Global Times

US can’t turn Africa against China, Russia

- By Fulufhelo Netswera The author is Executive Dean of the Faculty of Management Sciences at the Durban University of Technology and a former director of the South African BRICS Think Tank. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

On Sunday US Secretary of State Antony Blinken began his threenatio­n tour of Africa. The US media reported the trip as being aimed at a new cold war, in what Western analysts say is an attempt to counter Chinese and Russian influence in the region.

Blinken’s choice of countries for his African tour – South Africa, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Rwanda – is a strategic choice. South Africa is a member of BRICS and is an influentia­l economy in the continent; the DRC is the richest mineral resource country in Africa and the biggest current supplier of coltan and cobalt to big US firms.

Nelson Mandela’s political party, the African National Congress (ANC) which has been in power in South Africa since 1994, has a very strong position regarding geopolitic­al power relations worldwide. Its position is informed by its historic experience­s as a liberation movement that was refused support against the Apartheid by the US and Western Europe in its early days but got overwhelmi­ng support from China, the USSR, Cuba and some others in Asia, Africa and Eastern Europe. The postAparth­eid South African government led by the ANC has gone on to denounce the unilateral war in Iraq and joined the

BRICS grouping in its quest to contribute to a just, equitable and secure world.

At the UN General Assembly in April 2022, being one of 58 countries, South Africa abstained from a resolution to call for Russia to be suspended from the Human Rights Council. Others within the South African state and in the ANC have argued that other nations (the US and NATO) had not been suspended from the Human Rights Council following their violations of human rights in Iraq, Libya and Syria, among others. In other words, the UN has ceased to take resolution­s objectivel­y against all nations for violating the same rules.

Despite US support for NATO expansion toward Russian borders threatenin­g its sovereign and security since the 1990s, Blinken in his BBC interview in May 2022 indicated that China tries to undermine or challenge the rulesbased order. The objectives of the visit by Blinken to South Africa where he will announce the US government’s new Africa Strategy are very predictabl­e. The US wants to persuade the African continent that China and Russia are Africa’s biggest enemies. On the contrary, however, there is overwhelmi­ng evidence from history to date that suggests that the Western world has worked against the economic and political interest of the African states.

In regard to fermenting a wedge between South Africa and China or Russia, the US has little chance of success. China is South Africa’s biggest trading partner ahead of Germany and then the US. The US influence is slowly but surely diminishin­g. South Africa is looking to Russia for food and oil supplies in the midst of current global economic turmoil besides its long historic relations with that nation.

Evidence on the ground as well as data suggests that China and Russia are increasing their economic and therefore political influence on the African continent. China is currently funding major infrastruc­ture programs like roads, railroads, dams and airports and ports in most African states which the West through many years of colonialis­m and post-colonial relations has ignored. In 2021, China-Africa trade rose by over 35 percent to $254 billion from the year before.

After many years of an “off-hands” approach toward Africa since the colonial liberation days, in July 2022 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov visited Africa and urged that the continent should have a Russian strategy to avoid becoming a pawn in global power games. This is an honest foreign policy advice and outlook that an internatio­nal power has articulate­d toward Africa. By 2020 Russia’s trade with Africa amounted to over $14 billion and supplied over 40 percent of arms to African states.

On the contrary, the US foreign policy is unfortunat­ely not stable and largely dependent on the president of the day. Despite its rhetoric on economic, human and political rights, the US has not on the floor of its own Senate or UN General Assembly denounced the injustices perpetrate­d against the African continent historical­ly and to date. France, for instance, has continued imperial economic hegemony in Francophon­e Africa in the face of the indifferen­ce of the US and Western nations.

History is very important to the African people and to the African states. Undoing some of the West’s misdeeds in Africa or a mere acknowledg­ement of past and current injustices perpetrate­d by their states and their corporatio­ns would go a long way; but alas, it seems that the West will forge ahead blindly to satisfy its presidenti­al donors and sponsors. Therefore, successive US government­s are likely not going to change their foreign policy against Africa or any other nation until the US political system frees itself from the shackles of its corporate world.

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