
 
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