Somaliland is offering the United States military basing rights at Berbera port and exclusive access to critical minerals like lithium and coltan. All it wants in return is formal diplomatic recognition. The proposal comes at a time when Red Sea security remains a headache and great power competition in Africa is heating up.
A bill in Congress could make the deal possible. H.R. 3992, the Republic of Somaliland Independence Act, was introduced June 12, 2025, by Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa. It directs the U.S. to recognize Somaliland as an independent country separate from Somalia. Nine months later the legislation is still sitting in the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Somaliland Built Its Own State
The region started as British Somaliland, a protectorate that became independent on June 26, 1960. Five days later it joined Italian Somalia to create the Somali Republic. That arrangement fell apart during the civil war of the late 1980s.
On May 18, 1991, Somaliland declared independence and went its own way.
For the past 35 years it has functioned as a separate country. It holds regular elections, issues its own currency, runs its courts and maintains a national army and coast guard. While the south dealt with warlords and instability, Somaliland kept its territory relatively secure and stable. In December 2020, President Trump ordered all U.S. troops out of Somalia—a move that was quickly undone by the subsequent administration.
Israel Breaks the Recognition Barrier
On Dec. 26, 2025, Israel became the first nation to grant Somaliland full recognition. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the move and quickly followed with ambassador exchanges and cooperation agreements. The step drew immediate condemnation from Somalia, the African Union and several Arab countries.
Ethiopia took a different approach. It signed a 2024 memorandum of understanding with Somaliland for port access in exchange for potential economic and political ties. The United Arab Emirates poured money into Berbera years ago through DP World. Those investments created a modern port and airfield that U.S. planners have watched closely.
AFRICOM Commander Visits Berbera
U.S. military interest is already on display. In late November 2025, General Dagvin Anderson, commander of U.S. Africa Command, visited Hargeisa (Capital of Somaliland) and toured Berbera. He met with Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi Irro and senior military leaders, including the chief of general staff and coast guard commander. Anderson specifically checked the port's security and operational capacity.
The visit came months after Israel's recognition and sent a clear signal that Washington is evaluating options on the ground.
Somalia Offers No Real Alternative
President Trump has called Somalia a fourth-world nation with no real government, no police and no functioning military. The description matches what logisticians and operators have seen for years.
Mogadishu receives U.S. training and aid but controls little territory beyond the capital.
A recent offer from the Somali president would have granted more access, but challenges have persisted to the nature of control from the Somali capital.
Djibouti adds risk to the picture. America maintains its main base there at Camp Lemonnier, but China operates its own facility nearby. Putting too many eggs in one small basket invites trouble when tensions rise.
Real Strategic Gains
Recognition would deliver a functional partner without the usual nation-building costs.
Berbera gives U.S. forces a deep-water port and long runway right on the Gulf of Aden.
It provides redundancy for resupply, shorter lines for counter-Houthi operations and a hedge against problems in Djibouti.
The mineral offer is equally practical. Exclusive access to lithium, coltan and other rare earth elements would help secure supply chains for American defense industry. Somaliland already controls its territory and can protect development sites.
Somaliland has proven it can deliver security and governance where Somalia has not. Moving the bill out of committee and extending recognition could shift America's position in the Horn of Africa in one practical step. The opportunity is on the table now.