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Israel recognised Somaliland and turned recognition into leverage - and global fears are proving justified. Right, so Somaliland has finally been recognised, and it turns out recognition wasn’t the prize, it was the bill. A territory that wanted legitimacy now has exposure, a parent state has lost control of its own borders, and Israel has demonstrated that recognition still works exactly how empires prefer it to work — as leverage. That outcome is nowlocked in, and no amount of denial is putting the lid back on. Israel didn’t recognise Somaliland to tidy up a map or reward good behaviour. It recognised Somaliland because recognition now buys access, alignment, and silence, and Somaliland was in no position to say no. Somalia pays the price in territorial authority, Somaliland pays it in strategic vulnerability, and Palestinians are dragged back into the conversation as something that can be moved around if the bargain demands it. So this isn’t just about one recognition decision. It’s about how recognition itself has stopped closing arguments and started opening transactions, and why once that happens, the cost doesn’t arrive once, it keeps coming. Right, so Israel has recognised Somaliland, and that recognition has landed not as closure but as exposure. A territory that wanted legitimacy now carries strategic liability, a parent state has lost control over how its own borders are treated, and Israel has shown that recognition no longer functions as an endpoint but as leverage. That outcome is already fixed. The argument has moved on, whether the parties involved are comfortable admitting it or not. Israel has taken a step no other state has taken in more than three decades. Somaliland has existed in diplomatic suspension since 1991, governing itself, running elections, maintaining internal order, and still being treated as if none of that counted because recognition never arrived.
By Damien WilleyIsrael recognised Somaliland and turned recognition into leverage - and global fears are proving justified. Right, so Somaliland has finally been recognised, and it turns out recognition wasn’t the prize, it was the bill. A territory that wanted legitimacy now has exposure, a parent state has lost control of its own borders, and Israel has demonstrated that recognition still works exactly how empires prefer it to work — as leverage. That outcome is nowlocked in, and no amount of denial is putting the lid back on. Israel didn’t recognise Somaliland to tidy up a map or reward good behaviour. It recognised Somaliland because recognition now buys access, alignment, and silence, and Somaliland was in no position to say no. Somalia pays the price in territorial authority, Somaliland pays it in strategic vulnerability, and Palestinians are dragged back into the conversation as something that can be moved around if the bargain demands it. So this isn’t just about one recognition decision. It’s about how recognition itself has stopped closing arguments and started opening transactions, and why once that happens, the cost doesn’t arrive once, it keeps coming. Right, so Israel has recognised Somaliland, and that recognition has landed not as closure but as exposure. A territory that wanted legitimacy now carries strategic liability, a parent state has lost control over how its own borders are treated, and Israel has shown that recognition no longer functions as an endpoint but as leverage. That outcome is already fixed. The argument has moved on, whether the parties involved are comfortable admitting it or not. Israel has taken a step no other state has taken in more than three decades. Somaliland has existed in diplomatic suspension since 1991, governing itself, running elections, maintaining internal order, and still being treated as if none of that counted because recognition never arrived.