
Turkey and Somalia's Plot
By Prof. Nassir Hussein Kahin, Political Analyst & Managing Editor of bridgingsomaliland.com
The August 14, 2025 letter by U.S. Senator Ted Cruz to President Donald J. Trump has unleashed a wave of hope and renewed determination in Somaliland’s long struggle for recognition. But it has also provoked a predictable backlash from those who fear the inevitable: that Somaliland’s day of international recognition is fast approaching.
Beijing, Ankara, and Mogadishu have revealed their hands. The Chinese Embassy in Mogadishu wasted no time issuing a furious statement accusing the United States of “interfering in the internal affairs of Somalia and China.” It invoked the tired and discredited “One Policy” doctrine, equating Somaliland with Taiwan as “secessionist” regions. In a breathtaking display of arrogance, Chinese officials even singled out Senator Cruz, accusing him of masterminding a global conspiracy to undermine their sovereignty.
This is not diplomacy; it is intimidation. And Somaliland will not bow.
Turkey’s Dangerous Double Game
China’s anger is hardly surprising, but what is most alarming is Turkey’s deepening complicity in Mogadishu’s campaign to destabilize Somaliland. Ankara, which enjoys a consulate in Hargeisa, has taken Somalia’s side in this orchestrated campaign of sabotage.
Recent intelligence has revealed a disturbing chain of events:
• Somalia’s Defense Ministry held secret talks with a separatist chief from Awdal, Somaliland inside Mogadishu.
• The Turkish Ambassador in Somalia also met with this same tribal leader to advance a destabilization agenda.
• Shockingly, the Turkish Consulate in Hargeisa — operating under Somaliland’s hospitality — has now been linked to these same clandestine contacts.
Meanwhile, Turkey’s oil and gas agreements with Mogadishu — including deals that hand away 95% of Somalia’s resources to Ankara — expose the real motives: money, control, and regional influence. Somalia’s President Hassan Sheikh has effectively mortgaged his country’s wealth to Turkey in exchange for their backing against Somaliland’s recognition.
Somaliland and Taiwan: Small States, Big Principles
These maneuvers, however, betray desperation, not strength. Somaliland and Taiwan are not “secessionist regions” but historically legitimate states whose sovereignty predates the regimes now trying to erase them. Both are democracies. Both respect international law. Both uphold values of freedom, stability, and responsible governance.
By contrast, Somalia’s corruption, Turkey’s neo-Ottoman ambitions, and China’s authoritarian bullying place them on the wrong side of history. No amount of tribal militias, propaganda campaigns, or oil contracts will erase the truth: Somaliland is a sovereign nation, and Taiwan is a thriving democracy.
The Moral High Ground
Let it be clear: Somaliland will not be intimidated into silence. Taiwan will not be coerced into submission. Small nations with principles often prove stronger than empires built on coercion. Their moral legitimacy, democratic governance, and the courage of their people give them an edge that no amount of money, military pressure, or diplomatic bullying can extinguish.
The Red Sea, the Horn of Africa, and the Indo-Pacific are not playgrounds for authoritarian powers to redraw borders at will. Somaliland and Taiwan, backed by democratic voices around the world, are showing that courage, resilience, and legitimacy matter more than brute force.
A Warning to Beijing, Ankara, and Mogadishu
Somaliland will defend its sovereignty from coast to coast. Its armed forces and citizens are alert to sabotage in Sool, Awdal, and every other corner of the nation. Any attempt to destabilize Somaliland will be met with firm resistance.
China, Turkey, and Somalia must understand: they are fighting against the tide of history. They are investing in failure. And in time, their obstruction will only strengthen Somaliland’s claim and hasten its recognition.
A Call to Action
To the people of Somaliland: remain vigilant. Support your government, parliament, opposition, and security services. Step up to counter disinformation, resist propaganda, and expose the schemes designed to undermine your sovereignty. And stand shoulder to shoulder with Taiwan, whose friendship and solidarity will prove invaluable in the years ahead.
To the international community: know this — Somaliland and Taiwan are not pawns in a great power game. They are partners for peace, democracy, and stability. They are the future.
History will remember who stood with freedom — and who tried to strangle it.