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Jun 20, 2026
Israel Rolls Out Lavish Welcome for Somaliland's President in Historic Visit
Israel has given a lavish welcome to Somaliland's President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi, marking t…
The Historic Visit
Israel rolled out a lavish state welcome for Somaliland's president in Jerusalem, extending honors rarely accorded to the leader of a territory still unrecognized by any country other than Israel.
President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi, known as Cirro, arrived last Sunday for the first state visit by a Somaliland leader, six months after Israel became the first country to recognize the breakaway region's independence from Somalia.
Strategic Cooperation
The visit combined high-profile ceremony with what officials said were substantive discussions. A strategic cooperation agreement was signed alongside a series of meetings, underscoring both sides' ambition to turn diplomatic recognition into a broader partnership encompassing security, trade, and regional strategy.
Somaliland sits across the Gulf of Aden from Yemen and controls a long stretch of coastline overlooking one of the world's busiest maritime corridors.
The Red Sea Significance
For Israel, which has spent the past two years exchanging fire with Yemen's Houthis while watching Red Sea shipping repeatedly disrupted, the region has assumed growing strategic importance.
The visit also came against the backdrop of US President Donald Trump's memorandum of understanding with Iran, a move that has intensified pressure on Netanyahu from critics who argue it leaves many of Israel's core security concerns unresolved.
Security and Defense
Attention has largely centered on Berbera, Somaliland's largest coastal city on the Gulf of Aden, where an airport originally constructed by the Soviet Union and later used by NASA—while nominally civilian—has been recently militarized.
During a meeting with Abdullahi, Israel's Defence Minister, Israel Katz, said his country had cooperated for years "under the radar in a series of operations" with Somaliland, and added that he expected it would reach "new heights".
The Future Outlook
Chatham House expert Mekelberg told Al Jazeera that whilst the relationship offers some gains for both sides, it addresses neither of their core issues.
"Netanyahu is seeking ways to continue to bypass addressing the Palestinian issue and reach out to other countries," he said. "Somaliland is building too much into this too. Yes it is big for them and important for them but Israel can't do everything."
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