In March 1995, ARDUF was involved in the kidnapping of Italian tourists in the
Afar Region of Ethiopia, resulting in an Ethiopian military campaign against the group, coordinated with the
Eritrean government. Travelers reported clashes between ARDUF and Ethiopian government forces in the
Dallol district through 1995, including attacks on the homes and property of
Afar People's Democratic Organization (APDO) members as "traitors", which led an end of all traffic on caravan trade routes through the Dallol area and resulting food shortages. Political attempts at reconciliation were made in October 1997 with the creation of an Afar conference, and again in November, though both of these failed. Mohamooda Gaas made a statement declaring unilateral cease-fire with government forces on 5 June 1998 after the beginning of the 19982000
Eritrean-Ethiopian War and an Eritrean attack on the town of
Alitena, inhabited primarily by
Irob people (an ethnicity closely related linguistically to Afars). As a result of the fighting's civilian casualties, ARDUF reconciled with the Ethiopian government to minimize civilian casualties in the region and condemned the Eritrean government's attacks. In March 2, 2007, ARDUF militants take as hostages five British embassy personnel, workers and relatives of workers, along with nine Ethiopian guides and embassy personnel, during a tour of the Afar region in Hamedela. The crisis ended without casualties or people wounded. ARDUF claimed responsibility for a January 16, 2012
attack on a group of tourists at
Erta Ale in which five were killed, some taken as hostages and others wounded. In March 2012, ARDUF released two tourists kidnapped in the attack. In December 3, 2017, Dr. Walter Reopert, a German tourist was shot dead and his guide was injured in the assault, near the
Erta Ale Volcano in Zone 2 district, Afar. Some sources suspected that the killing was carried out by the ARDUF. As of 5 November 2021, the ARDUF announced that it had joined the
United Front of Ethiopian Federalist and Confederalist Forces. However, the veteran founder of the Afar Revolutionary Democratic Unity Front, insisted that his group was never a part of the alliance at all. On 31 January 2022, the ARDUF announced that it was distancing itself from the
United Front of Ethiopian Federalist and Confederalist Forces after accusing Tigrayan forces of killing civilians in the
Afar Region. ==After joining UEDF==