Who
Will Get “Whacked” Next in Africa?
The
Obama administration’s Africa policy “has become a rotten fusion
of the worst instincts within neoliberalism and neoconservatism.”
Its common denominators are “petro-military complex profits, an
ever-expanding ‘War on Terror’ and an anti-Chinese political
block.”
by
Patrick Bond
17
October, 2012
This
article was an address delivered by Patrick Bond to the Muslim Youth
Movement 40th Anniversary Conference at the University of
KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa. It was previously published in
Pambazuka.org.
“At
a time when popular revolutions are sweeping the globe, the United
States should be strengthening, not weakening, basic rules of law and
principles of justice enumerated in the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights. But instead of making the world safer, America’s
violation of international human rights abets our enemies and
alienates our friends,” – Former US president Jimmy Carter, 25
June 2012, The New York Times.
“US
actions since 9/11 represent the final stage in the US's century-long
effort to complete the project of making US-led globalization a
concrete reality across the world through three historical moments:
1) the attempted creation of a global Monroe doctrine between 1898
and 1919; 2) the Roosevelt administration's creation of the Bretton
Woods Institutions – the World Bank and IMF – and the UN; and 3)
globalization – the US-led effort to establish a new global regime
based on free trade, deregulation, and privatization.” – Neil
Smith, The Endgame of Globalization, 2005
The
US Assistant Secretary of State for Africa and former three-time
ambassador, Johnnie Carson, was feted by Brooks Spector recently at
Daily Maverick, in an article entitled “America’s Mr. Africa.”
While it is always fitting to honor African-Americans who persevere
to the top despite that country’s deep internal racism, Spector
makes contentious political and economic claims about the “new”
US Africa policy. “For some observers at least,” he says, “Barack
Obama’s new partnership with Africa was announced in his speech in
Accra [11 July 2009], when he declared the era of the authoritarian
African big man to be over – kaput!” As described below, however,
Washington has maintained extremely cozy relationships with a variety
of African dictators.
Spector
then endorses Carson’s claims that “US interests in the continent
fundamentally stem from its interest in strengthening trade to help
African states grow their economies and meet development needs,”
and that “the US wants to work with African nations to strengthen
democratic institutions, good governance and efforts to stamp out
corruption [and] to spur economic growth through market-driven, free
trade principles.” Sorry, but we recall Washington’s deregulatory
support for Wall Street’s market-driven binge, which in 2008-09
contributed to the worst global economic crash in 80 years, resulting
in around a million South African job losses. We know that only the
wealthy recovered so far, and that in the US, the top 1 percent
received 93 percent of all new income since 2009, because the system
wasn’t fixed. And who can forget White House hypocrisy when it
comes to vast and often illegal US agro-corporate subsidies which
continue to thwart African production? And is there any capital city
whose political system is more corrupted by corporate (especially
banking) campaign contributions than Washington, resulting in such
extreme malgovernance that Obama cannot even make an effort to
convict a single banker for world-historic economic misdeeds?
“Washington
has maintained extremely cozy relationships with a variety of African
dictators.”
Spector’s
most flawed assumption is that by increasing trade with (and
vulnerability to) the world economy, “Africa” grows. Although a
few elites have certainly grown rich from extraction, the opposite is
more true, if we make a simple, rational adjustment to GDP:
incorporating the wasting of Africa’s “natural capital” (a
silly phrase but one used increasingly by powerbrokers eyeing the
“Green Economy”). Measuring this loss is something that 10
African leaders agreed to start doing so in May, in the Gabarone
Declaration initiated by Botswana president Ian Khama and the NGO
Conservation International. The adjustment entails counting the
outflow of natural capital (especially non-renewable
mineral/petroleum resources) not only as a short-term credit to GDP
(via “output of goods” measuring the resources extracted and
sold), but also as a long-term debit to the natural capital stocks,
as non-renewable resources no longer become available to future
generations. Number-crunch the resource depletion, and net wealth
declines in Africa as well as the Middle East.
