Thursday, December 15, 2022

"US should heed Africa’s needs to make strategy work." Officials in the United States look upon Africans as people “in need of help” or people who “need to be told what to do”, and this is destroying relations between Africa and Washington. #USA #China #Africa #AlJazeera #GT








Eguegu: The rise of China has no doubt inspired the US to rethink its global strategy as well as regional strategies. It is in this light that recent increase in enthusiasm for engagement with Africa should be seen. Today, China is the biggest trade partner of the African region, Beijing's political and security relations with the continent is also growing to the benefit of both sides. Two of the main reasons for the growing ties with China is the consistent high-level contact between leaders of both sides, and the needs-driven approach of the relationship: whereby the Chinese side makes efforts to ensure African needs are well respected and addressed, despite power imbalances. The US seems to be taking a leaf off the China-Africa playbook. Next week's summit is in recognition of the importance of high-level diplomatic engagement in strengthening US-Africa ties. Similarly, for Biden's recently published Africa Strategy to find success, it needs such high profile engagement for Biden to communicate his objectives to African leaders, and to listen to responses from African side. 



US influence in Africa is under significant strain, not just from an economic perspective, but from under performance of key US' Africa oriented initiatives like AGOA, which is out of touch with African realities.At the global structural level, there is waning confidence in Western leadership due to the lack of delivery of global public goods as seen during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. To this day, Africa is still the least vaccinated region in the world and that is largely due to issues with vaccine accessibility, availability and affordability, to which the US response fall short of rhetoric. Energy power remains a major challenge, and there is divergence on this issue as well. In September, Washington's Climate Envoy John Kerry visited some African countries, during which he cautioned African countries against the use of fossil fuels. This is in sharp contrast with sentiments across the continent, where reliance on hydrocarbons both for energy and revenue remains high." 

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