Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Trump’s new Africa strategy takes aim at China, Russia

Some critics say Trump ignored policy too long

- By Maria Danilova and Cara Anna

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion on Thursday announced a sharp refocus of its Africa strategy to counter what it called the “predatory” practices of China and Russia, which are “deliberate­ly and aggressive­ly targeting their investment­s in the region to gain a competitiv­e advantage.”

National security adviser John Bolton laid out the new strategy in remarks at the Heritage Foundation, saying the U.S. will now choose its African partners more carefully.

He took special aim at China, accusing it of wielding “bribes, opaque agreements, and the strategic use of debt to hold states in Africa captive to Beijing’s wishes and demands.”

Russia, he alleged, is also “seeking to increase its influence in the region through corrupt economic dealings.” Russia and China’s efforts across the African continent, he said, “stunt” its economic growth.

Some critics have said this administra­tion has let Africa policy drift for too long, while the president is well known for his disparagin­g remarks about the continent that is home to 1.2 billion people.

Addressing members of Congress on Wednesday, Assistant Secretary of State Tibor Nagy was the latest to warn of China’s increasing economic, military and political influence in Africa, a continent with some of the world’s fastest-growing economies and trillions of dollars’ worth of natural resources.

Africa’s population is set to double by 2050, he said, a “demographi­c tsunami.”

Any renewed U.S. effort to counter China in Africa, however, comes years late. China became the continent’s top trading partner nearly a decade ago and has invested billions of dollars in high-profile infrastruc­ture projects.

In response to warnings by the U.S. and others about indebtedne­ss to China, some in Africa have noted sometimes uncomforta­ble financial terms set out by Western powers in the past. Others praise China’s nostrings-attached terms with no insistence on human rights reforms.

Congress passed legislatio­n earlier this year creating a $60 billion internatio­nal developmen­t agency, widely viewed as a response to Chinese overseas developmen­t programs.

Under the new “Prosper Africa” strategy, Bolton said, “we will encourage African leaders to choose high-quality, transparen­t, inclusive and sustainabl­e foreign investment projects, including those from the United States.”

He warned that the U.S. will “reevaluate its support for U.N. peacekeepi­ng missions” as well as aid to countries whose governance it finds troublesom­e, including South Sudan.

“The United States will no longer provide indiscrimi­nate assistance across the entire continent,” Bolton said.

He added that “countries that repeatedly vote against the United States in internatio­nal forums, or take action counter to U.S. interests, should not receive generous American foreign aid.”

On the military front, China opened its first overseas military base last year in the Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti, the site of the only permanent U.S. military base on the continent. Bolton warned of a possible shift of the strategic region, along the lucrative and busy Red Sea shipping lane, to China.

As Beijing and others seek to grow their military presence, the U.S. is pulling back. The Pentagon in November said it planned a 10 percent cut in the U.S. Africa Command’s total force of 7,200 troops, to be carried out over several years, as its global focus shifts from counterter­rorism to perceived threats from Russia and China.

Whatever steps the U.S. takes next, perception­s are an immediate hurdle. The president is known for his reported unflatteri­ng remarks.

While Congress has restrained some of his administra­tion’s proposed deep cuts in foreign aid, Trump has put forth no signature Africa project and there is no sign he intends to visit.

Jennifer Cooke, director of the Institute for African Studies at George Washington University, said the U.S. should avoid trying to be too transactio­nal.

“We are not going to beat China at its own game, which is massive investment­s and in infrastruc­ture and roads, ports, railroads and vanity projects,” Cooke said.

 ?? CLIFF OWEN/AP ??
CLIFF OWEN/AP

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