Saturday, March 7, 2026

​From Shipping Lane to Strategic Corridor: Why the Red Sea Matters More Than Ever?

For most of modern history, the Red Sea was viewed mainly as a maritime route linking the Indian Ocean to Europe through the Suez Canal. Ships carrying energy, goods, and raw materials passed through quietly, rarely attracting sustained geopolitical attention. Today that perception has changed. The Red Sea has become one of the most important strategic corridors in the world.

At the center of this corridor lies the Bab el-Mandeb strait, the narrow passage connecting the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden and the wider Indian Ocean. Any vessel traveling between Asia and Europe through the Suez Canal must pass through this gateway. As global trade expanded over the last three decades, the importance of this corridor steadily increased.


In the 1990s, the Red Sea remained outside the main focus of global power politics. After the Cold War, strategic attention shifted toward Europe, the Balkans, and later the Gulf. The corridor remained essential for trade but was not yet treated as a geopolitical arena.


That began to change in the early 2000s. Piracy off the Somali coast and growing counterterrorism operations brought international naval forces into the Gulf of Aden. Maritime security became a priority, and the region started appearing more frequently in global strategic calculations.

The transformation accelerated during the 2010s. Conflicts around the Red Sea, particularly the war in Yemen, highlighted how vulnerable global trade could be if instability reached the Bab el-Mandeb. At the same time, Asia–Europe trade volumes were expanding rapidly, increasing the economic importance of the corridor.

A significant turning point came in 2017 when China opened its first overseas military facility in Djibouti. That decision signaled that the Red Sea had entered the arena of major-power competition. Djibouti soon hosted several foreign military installations, reflecting the corridor’s growing strategic value.

Competition in the region has not been limited to military presence. Ports, logistics corridors, and infrastructure have become central to the strategic landscape. Investment in ports such as Berbera, along with the development of trade corridors connecting the Horn of Africa to inland markets, illustrates how infrastructure and connectivity now play a major role in geopolitics.

The fragility of the corridor was exposed in 2021 when the container ship Ever Given blocked the Suez Canal. The incident disrupted global supply chains and demonstrated how dependent international trade is on a handful of narrow maritime passages.

More recently, attacks on shipping in the Red Sea forced many vessels to reroute around the Cape of Good Hope, adding thousands of kilometers to voyages between Asia and Europe. Higher freight costs and delays quickly followed. Events like these highlight how a single chokepoint can influence the global economy.

Geography places the Horn of Africa at the center of this system. Ports along this coastline sit next to one of the most important maritime corridors in the world. For landlocked economies such as Ethiopia, access to reliable ports is essential for trade and growth. As a result, competition among regional ports and trade routes is increasing.

What is happening in the Red Sea reflects a broader shift in geopolitics. Global competition is no longer confined to traditional military arenas. It increasingly revolves around trade corridors, supply chains, and infrastructure networks.

By the next decade, the Red Sea may stand alongside the Indo-Pacific as one of the key strategic theaters of global politics. The stakes are not only military. They involve trade flows, energy routes, and economic connectivity.

For countries located along this corridor, geography creates opportunity—but also responsibility. Stability, governance, and infrastructure will determine whether they become active participants in this evolving system or remain on its margins.

The Red Sea is no longer simply a passage for ships. It has become a central artery of global commerce and strategy, linking continents, economies, and geopolitical interests in ways that will shape the decades ahead.


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