Reckless General Tsadkan Gebretensae and the Contested Legacy of Power, War, and Political Ambition
By David Yeh
How many wars must a region endure before those who helped ignite them are finally held to account? The Horn of Africa has barely emerged from decades of devastation, yet figures like Tsadkan Gebretensae continue to speak and act as if war is an acceptable instrument of policy. After the Eritrea–Ethiopia war of 1998–2000 and the catastrophic conflict that engulfed Ethiopia from 2020 to 2022, one would expect restraint, reflection, and accountability. Instead, what we see is something far more troubling: a renewed push toward confrontation, led by a man whose record is already written in loss, miscalculation, and human suffering.
Tsadkan’s political and military trajectory is among the most controversial in the modern history of the region. Over decades, his name has been tied to defining moments of conflict. Yet these moments do not point to disciplined leadership or strategic clarity. They reveal a recurring pattern of reckless decision-making, shifting positions, and a persistent pursuit of influence at the expense of stability.
A Pattern of War, Not Leadership
The political and military trajectory of the Incompetent Tsadkan Gebretensae remains one of the most controversial and polarizing in the modern history of the Horn of Africa. Over several decades, his name has been closely tied to defining and often destructive moments in the region, from the Eritrean – Ethiopia War to the outbreak of the Tigray War in 2020. His career reflects not strategic brilliance or disciplined leadership, but rather a persistent pattern of miscalculation, inconsistency, and an overriding pursuit of personal power at the expense of stability and accountability.
Central to current debates is the allegation that Tsadkan was among the key figures who secretly decided and planned the November 4, 2020 attack on the Northern Command of the Ethiopian Army. This act marked a decisive turning point, plunging Ethiopia into a devastating internal war with far reaching humanitarian and geopolitical consequences which led to over half a million people dead and total inhalation. The decision emerged from a small, tightly controlled circle of senior actors. This was not merely a military calculation but a politically motivated gamble one that underestimated the scale of the response and the catastrophic impact on civilians. Tsadkan’s calculation was that his Tigrayan army will defeat Ethiopia and he will be the President of Ethiopia. The result was a prolonged conflict that devastated infrastructure, displaced millions, and deepened divisions across the country.
Tasdqan, now conveniently aligned with the very man he once dismissed, spoke with striking hubris in Fall of 2021. As Tigrayan forces pushed a disorganized Ethiopian army back toward the gates of Addis Ababa, he scoffed that there would be “no negotiation,” insisting there was no credible leadership in Addis Ababa to engage with. At that moment, Tsadkan and his forces were convinced that entry into Addis Ababa was imminent. So confident were they that a coalition was already being assembled in Washington, D.C., positioned to assume power. In that climate of certainty, Tsadkan appeared to see himself reclaiming the authority he believed had been denied to him in 1991, a belief that revealed more about ambition than reality. Today, that same Abiy Ahmed he mocked stands as his boss and handler; a reversal that exposes just how hollow and short-lived that bravado really was.
A Record Written in Failure
Tsadkan’s war against Ethiopia is not an anomaly but part of a long standing pattern. Tsadkan’s tenure as Chief of Staff under Meles Zenawi during the Eritrean – Ethiopian War offers an earlier example of what they describe as deeply flawed leadership. That war, Ethiopia started around Badme, escalated rapidly into a large scale conventional conflict involving massive troop deployments and extensive casualties. Under Tsadkan’s command, Ethiopian forces launched offensives across multiple fronts, including Badme, Tsorona, Zalambessa, and Bure. Many of these operations have since been criticized for poor planning, lack of coordination, and a failure to adequately assess the enemy’s defensive capabilities.
The campaign in the Tsorona front, particularly around Igri Mekel, is frequently cited as a defining example of strategic failure. Reports describe how thousands of infantry, supported by militia forces and mechanized units, were sent into heavily fortified positions with insufficient intelligence and logistical preparation. Civilians were reportedly mobilized to support the operation, highlighting what critics view as a disregard for both military discipline and human life. Within a short period, entire units were decimated, heavy weaponry was destroyed, and morale collapsed. The scale of destruction was so severe that Tsadkan himself later admitted he had never experienced such a defeat in his career. In the words of General Bacha Debele, now Ethiopia’s ambassador to Kenya, the Ethiopian army on Tsadkan’s order was nothing more than cattle driven straight to the slaughterhouse.
Following these failures, internal military reviews reportedly revealed deep dissatisfaction with Tsadkan’s leadership. During meetings in locations such as Infara, Tsadkan is said to have broken down emotionally while acknowledging the magnitude of the losses. While some interpret this as a moment of accountability, critics argue that it underscores a deeper issue: a leadership style characterized by reactive decision making rather than strategic foresight. Ultimately, his removal from his position was widely seen as a direct consequence of these shortcomings, reinforcing perceptions of incompetence at the highest levels of military command.
