JERUSALEM — Israel's recognition of Somaliland has thrust the breakaway territory into the international spotlight, causing an uproar in the Horn of Africa and the Middle East as a surprise new factor in regional power struggles.
For Israel, the decision reignites questions about the contentious proposal raised last year by American and Israeli officials for Somaliland to take in Palestinians displaced from Gaza. Israel also could use Somaliland as a base to more closely respond to attacks from Iran-backed Houthis rebels in Yemen, just across the Gulf of Aden.
Israel also would get a diplomatic win. Somaliland's foreign minister told The Associated Press that it aims to join the Abraham Accords, bilateral agreements between Israel and Arab and Muslim-majority countries.
''It is a mutually beneficial friendship," Abdirahman Dahir Adan said in an interview. In return, ''Somaliland gains open cooperation with Israel in trade, investment and technology."
But the first international recognition of Somaliland as an independent nation also could make it a target. Analysts warn that its ties with Israel could become a rallying cry for Islamic extremists, destabilizing an already volatile region in which Somaliland has prided itself as an oasis of relative calm.
Al-Qaida affiliate al-Shabab, based in Somalia and the key challenge to that country's stability, is already making threats. The group has rarely carried out attacks in Somaliland, which broke away in 1991 as Somalia collapsed into conflict.
''Members of the movement reject Israel's attempt to claim or use parts of our land. We will not accept this, and we will fight against it,'' al-Shabab spokesperson Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rageal said in an audio message posted on one of the group's sites.
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