A look at America’s new Africa strategy

13 Jan, 2019 - 00:01 0 Views

The Sunday Mail

Dan Steinbock

Recently, the White House released its new US Africa strategy, which seeks militarisation and portrays China as a threat.

Both are misguided.

Africa can greatly benefit from Chinese and US economic development.

On December 13 2018, US national security adviser John Bolton gave a speech in the conservative Heritage Foundation about the Trump administration’s new “Africa strategy,” based on Trump’s ‘America First’ foreign policy doctrine.

In the United States, the media focus was on Bolton’s attack against US adversaries and American aid. Specifically, Boston accused Russia and China of “predatory practices” in Africa.

In practice, the Trump administration’s Africa strategy implies militarisation of US activities in Africa to undermine Chinese economic contribution, which has effectively supported modernisation and growth in the continent.

Militarisation of US Africa Strategy

In 2017, the United States had a $39 billion in total goods trade with Sub-Saharan African countries and a trade deficit of $10,8 billion. America’s largest export markets were South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana, Ethiopia and Angola.

In imports, Cote d’Ivoire and Botswana played a role as well.

In the past, US Africa strategy focused mainly on economic cooperation and aid, and secondarily on military cooperation. In the new strategy, the focus areas have been reversed.

The “America First” Africa strategy purports to address three core US interests in Africa:

First, advancing US trade and commercial ties with nations across the region to the benefit of both the United States and Africa. . .Second, countering the threat from radical Islamic terrorism and violent conflict. . .And third, to ensure that US taxpayer dollars for aid are used efficiently and effectively.

While the first core interest ostensibly involves economic dealings, it actually doesn’t.

The Trump administration “wants our economic partners in the region to thrive,” but it downplays all economic efforts to boost African prosperity.

It is the second principle that’s the key to the new US strategy.

According to Bolton, “ISIS, al-Qaida, and their affiliates all operate and recruit on the African continent, plotting attacks against American citizens and targets.”

The new strategy sees Africa mainly as a base of Islamic terrorism, which must be defused in the continent so that it will not threaten American interests.

Third, the new strategy will no longer support “unproductive, unsuccessful, and unaccountable UN peacekeeping missions”.

Moreover, the “America First” stance portrays as adversarial the Chinese efforts to boost global economic integration through the One Road and Belt initiative in emerging and developing economies. China’s economic contribution is mainly an effort to “dominate the world”.

As Bolton puts it: “(China’s) predatory actions are sub-components of broader Chinese strategic initiatives, including ‘One Belt, One Road’ – a plan to develop a series of trade routes leading to and from China with the ultimate goal of advancing Chinese global dominance.”

Since economic facts do not support the Trump administration’s narrative, it relies increasingly on ideological trashing.

Chinese Economic Cooperation in Africa

Since the mid-2010s, Washington has accused China of “neo-colonialism” in Africa.

The misguided narrative seeks to reframe the eclipse of the commodity super-cycle, which caused a drastic fall in commodity prices, as another Chinese plot. In 2016, the value of China-Africa trade was $128 billion, almost three times bigger than US trade with the continent.

The largest African exporters to China comprise Angola, South Africa and the Republic of Congo, whereas the largest buyers of Chinese goods include South Africa and Nigeria. The Sino-African trade increased rapidly some two decades until the fall of the commodity prices since 2014, when the bilateral trade peaked at $215 billion.

Since then, the value of African exports to China has been penalised, even as Chinese exports to Africa have remained steady. Meanwhile, US investment in China has collapsed.

US FDI into Africa grew through the Bush years, when the White House still hoped to benefit from the impending industrialisation in several African economies. But as the Obama administration presented its Africa vision in the early 2010s, US FDI first plunged and then collapsed.

When the administration began its attack against Chinese initiatives last fall, these outbursts were preceded by President Xi Jinping’s speech in the 2018 Forum on China Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) where Xi pledged $60 billion to the continent in loans, grants, and development financing.

The new US Africa strategy is largely dictated by the concern that it has become Africa’s largest economic partner. In contrast to Bolton’s fearful images of Chinese negative impact in Africa, leading business consultancies, including McKinsey, offer very different accounts. The former is based on ideological bashing without facts. The latter reflects simple economic analysis:

Bolton on the U.S. Africa Strategy:

“China uses bribes, opaque agreements, and the strategic use of debt to hold states in Africa captive to Beijing’s wishes and demands. Its investment ventures are riddled with corruption, and do not meet the same environmental or ethical standards as US developmental programmes.”

McKinsey on China in Africa:

“The Chinese ‘dragons’ – firms of all sizes and sectors – are bringing capital investment, management know-how, and entrepreneurial energy to every corner of the continent – and in so doing, they are helping to accelerate the progress of Africa’s ‘lions,’ as its economies are often referred to.”

In the past two decades, Africa-China trade has been growing at some 20 percent per year. FDI has grown twice as fast in the past decade. McKinsey estimates China’s financial flows to Africa are 15 percent higher than official figures when non-traditional flows are included. China is also a large and fast-growing source of aid and the largest source of construction financing, which support Africa’s ambitious infrastructure developments.

But is Chinese infrastructure investment in Africa a threat to U.S. interests, really?

 US, China, and Africa: Two Scenarios

Ever since the release of the US administration’s new 2017 National Security Strategy, China has been perceived as America’s “adversary” rather than a partner: “For decades, US policy was rooted in the belief that support for China’s rise and for its integration into the post-war international order would liberalise China.”

Dan Steinbock is the founder of Difference Group and has served at the India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institute for International Studies (China) and the EU Centre (Singapore).

Read full article on www.sundaymail.co.zw

 

The new Africa strategy is actually based on the old neo-conservative Wolfowitz Doctrine, which in the early ‘90s deems that the American goal must be “to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival, either on the territory of the former Soviet Union or elsewhere that poses a threat.”

That’s why the White House sees its China ties mainly in win-lose terms.

But there is another future scenario that sees the multipolar world economy as a strength rather than a liability.

It is predicated on more stable, global prospects as developing economies focus on economic development, instead of militarisation.

Unlike the US Africa strategy, the multipolar scenario would not foster “major power competition” in Africa.

Rather, it supports a win-win scenario, in which both America and China would trade and invest, and provide development aid to African economies.

That would accelerate modernisation and industrialisation across the continent and, thus, living standards.

With rising prosperity, terror would diminish.

The multipolar scenario would fulfill the three US core interests in Africa and foster triangular economic ties among the US, China and Africa, while intensifying modernisation in the continent.

In contrast, the old new US Africa strategy has potential to undermine such futures.

 

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