President Isaias Afewerki can call himself whatever he wants, even president. Â Without an election, with a never-used constitution gathering dust, without an elective assembly, it’s just all Isaias all the time.
He has fought with everyone around, including Ethiopia, Yemen, Djibouti and Sudan.
The US has an ambassador in Asmara  but after two years his credentials have still not been received. His tour will end soon, probably this way.
But are things starting to change? Â Are Isaias’ backers getting tired of their cranky, isolated and and useless ally? These include Libya, Qatar (possibly representing other Gulf leaders who prefer to stay anonymous), Iran, maybe a shout out from North Korea. Â Not an A-list group.
As Israeli diplomat Abba Eban used to say about the Palestinians (and could say about Israel itself today), Eritrea ‘never misses an opportunity to miss an opportunity’ to be smart.
After his monumental blunder of attacking Ethiopia in 1998, Isaias accepted a ceasefire to stop Ethiopia’s counterattack from penetrating deeper into Eritrea. Being much wilier than the Ethiopians, Eritrea negotiated a favorable ceasefire (Algiers, 2000) and in 2002 got a favorable ruling from the Boundary Commission in the Hague. Â Eritrea accepted the ruling but Ethiopia, which had committed in writing to doing so, rejected it and still rejects it.
This gave Eritrea the moral high ground and international sympathy, which it soon threw away. Â Isaias made enemies instead, abandoning the diplomatic skills that for years had won his rebel movement so much admiration.
He has now thrown out almost all foreign aid and humanitarian assistance groups, despite reports of severe child malnutrition and a crippled economy.  Thousands flee Eritrea every year, particularly military age youth (service can  last for decades).  There are thousands in a camp in Ethiopia, where they don’t want to be — the bitter legacy of a century of colonialism and imperialism that divided a once culturally continuous region. Growing numbers are being admitted to the US.  Four faiths are officially tolerated in Eritrea: traditional Orthodox, Roman Catholics (Italian colonialism), Evangelican Lutherans (a missionary relic) and Islam. All others are harassed, or worse — abused, jailed, sometimes dying in roasting metal shipping containers in the desert sun.
The UN claims that Eritrea has been helping the Islamists in Somalia in a proxy war against Ethiopia. Â Eritrea denies it, but it is hard to imagine that there is no fire with all that smoke. Â Last December, the UN approved sanctions against Eritrea.
Did the sanctions stir a change of policy in Asmara by underscoring Eritrea’s isolation? Â Are his sponsors, who are probably keeping Eritrea afloat — Qatar in particular — urging him to wise up? Eritrea makes most foreign investors feel unwelcome except for the recent interest from mining companies. Â Light manufacturing, which could take advantage of Eritrea’s capable workforce, is not in the cards. Modern mines need few and mostly skilled labor and are easier to isolate than factories that hire many low wage workers and are located in towns.
Is Isaias is seeing the handwriting on the wall? Â An Eritrean minister just gave an interview to VOA…a true rarity. Even more important, Eritrea accepted mediation (from the Gulf) to end its pointless but irritating military occupation of a narrow strip of sand in Djibouti. Statements about Somalia, though still hostile to Ethiopia and the US, are now no more aimless than those from other governments.
Is opposition growing inside Eritrea, invisible to outsiders but not to his intelligence sources? Â Little word gets out so it isn’t easy to tell. Â Is the food shortage so ominous that he has no choice but to consider opening up to the outside? Â Is Eritrea’s poor reputation making it harder for the mining companies to raise the hundreds of millions needed to develop the gold mines that are the only economic hope on the horizon?
Is Isaias now realizing the error of his ways? Â Or does he see a growing threat from his inner circle, which must be aware of Eritrea’s true condition and international reputation? He isn’t likely to survive an overthrow and has few choices for asylum.
For now this is all highly speculative. Yet hints and intuition suggest that something could be happening in Eritrea. Â The Eritrean people deserve better than they have gotten for the past two decades.

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I’m a 18 year old eritrean and i see many errors in your report
keep dreaming Shlomo Bachrach your arguments are false and weak
you sound just like geroge bush
you dont deserve my time or evidence because you now yourself you are hateful liar
You are not a scholar but an old fraud
America’s New Frontline in somilia: A Self-Fulfilling Prophecy - Part 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYoRiCLX6Tk
the above is just a small amount of evidence i have against you proving you are hateful twisted liar
I hope, anonymous young defender of Eritrea, that you will outgrow childish name calling and learn to back up your opinions with substance.
Though I agree that Eritrea has been treated badly by the world on the border issue, it has to take responsibility for its own self-destructive response to this mistreatment, and its abusive behavior on human rights for Eritreans. Your countrymen and women deserve better treatment from their own government.