Power Without Principle
Despite a record that would sideline most public figures, Tsadkan has repeatedly reinserted himself at the center of Tigray’s political and military stage. Not because he represents continuity of principle, but because he has mastered the art of reappearing wherever power briefly resides.
The pattern is not subtle. At decisive moments, he breaks away, only to circle back when the calculus shifts. He stands in opposition, until opposition loses utility. He maintains ties with one center of power, until another offers greater leverage. Then comes the familiar pivot, repackaged as necessity, recast as strategy, and presented as foresight. But stripped of its language, it reads for what it is: a career built not on conviction, but on perpetual recalibration.
This is not pragmatism. Pragmatism operates within a framework of consistent ends. What we see here is something far thinner, a reflex to remain proximate to influence, regardless of the ideological cost. The result is a public trajectory that resists coherence. Positions are taken, abandoned, and reassembled with little regard for continuity, leaving behind a trail of contradictions that demand explanation but rarely receive one.
In a political environment already burdened by fracture and distrust, such a pattern is not neutral, it is corrosive. Leadership in moments of crisis requires clarity, steadiness, and a demonstrable anchor in principle. What Tsadkan’s record instead presents is a recurring willingness to adjust allegiance as circumstances dictate, raising a fundamental question about reliability at precisely the moments when reliability matters most.
At some point, repeated repositioning ceases to be interpreted as strategy and begins to read as habit. And when habit replaces principle, what remains is not leadership, but maneuver, constant, calculated, and ultimately unaccountable.
Figures such as Gebru Asrat are frequently mentioned alongside Tsadkan, forming what critics describe as a network of individuals motivated by shared grievances and ambitions. Together, they are portrayed as attempting to reshape the political landscape of Tigray in ways that consolidate their authority while sidelining rivals, including factions aligned with Debretsion Gebremichael. This internal power struggle has contributed to ongoing instability within Tigray, raising concerns about the region’s political future.
Manufacturing External Conflict
Within this broader context, accusations have emerged that Tsadkan seeks to provoke renewed tensions between Eritrea and Ethiopia. External conflict is viewed as a strategic tool to consolidate internal power. By advocating for increased military presence along the Eritrean border, he is seen as attempting to neutralize internal opponents while creating a security narrative that justifies his continued political relevance. This approach reflects a broader pattern in which conflict is used not as a last resort but as a mechanism for political survival.
The rhetoric surrounding these issues has become increasingly intense. The stale blabbering of Potemkin Party’s senior officials, and affiliated back stabbers, is again on the rise these days. The Party’s leader, as well as minions such as Gen. Tsadkan, are resuscitating the same provocative and discredited arguments of sovereign access to sea; the same unlawful recipe of regional destabilization, repeated with heightened urgency and tone. These toxic policies have and continue to be rejected by the international community. The purpose of the recent intensified campaign appears to be directed at domestic audiences, aiming to deflect attention from deeper structural problems, including economic hardship, political fragmentation, and governance challenges.
The Assab Obsession
Tsadkan’s long-standing fixation on Eritrea’s port of Assab points to something deeper than policy debate; it reflects a persistent willingness to entertain expansion by force, even when he knows exactly who would pay the price. Dispatched to advance arguments on behalf of the Ethiopian Prime Minister, he instead exposed the weakness of the case. By his own admission, he did not believe Assab legally belongs to Ethiopia. More revealing still is the statement he admitted saying in discussions with TPLF/EPRDF leaders: “ዓሰብን እንቀማቸው”—“let’s steal Assab from them [Eritreans],” language that implies theft, not legal ownership.
The historical record reinforces this posture. During the war on the Bure front (along the road that goes from Ethiopia to Assab in Eritrea), repeated offensives aimed at Assab ended not in strategic gain but in devastating losses. General Bacha Debele, who was there, described it bluntly: “ተጨፈጨፍን”—“we were slaughtered.” Division after division was committed and broken. The objective remained unchanged; the human cost kept rising.
That is what makes the current rhetoric so troubling. This is not abstract strategizing. Any renewed push toward Assab would not be carried out by those who advocate it in policy circles, but by poorly resourced soldiers, many from Ethiopia’s most vulnerable communities, sent into one of the harshest environments on the front, toward a fortified coastline they have already failed to take at enormous cost. He understands full well that those closest to him, his adult age children, will not be the ones sent to fight; they remain safely abroad in luxury, far removed from the consequences. The pattern is familiar, and so are the costs it imposes.
Even his later reflections, expressing regret that Assab was not captured during the Eritrea–Ethiopia war, are read by critics not as caution, but as unfinished business. The through line is consistent: when diplomacy forecloses the objective, force reenters the conversation.
This raises a fundamental indictment. To press for war under these conditions is not simply a strategic position, it is a decision that carries foreseeable human consequences. And when those consequences fall, as they have before, on the poorest and least protected, the question is no longer whether the objective is attainable, but whether it is defensible at all.
