RESEARCH AREAS

Our Centres

Six dedicated centres shaping analysis and policy across the Horn of Africa

Defense & Security

Governance, Statecraft & Conflict Management

Transnational Crimes & Strategic Threats

Diplomacy & Foreign Relations

Terrorism, Violent Extremism & Radicalization

Climate Change, Migration & Development

MEDIA

HORN Media

Objective and independent insights and analysis featured across national and international media

HORN in the Media

News & Features

Video Gallery

Recordings

Blogs

Research commentary

Photo Gallery

Events & fieldwork

Podcasts

Analyst conversations

Print

Bulletin print

FEATURED

HORN Services

Evidence-based advisory services to support informed decision-making

LATEST BULLETIN

Publications

Research That Informs Policy and Practice

GREAT LAKES REGION

GREATER HORN OF AFRICA

REGIONAL FOCUS

Somalia & Somaliland
Monitor

Evidence-driven analysis shaping policy and security across 13 countries

Featured

Programs

Nine Strategic Programs Designed to Analyse, Influence and Shape the Future of the Horn of Africa

Featured

Programs

Nine Strategic Programs Designed to Analyse, Influence and Shape the Future of the Horn of Africa

2026 EVENTS

BY TYPE

REGISTER

Security Dialogue 2026

12 March 2026, Nairobi, Kenya

RECENT

ARCHIVE

ARCHIVE

Join the Conversation

Engage with our events, dialogues, and discussions

Founded in 2017 · Nairobi

About HORN

A leading think tank driving research, policy, and regional dialogue

Support Research

Help Sustain HORN's Mission

Partner or donate to keep HORN independent

Menu
Menu

Flirting with Hyenas: How External Interests are Fueling Instability in the Horn of Africa

Photo Credits: Flirting-With-Hyenas
Content by HORN Institute
Published March 12, 2026

This study examines how external factors are destabilizing the Horn of Africa region. The objective is to demonstrate how external commercial, geostrategic, political, and military interests are contributing significantly to this phenomenon, and explore options for its mitigation. This study also focusses on the dynamics of the ongoing maritime dispute between Kenya and Somalia, and how the dispute is further destabilizing the Horn of Africa region. Using select cases, the study highlights specific interests of several foreign powers in the apparent ‘second scramble for Africa’ in which the region has become an increasingly strategic theatre. This qualitative study is centered on content analysis of secondary data. The study finds that, in recent years, the Horn of Africa region has grown in terms of geostrategic importance; Western, Middle-Eastern (especially the Gulf) and Asian powers have been the most active external players in the region, geopolitical struggles from the Gulf and the old West-East divide, and internal factors such as civil wars, interstate conflicts have been causing instability in the region.


The region’s governments are thus cautioned against vulnerability and exposure to foreign and external machinations; prioritize responsive governance; adopt preventive bilateral and multilateral diplomacy in dealing with destabilizing regional conflicts; revise regional peacekeeping strategies, mobilize regional counter terrorism efforts in addressing the threat of terrorism and violent extremism; limit foreign influence through regionalism; develop and strengthen regional mechanisms for conflict management; develop closer bilateral cooperation forums and arrangements; and settle territorial questions through negotiated mechanisms. With regard to the Kenya-Somalia maritime dispute, the two countries must engage and seek a negotiated settlement, either directly or through a third party, to avoid the unpredictable and likely adversarial outcome from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) whose consequences may be too grave to contemplate.

The HORN International Institute for Strategic Studies is a non-profit, applied research and policy think-do tank focusing on research and providing evidence-based analysis and strategic interventions to address political, security, economic, and environmental challenges affecting the greater Horn of Africa region.

© 2026 by The HORN International Institute for Strategic Studies. All rights reserved.

HORN Institute
Independent policy think do tank dedicated to advancing informed analysis and practical policy solutions on peace, security, governance and development across the Horn of Africa and the Great Lakes region.

Recent Publications