This week Egypt attempted to defuse political tensions with Nile Basin countries. On Monday President Abdel-Fattah Al-Sisi poured cold water on any suggestion Cairo would contemplate military action against either Sudan or Ethiopia, saying “Egypt will not fight its brothers”. “We are not willing to enter into a war with our brothers or with anyone,” the president said during the opening of a number of development projects. Egypt “does not conspire and does not interfere in the affairs of others,” the president added in comments that stressed Cairo is pursuing stability in the Horn of Africa. “Our spending on the Armed Forces is to achieve Egyptian national security and in accordance with security concepts that require a military capability to protect Egyptians and preserve peace,” he said. Al-Sisi's comments came against a backdrop of growing speculation in Ethiopia and Sudan over the possibility of Egypt waging military action from the UAE-owned base in neighbouring Eritrea as negotiations of Ethiopia's Grand Renaissance Dam remain deadlocked. Sudan, which two weeks ago summoned its ambassador from Cairo for consultations, went so far as to announce its troops are combat ready. Eriterian President Isaias Afwerki said on Monday there are no Egyptian troops in his country. As Al-Ahram Weekly went to press Egypt was still expecting the two-day visit to Cairo by Prime Minister of Ethiopia Hailemariam Desalegn, scheduled to begin on 17 January, to go ahead. An informed government source says Egypt needs a firm commitment from Desalegn on three issues: that Ethiopia will not begin filling the dam's reservoir without Cairo's agreement; that the filling timetable be fixed following discussions by the technical teams and avoid compromising Egypt's share of Nile water and Addis Ababa commit to cooperate “in good faith and transparently” with the consultants contracted to advise Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt on the impacts of the dam. According to a second source, Cairo expects Addis Ababa to accept that Egypt will only accept a temporary reduction of its share of water pending the filling process, with the proviso that in the event of a bad rainy season it can demand Ethiopia reduce the amount of water it is withholding; that Egypt will not negotiate a reduction of its annual share “under any conditions”, nor will it agree to any agreement that involves buying back part of its established share from either Ethiopia or Sudan “as has been indirectly suggested during talks”. Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan have been trying to negotiate an agreement on the construction and filling of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam since 2015. Construction work has continued apace though no agreement has been reached. Following a new round of talks between the three countries in November, Egypt announced that negotiations had failed. Days later, in a statement before parliament, Ethiopia's ambassador to Egypt insisted his country remained committed to a negotiated solution that satisfies all parties. During talks with senior Ethiopian officials in Addis Ababa late December Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukri suggested a team of experts from the World Bank join the negotiations to provide disinterested advice on the safety of the dam and its possible impacts. “The idea was to have an independent international body assessing the process of filling the reservoir,” says a senior government official. He added that previous studies conducted by the World Bank “before Ethiopia began construction” concluded the dam might harm Egypt's water interests unless its construction and the filling of the reservoir were carefully calibrated. Neither Ethiopia nor Sudan welcomed Egypt's request the World Bank be included in negotiations. According to the Egyptian official, it is likely they will either refuse or take a very long time before agreeing. “This is an ongoing problem. Ethiopia, with the support of Sudan, has been wasting time in fruitless talks while aggressively pursuing construction of the dam to create new facts on the ground,” says the official. Today, Cairo officials say it may well be time for Egypt to reconsider its commitment to the Khartoum Declaration of Principles, signed by the leaders of the three countries in 2015, which established the protocols for the tripartite talks. “This is not something we will rush into but it has to be considered given Ethiopia's refusal to make serious commitments. The fact is we have had enough of endless promises that lead to nothing,” says the official. “If no clear basis for an agreement is reached during the visit of the Ethiopian prime minister then Egypt will have little choice but to consider other legal options.” In an interview with the Weekly published last month Aye Atske-Selassie Amde, Ethiopia's ambassador to Egypt, said the political will of leaders could help give a positive push to negotiations but in the end it will be up to technical experts to resolve outstanding issues. Cairo, says the Egyptian official, is willing to give experts another chance to answer to the most obvious pending question of how many years should be spent filling the reservoir but warns “it is impossible we will agree to the three-year timetable some in Ethiopia are proposing because it will mean a 30 per cent cut to Egypt's share of Nile water.” As it is Egypt's annual 55 billion cubic metre share falls short of meeting the water needs of a growing population. The amount was set in historic agreements which a majority of the Nile Basin's 10 countries do not recognise because they were signed during the colonial period and want renegotiated, something Cairo firmly rejects. Desalegn's two-day visit has been officially designed to allow for him and Al-Sisi to chair a meeting of the joint cooperation committee Egypt and Ethiopia established in 2014. The committee could discuss a wide range of cooperative ventures between the two countries including possible agrarian, energy and industrial projects. Diplomats on both sides say the two capitals are more than willing to widen joint cooperation in the hope this will help build confidence. Parallel to talks with EthiopiaCairo is considering ways to contain tensions with Sudan, over both the dam and the Halayeb Triangle dispute, say informed diplomatic sources. Egyptian officials say Cairo is still considering its options and is keeping a close eye on the alliances the regime of Sudanese President Omar Bashir is forging with Turkey and Qatar. “We don't want to be in a state of perpetual tension with Sudan though Khartoum needs to realise we are disappointed with some of its choices,” said one Egyptian official.