Contradiction as Strategy
Tsadkan’s article titled “Tigray cannot be the battleground for Ethiopia and Eritrea” is often cited as a call for restraint. On its surface, it reads like the voice of a man urging caution. In context, it reads very differently. His record tells a story that runs in the opposite direction. The gap between what is said and what has been done is not incidental. It is a pattern.
This is not moderation. It is messaging. Public language is calibrated to project reasonableness, while underlying positions continue to lean toward confrontation. Over time, this duality erodes trust. It confuses intent, complicates diplomacy, and makes genuine reconciliation harder to achieve.
The language itself is revealing. References to “preparations in their final stages” and talk of “shortening the war” do not belong to a mindset anchored in de-escalation. They reflect a framework in which conflict is anticipated, managed, and even rationalized. War is not rejected. It is discussed as an option to be optimized.
Another layer of criticism centers on what followed his formal military career. His economic activities and business interests have raised questions about the intersection of power and personal gain. Whether proven or not, the perception is damaging. It reinforces the view that political and military influence has been leveraged not only for strategic positioning but for private benefit. That perception feeds a broader narrative of opportunism that continues to shadow his public role.
The contradictions become even sharper when viewed institutionally. A figure associated with actions that weakened the Northern Command now calls for its restoration. The reversal is striking. It suggests not a reassessment grounded in principle, but a shift dictated by immediate political need. Positions move as circumstances change. The anchor is absent.
These contradictions are not isolated. They reflect deeper structural problems within the region’s political and military culture. Armed struggle remains a default instrument. Power is personalized. Accountability is limited. Within such a system, figures like Tsadkan do not simply operate within the cycle. They reinforce it.
The cost of this cycle is not theoretical. It is measured in lives lost, communities displaced, and economies broken. Trust has been repeatedly eroded. Prospects for long-term stability have been set back again and again. This is the cumulative legacy of decisions made without sufficient accountability or foresight.
Tsadkan remains a deeply divisive figure because his career encapsulates these failures. It is a record marked by inconsistency, ambition, and outcomes that have too often led to instability rather than resolution. It stands as a case study in how power, when exercised without restraint or responsibility, produces consequences that extend far beyond the moment.
As tensions persist within Tigray and along the Eritrea–Ethiopia frontier, the influence of such figures continues to matter. The future of the region will depend on whether it remains trapped in cycles of confrontation or begins to move toward accountability and reform.
What is certain is this. The past has not passed. It continues to shape the present. And unless confronted directly, it will define the future as well.
A Reckoning Deferred
In the end, Tsadkan stands not as a figure of leadership, but at the center of a documented pattern of decisions that have repeatedly produced human suffering, political instability, and avoidable war. The gravest allegation remains his role in the November 4, 2020 attack on the Northern Command, widely described as a covert, politically driven operation conceived within a small and insulated circle. That single act did not merely escalate tensions; it ignited a catastrophic war that consumed lives on a massive scale and fractured a nation. It stands as the clearest example of a leader willing to wager national stability for political advantage.
This was not an aberration. It was consistent with a longer record. During the Eritrea–Ethiopia war, Tsadkan oversaw offensives that have since become synonymous with failure, most notably the assault on Tsorona and Igri Mekel. Thousands of soldiers were pushed into fortified positions with inadequate intelligence, insufficient preparation, and little regard for the cost. Units were decimated. Civilians were drawn into support roles. These were not unavoidable tragedies of war; they were foreseeable outcomes of deeply flawed command decisions.
His political conduct reinforces this pattern. Tsadkan has repeatedly shifted alliances in ways that align less with principle than with proximity to power. He has opposed the TPLF, then returned to it; aligned with federal authorities, then abandoned them; formed tactical blocs to sideline rivals. These are not acts of strategic coherence. They are maneuvers of survival that deepen fragmentation and erode trust.
More troubling still is his repeated invocation of external conflict as a political instrument. By reviving discredited claims around “sovereign access to the sea” and advocating militarization along the Eritrean border, he reintroduces a dangerous logic: that instability can be managed, even exploited, through confrontation. This is not new thinking. It is the same failed formula, repackaged and redeployed.
The contradictions in his public posture only sharpen the indictment. A figure associated with dismantling the Northern Command now calls for its restoration. A commander linked to catastrophic offensives now publishes arguments for restraint. These reversals do not signal growth. They reveal calculation.
Taken together, the record forms a coherent and troubling narrative. This is a figure whose military, political, and rhetorical choices have repeatedly contributed to cycles of war, displacement, and civilian harm. The demand for accountability is not rhetorical. It is a legal and moral imperative.
The region has already paid an extraordinary price. Entire communities have been shattered. Generations have been marked by loss. Yet the language of confrontation persists, and the same actors remain at the center of it.
This is the final indictment. Not merely that grave decisions were made, but that their consequences have not altered the mindset that produced them.
To advocate for another war, after everything that has already been lost, is not strategy. It is repetition of failure. And repetition at this scale is not just dangerous; it is indefensible.
The question now is no longer whether the region can endure another conflict. It is whether it has the will to confront those who continue to make such conflict inevitable.


