Why This Circle Could Spark Africa’s Biggest War

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Published 2023-03-24
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All Comments (21)
  • As an Ethiopian that’s aware of current politics around the dam, this is by far the most underrated, unbiased, uncomplicated reporting of the issue. Thank you RLL! Also will like to add that Ethiopia is not planning to fill during drought years. we’re not inconsiderate. However it is our right to live, build, prosper over the Nile, and thus will make sure this dam reaches its full operational stage while mitigating all issues Egypt faces regarding water security.
  • @ITSBIG8086
    the thing is if Egypt blows up the dam, about 74 billion cubic meters of water would flood Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, and severely damage the surrounding areas.
  • @taerasisay8004
    Here is the latest update after the video: Five months after this video was released, Ethiopia announced that it had completed the fourth and final filling of the dam without causing any harm to Egypt. This contradicts Egypt's claim that it should take 11 to 20 years to fill the dam, exposing the Egyptian government's falsification of the research for political gain over Ethiopia rather than water security. For Ethiopians, however, the dam is a vital project that will improve the lives of tens of millions of people.
  • Fun fact, in autumn/winter of 2019/2020, Egypt recieved more than 3-4 times the annual rainfall, causing flash floods that may have helped in water supply, but also caused multiple deaths. Monitoring possible wet/dry periods could help resolve this issue, whereas more filling in the wet years and less in drier years.
  • As an Egyptian, I am fully for the development of the world. I hope that both Egypt and Ethiopia can find a mutually beneficial resolution without hindering the development of either of the countries growth.
  • @lesussie2237
    Water conflicts are becoming increasingly common. Similar cases are happening between Turkey and Iraq with dams along the Tigris and Euphrates as well as in South & Southeast Asia where China's dams in Tibet are threatening major rivers like the Indus, Brahmaputra, Ganges & Mekong
  • You have the best geopolitical analysis channel on Youtube. Not only is it well researched but your presentation is also extremely concise and there's no repetition.
  • @RealLifeLore I just want to say I love your channel. All of your content is gripping.
  • the European union once floated the idea of filling the dam in 15 years and Egypt would pay Ethiopia for delaying the filling. but with the economic situation in Egypt that ship has long sailed into the abyss.
  • Very unfortunate but I find it fascinating when there's no "real" evil side in a conflict. Just two sides that want to do what would benefit them the most.
  • @mikete714
    Thank you for explaining this situation
  • @Hod5575
    As a Sudanese I want to add one thing. Since the filling of dam has already begun the Sudanese government will never cooperate with Egypt to strike the dam, because billions of cubic metres of water will flow through the Nile. Sudan dams are incapable of handling the massive amount of water at once, thus all the city along the nile are threatened with drowning. However, the only option for Sudan is to negotiate an agreement with Ethiopia and Egypt. In fact since 2020 Sudan has more concerns about the dam's safety than its filling.
  • As an ethiopian i hope that we could solve this issue peacefully,much love to my egyptian brothers and sisters ❤
  • Congrats to Ethiopia for completing the game-changing GERD project🎉❤
  • @Dcain2
    This is very complex yet so simple. Neither side is wrong. If the Nile originated in Egypt, I highly doubt they would let a sub Saharan African country force them to tone down. This would make a great college case study. If had to choose, I side slightly with Ethiopia since it’s in their own country.
  • @henokhenke
    Once again an issue that I had no clue about being well researched and presented. Thank you so much for your work, I enjoy these videos alot! Also thanks to the natives commenting in all the videos who point out things that might be wrong, always fun to see all the sides of the issue and try to learn what's percieved as "correct" :)
  • I think quite a similar situation is happening along the Mekong river in Southeast Asia. Its amazing how easy people overlook rivers as a geopolitical issue.
  • @srgantmoomooo
    okay, that was the most convincing nebula ad you've pitched yet. ill think about it now, thank you