Even
the World Bank is taking seriously the need to adjust GDP, for
example in its 2011 book The Changing Wealth of Nations, which
concludes that instead of growing rapidly, as often advertised by
naive commentators, Africa is shrinking even faster. Conservatively
estimated for the year 2007-08 (the last available measurements),
sub-Saharan Africa’s decline in Adjusted Net Savings exceeded six
percent of national income (and that does not even include diamond
and uranium outflows, too hard for the Bank to calculate).
“Although
a few elites have certainly grown rich from extraction, the opposite
is more true.”
The
continent-wide Resource Curse makes the Marikana massacre look like a
picnic, and allows us to dismiss Spector’s article as the kind of
idle spin-doctoring fluff one gets from the State Department’s US
Information Service (his former employer). But that is not a
particularly satisfying place to leave matters, for the broader
assumptions about the US in Africa also need a rethink, in part
because South Africa is hosting the BRICS summit in Durban next
March, and we’re being subjected to rhetoric from Pretoria about a
“new dynamic” in the emerging market power bloc, supposedly
challenging the sole-superpower system of global governance. So it is
timely to consider whether the two words US and Imperialism still fit
snugly, and then (on another occasion in the near future) whether
Resource-Cursed South Africa also deserves the description
“sub-imperialist” because of its persistent collaboration as an
economic deputy-sheriff to Washington. When a decade ago, Thabo Mbeki
introduced the New Partnership for Africa’s Development, it was
termed “philosophically spot on” by Carson’s predecessor in the
Bush regime, Walter Kansteiner. With both presidents gone for nearly
four years, what’s new and different?
The
US Versus African Democracy
Has
Washington, as Carson claims, helped Africa democratize? The quaint
US State Department notion is based on Washington’s “talking
left” about democracy. On closer examination, Obama and Carson are
“walking right,” along the same neo-conservative track George W.
Bush prepared across Africa’s military, geopolitical and
extractive-economic terrain. Thanks to White House patronage,
murderous African dictators still retain power until too late, most
obviously Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak, who is personally worth at least
$40 billion (according to an ABC News report) and who was recipient
of many billions of dollars in US military aid in the 18 months
following Obama’s speech. As Carson’s boss Hillary Clinton
remarked in 2009, “I really consider President and Mrs. Mubarak to
be friends of my family,” and offered this gaffe a few days before
the corrupt tyrant was overthrown in February 2011: “Our assessment
is that the Egyptian government is stable.” As a result of her
affection for one of the worst African big men, Egypt’s democratic
movement’s core activists turned a cold shoulder to Clinton again
and again.
Washington’s
coddling of other dictators was signaled just weeks after Obama’s
Ghana speech, when his UN Ambassador Susan Rice announced a New York
luncheon with 25 African heads of state (40 had been invited): “We
are looking to have a dialogue with responsible leaders about the
future of Africa’s economic and social development.” Obama dined
with numerous tyrants that day, as only a few governments (Eritrea,
Guinea, Kenya, Madagascar, Niger, Sudan and Zimbabwe) were
specifically “left off the guest list because of disputes over
their governance or an antagonistic relationship with Washington,”
according to Kenya’s Nation newspaper. Amongst the 40 were
Cameroonian dictator Paul Biya, and as his office reported, “At the
end of the two and half hours that they spent together, most of the
African leaders left the dining hall visibly satisfied.” Democracy
and human rights were apparently left off on the agenda, according to
a briefing by the main White House Africa security official, Michelle
Gavin.
Another
attendee was Gambian president Yahya Jammeh, a colonel who after
overthrowing a democrat in 1994 and later claiming to have found an
AIDS cure, last month came under renewed criticism from international
human rights advocates after carrying out the first nine out of a
potential 40 mass death-row executions (those threatened include an
elderly 84-year-old, eight prisoners with mental health issues and
eight foreign nationals). As one local citizens’ network put it,
“Given that the Gambia government uses the death penalty and other
harsh sentences as a tool to silence political dissent and
opposition, Civil Society Associations Gambia believes that any
execution is a further indicator of the brutality with which
President Jammeh’s regime is bent on crushing political dissent.”
Yet when asked whether, like the European Union, the US State
Department would “also have some sort of response should they not
heed these warnings not to proceed?” the official answer was
chilling: “I think we haven’t telegraphed any response at this
point.”
“Democracy
and human rights were apparently left off on the agenda.”
