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BIDEN TELLS AFRICAN LEADERS U.S. IS ‘ALL IN’ ON THE CONTINENT

- By Aamer Madhani & Colleen Long The Associated Press writer Matthew Lee in Washington and Cara Anna in Nairobi, Kenya, contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON—PRESIDENT Joe Biden told dozens of African leaders gathered in Washington that the United States is “all in on Africa’s future,” laying out billions in promised government funding and private investment Wednesday to help the growing continent in health, infrastruc­ture, business and technology.

“The US is committed to supporting every aspect of Africa’s growth,”biden told the leaders and others in a big conference hall, presenting his vision at the three-day Us-africa Leaders Summit of how the US can be a critical catalyst.

Biden, who is pitching the US as a reliable partner to promote democratic elections and push critical health and energy growth, told the crowd the $55 billion in committed investment­s over the next three years—announced on Monday—was “just the beginning.”

He announced more than $15 billion in private trade and investment commitment­s and partnershi­ps.

“There’s so much more we can do together and that we will do together,” Biden said.

The president after his speech spent some time with leaders, including Moroccan Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch, watching Morocco’s World Cup match with France. Morocco lost but made history as the first African team to advance to the tournament’s semifinal round.

The United States has fallen well behind China in investment in sub-saharan Africa, which has become a key battlegrou­nd in an increasing­ly fraught competitio­n between the major powers. The White House insists this week’s gathering is more a listening session with African leaders than an effort to counter Beijing’s influence, but the president’s central foreign policy tenet looms over all: America is in an era-defining battle to prove democracie­s can out-deliver autocracie­s.

That message was clear in Wednesday’s events. In his speech, Biden spoke of how the US would help in modernizin­g technology across the continent, providing clean energy, moving women’s equality forward through business opportunit­ies, bringing clean drinking water to communitie­s and better funding health care. First lady Jill Biden’ s office also laid out $300 million for cancer prevention, screening, treatment and research in Africa.

On Wednesday Biden also held a smaller meeting at the White House with the leaders of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Liberia, Madagascar, Nigeria and Sierra Leone. Thursday is to be dedicated to high-level discussion­s among leaders; Biden will open the day with a session on partnering with the African Union’s strategic vision for the continent.

The president and first lady hosted a White House dinner for all the leaders and their spouses Wednesday night, with the food prepared by Mashama Bailey, the executive chef of The Grey, a Southern cooking spot in Savannah, Georgia. Gladys Knight provided the post-dinner entertainm­ent.

Biden in a toast at the start of the dinner noted the “original sin” of enslaved Africans brought to US shores and paid tribute to the next generation of leaders in both the US and sub-saharan Africa.

“Because particular­ly of our young people, in all our countries together, we can deliver a world that is healthier and safer, more equal, more just, more prosperous and more filled with opportunit­y for everyone,” Biden said.

Senegalese President Macky Sall, who also heads the African Union bloc, expressed hope in his own toast that the US and African leaders could advance their partnershi­p “to the next level.”

The summit is the largest internatio­nal gathering in Washington since before the start of the pandemic. Roads all around the city center were blocked off, and motorcades zoomed by gridlocked traffic elsewhere, ferrying some of the 49 invited heads of state and other leaders.

Many leaders of the continent’s 54 nations often feel they’ve been given short shrift by leading economies. But the continent remains crucial to global powers because of its rapidly growing population, significan­t natural resources and sizable voting bloc in the United Nations. Africa also remains of great strategic importance as the US recalibrat­es its foreign policy with greater focus on China—the nation the Biden administra­tion sees as the United States’most significan­t economic and military adversary.

But Biden invited several leaders who have questionab­le records on human rights, and democracy loomed large.

Equatorial Guinea was invited despite the State Department stating “serious doubts” about last month’s election in the tiny Central African nation. Election officials reported that President Teodoro Obiang’s ruling party won nearly 95% of the vote.

Zimbabwe, which has faced years of US and Western sanctions, also was invited.

Tunisian President Kais Saied, who has been criticized by the United States for democratic backslidin­g, used an appearance before reporters with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday to offer a stout defense of actions he has taken, including suspending the parliament and firing judges.

“The country was on the brink of civil war all over the country, so I had no other alternativ­e but to save the Tunisian nation from undertakin­g any nasty action,”saied said.

Biden made no mention of China in his remarks, and White House officials rejected the notion that the summit was in part about countering China’s influence.

National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said the administra­tion is “refusing to put a gun” to Africa’s head and make it choose between US and China. At the same time, he said “there’s nothing inconsiste­nt about calling a fact a fact and shedding light on what is increasing­ly obvious to our African partners about China’s malign influence on the continent.”

Still, the summit-related activity got a rise out of China. Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin said the US should“respect the will of the African people and take concrete actions to help Africa’s developmen­t, instead of unremittin­gly smearing and attacking other countries.”

Wang said at a briefing Wednesday that it is the“common responsibi­lity of the internatio­nal community to support Africa’s developmen­t.” But he added: “Africa is not an arena for great power confrontat­ion or a target for arbitrary pressure by certain countries or individual­s.”

Rwandan President Paul Kagame also bristled at the idea of his country and others on the continent getting caught between the US and China. “I don’t think we need to be bullied into making choices between US and China,” Kagame said during an event on the summit’s sideline hosted by the news organizati­on Semafor.

Biden has promised US support for a permanent Group of 20 seat for the African Union, and the appointmen­t of a special representa­tive to implement summit commitment­s.

In addition to China, talks also spotlighte­d what the US sees as malevolent Russian action on the continent.

The administra­tion argued in its subsaharan strategy published earlier this year that Russia, the preeminent arms dealer in Africa, views the continent as a permissive environmen­t for Kremlin-connected oligarchs and private military companies to focus on fomenting instabilit­y for their own strategic and financial benefit.

During an appearance with Blinken on Wednesday, Ghanaian President Nana Akufoaddo expressed alarm about the presence of mercenarie­s from Russia’s Wagner Group in Burkina Faso directly north of Ghana. This follows a similar deployment of Wagner forces in Burkina Faso’s immediate neighbor Mali.

“Today, Russian mercenarie­s are on our northern border,” said Akufo-addo, adding that he believed Burkinabe authoritie­s had given the Wagner Group control of a mine for payment and that the country’s prime minister had recently visited Moscow.

 ?? AP/SUSAN WALSH ?? PRESIDENT Joe Biden speaks during a toast in the East Room of the White House in Washington on Wednesday, December 14, 2022, during the Us-africa Leaders Summit dinner as Senegalese President Macky Sall listens.
AP/SUSAN WALSH PRESIDENT Joe Biden speaks during a toast in the East Room of the White House in Washington on Wednesday, December 14, 2022, during the Us-africa Leaders Summit dinner as Senegalese President Macky Sall listens.

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