Only a country that has a lot to hide closes its entire independent press and bans the world’s media. Clearly, Eritrea has something to hide. The thousands of Eritreans who run away every year also tell us that this is true.
If you read what I wrote, you will see that I am looking for a reason for hope, for a sign that the richness and depth of the Eritrean culture that I used to visit with such pleasure years ago will once again flourish and open itself to the world.
Shortly after the ceasefire ending the brutal war was signed, an event Ethiopia and Eritrea Returned Peace Corps Volunteers helped to bring about, I realized that Isaias Afewerki was a megalomaniac. I voiced my opinion in several fora and earned a black mark from the Eritrean diaspora with which I had worked hard during the effort to end the war. I do not believe the man has changed, but the times have, and there could be a move afoot to replace him. I doubt he will go peacefully.
All the hateful critics written above on you are by individuals (if not one or two using deferent names)
Your article mirrors the reality in Eritrea, as you said Eritrean people deserve better. One way or the other, the removal of that unique dictator is inevitable; I hope the change will not result by a replacement of one devil by another, but a real change for the benefit of Eritrea and its neighbours
Eritrea is just for Eritreans and we are not like Ethiopian you used them like limon a year ago.You are a monster one and are not wellcome to my dare mother land.do your home work on your land Isreal.We are not a slav but a proud best people.get red and try this cheap your articles in Ethiopia.it works!!
stop the lies on 11/07/2010 in 20:33
Blogger # 1 says “I’m a 18 year old eritrean and i see many errors in your report” Lier……
No, you are not 18, you are a corrupted mind Issaya’s age who do not care about the 18 year old children leaving their homes to indefinite time slavery instead of going to colleges. You are a sinful, and irresponsible collaborator who will be tried tomorrow in people’s court. Use your bosses’s favorite English Word “Fabrication” and blame the west for all evils done by pfdj. Your days are numbered and hope this message gets you to you in time to remind you about your nieces and nephews victimized by the regime.
The tone of the two comments posted on 7/17 is sadly characteristic on both Eritrean and Ethiopian chatrooms. These are relatively mild next to the shocking personal invective, the fantasies of rape and dismemberment of opponents, the abandonment of restraint of any kind that can be found there.
Rather than just deleting them as I did once before, they are posted here to give readers a sense of the internet landscape of Horn posters.
Are these posters in the US? Eritrea? Ethiopia?
It isn’t clear to me why such posts are so common. The repellent language and lack of content on a surprising number of these sites — though certainly not all of them — contrasts sharply with the personal behavior of the Eritreans and Ethiopians I know. My friends tell me that many posters use false names. Maybe the safety of anonymity encourages some of them.
Abuse on the internet is hardly limited to Horn websites. Preying on the unwary, which is worse, happens on Facebook and other social networking sites, where predators and horrific crimes have been reported.
I’d be interested in hearing from anyone who has some insight into what lies behind posts like the ones received here. One of the posters even attacked another poster and coming to my defense.
We Eritreans don`t want any advocator for our issue and mind your business, if there is at all something wrong, we are capable of fixing it
the points u made regarding the current situation in Eritrea are timely and correct except they lacked emphasis on the human rights violation. let me add some figures, 2002 on about 60,000 people from kebesa are brought to gash and setit region the kunama land. these settlements are illegal becouse the regime forced tens of thousanda of people from the kunama nationality are made to flee their home and leave the land which is given to the settlers replacing indigenous people with the saho, in Aligidir and tigryna in guluj sub-zones. these facts largely unknown by our eritrean brothers and sisters. many more ordinary citizens from the kunama are in prisons u described. and mass murder is committed on innocent members of this nationality group. people are forced to enter alive in underground cells which are dark and have dead people at different stages of decay on the ground in an attempt to accept alligations for which they dont even know
‘Mirror”’s comment is answered adequately by the next comment. Too bad “Mirror” is unwilling to stand behind his/her words by providing a name.
The human rights situation throughout the Horn is appalling. Ironically, Somaliland, unrecognized by any government, might well have the best human rights record in the region.
Human rights conditions are obviously worst in Somalia. Eritrea is better only by comparison with anarchy and authoritarian religious fanaticism. Ethiopia is more open than Eritrea but falls disgracefully short of protecting many basic human rights. Even tiny Djibouti, with about 600,000 people, many of them nomadic pastoralists, offers little institutional protection of human rights.
The so called journalist/s commenting about Eritrea, I have these few word for you “dogs bark and the camel (Eri) marches”.
Thank you Shlomo! beside stating the obvious I found your article to be full of questions more then answers, timely!! Hope that something is happening in Eritrea. And that soon the voiceless public would claim its dignity and nation back from the hands of the tyrant. Although Eritrea has isolated itself, hopefully people like you wont forget her.