One
reason not to annoy Jammeh was the US Central Intelligence Agency’s
reliance upon a Banjul airport as a secret destination and refueling
site for “rendition” victims, that is, the illegal transfer of
suspected terrorists to countries carrying out torture on behalf of
Washington. According to former US air force veteran and Miami Herald
journalist Sherwood Ross, amongst 28 countries “that held prisoners
in behalf of the US based on published data” are a dozen from
Africa: Algeria, Djibouti, Egypt, Ethiopia, Gambia, Kenya, Libya,
Mauritania, Morocco, Somalia, South Africa and Zambia.
With
the possible exceptions of Kenya and Zambia, all these regimes remain
close Pentagon allies, and hence difficult for genuine democrats.
Last March, as the Arab Spring wave moved east from Tunisia, Obama
backed the Djibouti regime of Ismail Omar Guelleh against
pro-democracy protesters, apparently because of the tiny
dictatorship’s hosting of several thousand US soldiers at
Washington’s only solely-owned base on the continent.
Such
hypocritical relations are not new, and even though he served less
than a term in the US Senate, Obama developed ties to some of the
continent’s most venal elites. Promoting US interests in the form
of petro-military complex profits, an ever-expanding “War on
Terror” and an anti-Chinese political block, are the common
denominators behind Washington’s African alliances. Some examples
are illustrative:
•
In 2006, before becoming
president, he visited Chad’s dictator Idriss Deby in part to press
the case for Chevron Texaco, which Deby had just expelled for failing
to pay sufficient taxes.
•
Obama infamously extended
red-carpet treatment to oil-rich Gabon’s world-class kleptocrat
tyrant Ali Bongo 15 months ago in spite of nearly unprecedented
controversy.
•
This was followed by a
similar invitation a few months ago to Ethiopia’s then prime
minister Meles Zenawi, in spite of objections from Human Rights Watch
and Amnesty International leaders who complained, “The United
States, the World Bank and other states and institutions have shown
little or no attention to Ethiopia’s worsening human rights record.
By inviting Meles to the G-8 summit, the US government is sending a
message that at best shows a lack of concern about the human rights
situation in Ethiopia, and at worst, will be perceived as a US
endorsement of the Ethiopian government's policies.”
After
Meles died in August, the New York Times acknowledged that “he was
notoriously repressive, undermining Obama’s maxim that Africa
doesn’t need strongmen, it needs strong institutions.” The
article quoted former US National Security Council official John
Prendergast’s concern about “a vexing policy quandary” in
Washington’s relations with Ethiopia, Rwanda, Uganda and South
Sudan: “All of them have served American interests or have a strong
US constituency, but all have deeply troubling human rights records.”
(Whether this is a “vexing quandary” or instead best described as
a time-honored tradition is up to the reader to decide.)
•
Obama’s support for
Rwandan strongman Paul Kagame, including $800 million a year in aid
and in June 2012, protection against possible UN censure for
supporting genocide in the Congo, attracted complaints by respected
social justice groups (including the Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagina
Foundation). Maurice Carney of Friends of the Congo explains: “Since
Rwanda invaded Congo in 1996, millions of Congolese have perished,
hundreds of thousands of women have been systematically raped and
Congo’s wealth has been looted. So the impact of Rwanda’s role in
destabilizing the Congo has been tragic for the people of the region
and especially the Congolese people. And this is really the sad part
about the whole situation, because it’s within the means of the
United States to hold its ally accountable, but it has not done so to
date.”
“Since
Rwanda invaded Congo in 1996, millions of Congolese have perished,
hundreds of thousands of women have been systematically raped and
Congo’s wealth has been looted.”
Washington
subsequently chided Kagame, apparently as a result of his turn to new
Chinese patrons, according to analyst Eddie Haywood: “US State
Department cables released by Wikileaks show that Washington has been
keeping a close watch on Rwanda-China economic ties. Referring to
meetings by Rwandan officials with a Chinese delegation, the cables
took note of Rwanda's economic agreements with China and loans from
Beijing for the construction of buildings to house the Office of
Foreign Affairs and to finance a railway project. China also agreed
to consider funding the construction of a new stadium, a women's
center and a Confucius Institute. Rwanda requested the delegation for
duty-free access to Chinese markets, and Rwandan rice cultivation and
road projects were discussed. As Rwanda is a transportation gateway
for the Congo’s vast resources to the global market, it goes
without saying that China's ‘control by investment’ of a railway
project traversing Rwanda through to a port in on the East coast of
Tanzania would raise concerns in Washington.”
