Cape Argus

Blinken lays out US policy for Africa

- JOHN HUDSON

US SECRETARY of State Antony Blinken on Friday gave the Biden administra­tion’s first speech articulati­ng its Africa policy and refrained from mentioning the most consequent­ial economic player on the continent: China. The omission was no mistake. Blinken and his top aides view the past four years of US-Africa policy under former president Donald Trump as ham-fisted and focused on forcing African leaders to choose between working with the US or China in a Cold War-style stand-off.

Blinken made clear, in his first official visit to Africa’s most populous country, that Washington wanted to partner with African countries because it is mutually beneficial rather than a proxy battle to limit Beijing’s influence.

“I want to be clear: the US doesn’t want to limit your partnershi­ps with other countries.

“We want to make your partnershi­ps with us even stronger.

“We don’t want to make you choose.

“We want to give you choices,” Blinken told an audience at the headquarte­rs of the Economic Community of West African States, a regional economic union based in Abuja, the capital of Nigeria.

The approach is a significan­t shift from Trump whose top diplomat, Mike Pompeo, often railed against Chinese-led infrastruc­ture projects as “debt traps” during his three-country trip to Africa last year and criticised telecom projects in Africa by the Chinese firm Huawei.

Trump himself had a strained relationsh­ip with the continent, inviting criticism with his reference to the non-existent African nation of “Nambia”, and broad generalisa­tions about African states as “s***-hole countries”.

His travel ban on several Muslimmajo­rity countries, including some in Africa, inflamed relations with important security partners such as

Chad and forced the administra­tion to remove it from the list as not to jeopardise operations against the extremist group Boko Haram.

In its first 10 months, the Biden administra­tion has sought to reset Washington’s relationsh­ip with the continent, providing more than 50 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines to 43 African countries and announcing a range of financial investment­s in health, education and climate adaptation projects in Africa.

“I know I’m hardly the first US secretary of state to come to Africa and promise different and better engagement,” Blinken said.

“I also know that many countries across the region are wary of the strings that come with more engagement, and fear that in a world of sharper rivalries among major powers, countries will be forced to choose.”

Although Blinken’s approach is different, analysts say merely jettisonin­g a style that many African leaders viewed as lecturing and condescend­ing will not be enough.

“It is not just that Blinken has learned that Africans didn’t appreciate having US engagement in Africa framed as some sort of great power competitio­n with China, it is also a recognitio­n that like it or not, the Chinese and many others are a real presence on the continent and that in many respects the US is playing catch up,” said Cameron Hudson, an Africa expert at the Atlantic Council.

“It’s hard to be preachy when our involvemen­t in so many areas is only episodic and surface level,” he added.

China’s involvemen­t in Africa has exploded in recent years, going from a relatively modest player in the 1990s to becoming Africa’s largest trading partner.

By 2019, one in five African infrastruc­ture projects was financed by Beijing and one in three was being built by it.

The trend has alarmed US lawmakers, and experts in Washington have urged the US to aggressive­ly counter Chinese inroads on the continent.

African leaders and some analysts have countered that Africa’s infrastruc­ture needs are great and rejecting Beijing’s offers would be political and economic malpractic­e.

In a news conference on Thursday, the foreign minister of Nigeria, which has taken on billions of dollars in debt from China for infrastruc­ture projects including roads, rail and gas pipelines, rejected criticism of the joint ventures.

“We saw a great opportunit­y with the Chinese,” Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama said.

“They are used to a lot of these huge capital projects and infrastruc­ture projects.

“We would have gone with anybody providing something at a competitiv­e rate,” he added.

Blinken, when asked about Chinese investment­s during the news conference, avoided characteri­sing working with the US or China as a binary choice.

“When it comes to infrastruc­ture investment, again, this is not about China or anyone else, it is about what we would like to think of as a race to the top when it comes to those investment­s,” he said.

He said investment from China into the continent was good in principle but warned that African countries should not be saddled with “tremendous debt that they cannot repay”, and noted that workers’ rights and environmen­tal standards shouldn’t be overlooked.

Defenders of the Trump administra­tion’s approach say that its campaign against Chinese infrastruc­ture projects raised awareness about Beijing’s practices in a way that continues to benefit US and African policymake­rs.

“In many respects Blinken does not need to raise the issue because Pompeo and others raised it and, by doing so, gave the impetus of US attention, both public and private, to questions of transparen­cy and sustainabi­lity of deals and especially of the debt involved,” said Peter Pham, Trump’s former special envoy for the Sahel region of Africa.

Pham noted the controvers­y within the Democratic Republic of the Congo over a $6.2 billion mineralsfo­r-infrastruc­ture project that has come under growing domestic scrutiny, including calls to renegotiat­e it.

“The conversati­on (over Chinese projects) has been taken up with vigour by Africans themselves,” said Pham.

Christophe­r Fomunyoh, an Africa expert at the National Democratic Institute, said American infrastruc­ture projects need to succeed on the merits, rather than through rhetorical sloganeeri­ng.

“You can’t browbeat people into denying the precarious­ness of their developmen­t; rather, an approach that brings them to embrace and value the strength, quality and durability of the American public and private sectors is a winner,” he said. |

 ?? | AFP ?? US SECRETARY of State Antony Blinken delivers his speech on US Africa Policy at the Economic Community of West African States in Abuja, Nigeria, on Friday. Blinken is on a five-day trip to Kenya, Nigeria, and Senegal.
| AFP US SECRETARY of State Antony Blinken delivers his speech on US Africa Policy at the Economic Community of West African States in Abuja, Nigeria, on Friday. Blinken is on a five-day trip to Kenya, Nigeria, and Senegal.

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