Ten months ago, after a disastrous military offensive designed to destroy the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) led to the destruction of much of the Ethiopian Army in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia, the government of Ethiopia declared a unilateral cease-fire, with the stated purpose of allowing desperately needed humanitarian aid to be delivered. The international community expressed its hope for peace.
Instead, the Ethiopian government imposed a blockade around Tigray, and rearmed itself to conduct a series of counteroffensives against the resurgent TPLF.
To date, researchers estimate that up to 500,000 Ethiopians have died from war and famine in the 17 months since Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and his partner in war, Eritrean dictator Isaias Afwerki, plotted to turn a political conflict with the TPLF into a genocidal military conflict.
Late last month, the Ethiopian government once again issued a statement declaring "an indefinite humanitarian truce" to ensure that those in need are able to receive aid. And once again, the international community expressed its hope for peace.
Since the announcement, only two small truck convoys have carried aid into territory controlled by Tigray, and it remains unclear how much more will follow, or when. More ominously, busloads of Ethiopian troops have been spotted heading north through the Amhara and Afar regions to Tigray, their purpose unknown.
There is every reason to doubt the sincerity of a government that has consistently mischaracterized its own actions. Yet perhaps those very missteps unintentionally open the door to diplomacy to stop the bloodshed.
The unity of purpose behind efforts of the U.S. and Europe to stop one dictator, Vladimir Putin, from killing innocent civilians in Ukraine may translate into a renewed commitment to stop Abiy Ahmed and Isaias Afwerki from doing the same in Ethiopia.
The staggering costs of the Ethiopian war are becoming ever more apparent. The inexcusable brutality of the Ethiopian assault on Tigrayans was on display yet again in a March video showing Ethiopian armed forces and other armed groups burning a Tigrayan civilian alive, triggering protests in Ethiopia and other countries. The economic cost now runs in to the billions.