•
Last year, citing US
national security interests, Obama issued a waiver so as to send more
than $200 million in military aid to US-allied regimes in Somalia,
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Libya, South Sudan and Yemen in
spite of a 2008 US law prohibiting such funding because of their
armies’ recruitment of child soldiers. According to Human Rights
Watch’s Jo Becker, “The Obama administration has been unwilling
to make even small cuts to military assistance to governments
exploiting children as soldiers. Children are paying the price for
its poor leadership.”
Although
Northwestern University professor Richard Joseph does give Washington
credit for its roles in facilitating democracy (albeit in US
interests) in Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal and
Malawi, the overall message is one of extreme hypocrisy: Obama is
only opposed to African dictatorships which are anti-US (or allied to
China), but if you are a sub-regional power, help hunt Al Qaeda or
have substantial oil reserves, you may commit horrendous crimes and
still get the prized White House photo op.
In
Wikileaks We Trust
We
partly know this thanks to the NGO WikiLeaks, which in late 2010
published more than 250,000 US State Department cables. These
repeatedly demonstrate how Clinton, Bush and Obama promoted, retained
or imposed undemocratic regimes where these coincide with US
interests. (Tellingly, Spector does not even mention this treasure
trove as a source when reviewing Carson’s bona fides.) Because of
WikiLeaks, we know that just a month after Carson took office,
Hillary Clinton asked eleven of Washington’s embassies in Africa to
collect fingerprints, DNA, iris scans, email passwords, credit card
account numbers, frequent flyer account numbers and work schedules of
local political, military, business and religious leaders, including
United Nations officials.
“To
spy on the UN does take it a bit far,” remarks African politics
researcher Liesl Louw-Vaudran of the Institute for Security Studies
in Pretoria. Thanks to WikiLeaks’ revelations of “meddling
chitchat” by Carson and his colleagues, says Louw-Vuadran, “I
think many Africans are a little bit disgusted, a little bit shocked…
once again forcing Africans to question the US’s role [and] voice
serious doubts about the US.”
One
simple reason, she says, is “that if the US cannot protect its
secrets, how on earth will they be able to protect people from
terrorist attacks, for example?” Along with increased access to
oil, imposition of market-driven (pro-corporate) economic policy and
hostility to China, Washington’s attempt to gain African
cooperation in the “War on Terror” appears the most important
factor in foreign policy. That role leaves the Pentagon’s Africa
Command (AfriCom) very busy from its main bases in Frankfurt and
Djibouti. ‘Rather than the simple and cheap rhetoric of bringing
stability to the continent in the name of the ‘war against
terror’,’ according to veteran analyst Daniel Volheim, “AfriCom
is involved in almost 38 African countries [including] Chad, Kenya,
Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Sierra Leone.”
In
the watchdog website Foreign Policy in Focus, Conn Hallinan reports,
“So far, AfriCom’s track record has been one disaster after
another. It supported Ethiopia’s intervention in the Somalia civil
war and helped to overthrow the moderate Islamic Courts Union. It is
now fighting a desperate rear-guard action against a far more
extremist grouping, the al-Shabaab. AfriCom also helped coordinate a
Ugandan Army attack on the Lord’s Resistance Army in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo – Operation Lightning Thunder – that ended
up killing thousands of civilians.” Add to that the failure to gain
a satisfactory transition in Libya, after Washington and European
powers misled the South African government about NATO’s bombing
intentions, in the wake of the African Union’s failed efforts to
settle the civil war peacefully.
“Washington’s
attempt to gain African cooperation in the ‘War on Terror’
appears the most important factor in foreign policy.”
