DJIBOUTI, (Hornpost) Djibouti is 48 years old, but it’s a Republic walking in pace every June 27th, in the morning, independence is commemorated not only in speech, but in cadence, formation, symmetry. The military ceremony, which has become a national ritual, is not just a security showcase: it is the staging of a state claiming its strength, discipline, and projection in a world that watches it. At the parade site, the ground echoes to the rhythm of well-oiled boots, while the President of the Republic, Ismail Omar Guelleh, stands in the grandstand, salutes the detachments one after another. Nothing is left to chance: everything is a symbol, everything is a signal.
What strikes first is the diversity of the bodies that make up the military architecture of the country. The Army, backbone of the national defense, opens the parade. Its motorized infantry regiments, rapid response units and support companies are advancing in perfect synchronization. But it’s the car and armored regiments that impress by the density of their equipment. Coming in column are heavy convoys, troop transport vehicles, armored 8×8, Puma type APCs and RG-33, recently modernized. The presence of light tanks, armed reconnaissance vehicles, as well as towed artillery parts can be noticed. The army is no longer just ensuring the presence. It now displays mobility, ballistic protection and firepower. Tactical integration between ground troops and motorized vectors is in the rigor of the parade.
The Republican Guard emerges in stunning silence, breaking with the martial riot of the rest of the parade. This elite unit, directly attached to the Presidency of the Republic, is not just a guard of honor. She is the guarantor of protocol, state continuity and presidential security. His appearance in the parade is always one of the highlights of the ceremony: impeccable red outfits with golden gallons, white belts and apparatus gloves, and his men march slowly, the bayonets raised high, in perfect alignment Slower their cadence, more solemn their appeal. They’re not marching: they’re watching. It reads a silent rigor, an absolute mastery of the gesture, which imposes it on the crowd.
The National Gendarmerie, a leading force between the civilian and military worlds, follows with its motorized platons, cynophile brigades and heavily equipped law enforcement units. Then the National Police closes the internal sequence with discipline and sobriety, embodying Republican authority in urban centers, sensitive neighborhoods, borders. Special counter-terrorism and intelligence units are detachable, revealing the growing sophistication of domestic intelligence.
But it is the appearance of women in uniform that upsets the order of apparatus. In the army, police and gendarmerie, they advance in tight ranks, helmets, armed, proud. Their right gazes, their assured cadence, express not only equality but also legitimacy. They embody the new face of Republican forces: inclusive, modern, competent.
The Djiboutian Air Force, once embryonic, expands its spectrum: transport, evacuation, support, recognition. The acquisition of tactical drones and portable radar means now puts Djibouti on the regional map of emerging airpowers.
Silence is broken by disciplined passage of Coast Guard. Autonomous naval force, their role has increased with growing maritime challenges: piracy, smuggling, industrial pollution. Their detachment, armed and rigid, symbolizes their rise to power. With their rapid patrols, semi-rigid and coastal mobile command, the Djibouti Coast Guard is today an essential link to maritime security in the Bab el-Mandeb Strait. They monitor Djibouti’s waters, but also protect the country’s blue economy and vital port infrastructure.
In the crowd, faces attentive, smartphones tense. Mohamed Daoud, a young teacher, confesses: “This is the first time I feel so proud.” What we see here isn’t just strength; its mastery The Djibouti army has grown up. »
Halima Warsama, mother of three, added: “It was the women who moved me.” See them walk like men, straight, strong… This is saying something new in this country. “And then, in a whisper, a retired military man concludes, looking into the distance: “It wasn’t like this before.” Today, everything is cleaner, bigger, and safer. We feel that Djibouti is respected. »
This June 27, the message was clear. Djibouti doesn’t celebrate just one date. She exudes strength, organization, confidence. The martial step of the military, the strict silence of the Guard, the pride of women in uniform, the coordinated flight of helicopters, the mechanical rigor of the armored, the passage of the Coast Guards and the emotional silence of the citizens: all of this forms a narrative. That of a Republic that arms itself without arrogance, that progresses without flaming, that asserts its authority without ever giving in to the cult of demonstration. War is never desired, but peace is maintained, and that’s where the whole Djibouti military philosophy is: prepare without provoking, defend without dominating, and exist without submitting.
As the region remains plagued by seizures, state fragility and strategic compositions, Djibouti, it, marches on And the world watches her walking straighter and straight Serene and confident of herself.
Hornopost staff Reporter