But
the problems are just beginning, observes US investigative journalist
Nick Turse: “Today, the US is drawing down in Afghanistan and has
largely left Iraq. Africa, however, remains a growth opportunity for
the Pentagon.” Since 2009, Turse continues, “operations in Africa
have accelerated far beyond the more limited interventions of the
Bush years: last year’s war in Libya; a regional drone campaign
with missions run out of airports and bases in Djibouti, Ethiopia,
and the Indian Ocean archipelago nation of Seychelles; a flotilla of
30 ships in that ocean supporting regional operations; a
multi-pronged military and CIA campaign against militants in Somalia,
including intelligence operations, training for Somali agents, a
secret prison, helicopter attacks, and US commando raids; a massive
influx of cash for counterterrorism operations across East Africa; a
possible old-fashioned air war, carried out on the sly in the region
using manned aircraft; tens of millions of dollars in arms for allied
mercenaries and African troops; and a special ops expeditionary force
(bolstered by State Department experts) dispatched to help capture or
kill Lord’s Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony and his senior
commanders.”
Adds
University of Pittsburgh international affairs professor Michael
Brenner, the AfriCom expansion “is self-perpetuating since there
will be a steady supply of murderers and extortionists and Islamic
radicals in this tormented environment which we never will be able to
suppress. Our efforts, moreover, will generate the inevitable
anti-Americanism and retaliation such ventures spawn – as in
Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq. So why launch this latest enterprise
of dubious value? Well, when you have created an AfriCom, when you
have staffed it with a few thousand personnel, when you have a
Special Forces corps numbering 60,000, when you have a vastly
expanded CIA Operations Division, and when American strategic
thinking is still locked in the auto-pilot mode set in September 2001
– when all these forces are at work, there will be action.”
Of
course, corpses of US troops on African soil are to be avoided at all
costs, as Bill Clinton’s disastrous 1994 Somalia mission taught the
Pentagon. AfriCom’s head General Carter Ham explained last year
that Washington “would eventually need an AfriCom that could
undertake more traditional military operations,” and he moved his
command in that direction although “not conducting operations –
that’s for the Africans to do.” Writing more frankly about the
anticipated division of labor in the US Air University’s Strategic
Studies Quarterly in 2010, Maj. Shawn T. Cochran quotes a US military
advisor to the African Union, “We don’t want to see our guys
going in and getting whacked… We want Africans to go in.”
Terror
Blowback
However,
even with military ventriloquism, blowback damage results from
Washington’s aggression, Volman argues. “The 2006 invasion of
Somalia by the Ethiopian forces was clearly a proxy war, with AfriCom
providing the logistics – allowing a criminal organization like
al-Shabab to claim a legitimate reason for its war and brutal terror
against the very people both sides claim to be freeing: the poor
ordinary Somalis.” The next stage of the proxy war was in 2010 when
the US gave aid to the Somali Transitional Federal Government (TFG),
but when the New York Times reported the growing AfriCom role, Carson
said its reporter’s allegations of Washington military advisors
assisting and “aiding the TFG… [and] helping to coordinate the
strategic offensive that is apparently underway now, or may be
underway now, in Mogadishu, and that we were, in effect, guiding the
hand and the operations of the TFG military… are incorrect.” Yet
it turned out, within a few months, that the Central Intelligence
Agency was extremely active in Somalia and that mercenaries (such as
Bancroft Global Development) were Washington’s hired guns, as
Carson admitted to the New York Times, “We do not want an American
footprint or boot on the ground.” Hence, according to The Times,
drones were used against the Shabab (Al-Qaeda’s allies in Somalia).
The
contradictions grow, because as The Times reported in mid-2010,
Washington would need to spend “$45 million in arms shipments to
African troops fighting in Somalia. But this is a piecemeal approach
that many American officials believe will not be enough to suppress
the Shabab over the long run. In interviews, more than a dozen
current and former United States officials and experts described an
overall American strategy in Somalia that has been troubled by a lack
of focus and internal battles over the past decade.” Most
worrisome, Washington aimed to get African armies addicted to
mercenary trainers: “The governments of Uganda and Burundi pay
Bancroft millions of dollars to train their soldiers for
counterinsurgency missions in Somalia under an African Union banner,
money that the State Department then reimburses to the two African
nations.”
“The
2006 invasion of Somalia by the Ethiopian forces was clearly a proxy
war.”
Obama’s
repeated drone-war executions of innocent civilians is another
manifestation of cowardly attacks from far above which then
exacerbate hatred and revenge sentiments, creating the conditions for
the counterproductive, violent mob attacks by Islamic extremists
witnessed recently. Most blowback from US military extremism is felt
within Africa, reports Turse: “Last year's US-supported war in
Libya resulted in masses of well-armed Tuareg mercenaries, who had
been fighting for Libyan autocrat Muammar Qaddafi, heading back to
Mali where they helped destabilize that country. So far, the result
has been a military coup by an American-trained officer; a takeover
of some areas by Tuareg fighters of the National Movement for the
Liberation of Azawad, who had previously raided Libyan arms depots;
and other parts of the country being seized by the irregulars of
Ansar Dine, the latest al-Qaeda ‘affiliate’ on the American
radar.”
In
the Washington Post in early October, Greg Miller and Craig Whitlock
report that “al-Qaeda’s African affiliate has become more
dangerous since gaining control of large pockets of territory in Mali
and acquiring weapons from post-revolution Libya,” leading the
White House counterterrorism office, the CIA, State Department and
AfriCom to recruit Mauritania, Algeria, Niger, Senegal, Burkina Faso,
Guinea and Gambia to carry out war games (with French help), and in
coming months to undertake probable proxy duties, not to mention
drone attacks.
According
to their report, “the emphasis is on replicating aspects of the
counterterrorism formula in Somalia. The United States has conducted
intelligence operations there, as well as strikes, but has mainly
relied on African troops to battle an al-Qaeda-linked militant
group.” However, they acknowledge, “Some counterterrorism experts
voiced concern that the administration is inflating the threat posed
by al-Qaeda in North Africa,” which is considered “the most
underperforming affiliate of al-Qaeda.”
Of
course, the very idea of “terror” is suspect when it comes to
Washington vocabulary. On two occasions (1994 and 1996) I worked in
the office of a man officially labeled a “terrorist,” a South
African targeted by the CIA in the early 1960s and only taken off the
US State Department’s no-entry “terror watch-list” in July 2008
(!) thanks to a formal Congressional intervention. We learn lots
about Washington’s whims not only from Nelson Mandela’s
experience, but also from the Pentagon’s embrace of – and
arms-supply to – Saddam Hussein for so long, and from US Vice
President Joe Biden labeling WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange a
“hi-tech terrorist” two years ago, since hounding him to the
point he today cowers in a tiny Ecuadoran embassy room in London.
Petro-Military
Complex, Chinese Competition and Climate Polluters
As
WikiLeaks demonstrated, Washington is choc full of pathological
hypocrites. For example, “China is a very aggressive and pernicious
economic competitor with no morals. China is not in Africa for
altruistic reasons,” Carson argued in early 2010 to a cozy Lagos
mansion meeting with his most important constituencies: executives
from Shell, Chevron, Exxon, Schlumberger oil and the American
Business Council.
“It’s
a common observation, to the point of triteness, that we tend to hate
those traits in others that we’re prone to ourselves,” replied
political economist Kevin Carson. For has China “maintained a
‘defense’ budget almost as large as those of the rest of the
world put together? Deployed a navy with a dozen carrier groups
capable of raining death from the skies on any country that defied
their will? Formulated a national security doctrine which explicitly
calls for China to remain the world’s sole superpower forever and
ever, and to prevent any other power from ever arising to challenge
its hegemony?” The “trip wires” that Carson informed the oil
executives will make Washington “start worrying” about the
Chinese are: “Have they signed military base agreements? Are they
training armies? Have they developed intelligence operations?”
Explaining
why this attitude could revive Africa’s status as a Cold War
battleground, one of Carson’s predecessors, Ryan Henry, revealed in
April 2007 that Washington’s rationales “for establishing AfriCom
included fighting terrorists in Africa, countering Chinese diplomacy
on the continent, and gaining access to Africa‘s natural resources,
especially oil.” Added AfriCom’s second-in-command, Vice-Admiral
Robert Moeller, “the free flow of natural resources from Africa to
the global market was a guiding principle,” along with preventing
“oil disruption,” “terrorism,” and China’s “growing
influence.”
Another
source of oil disruption in Nigeria of concern to Washington was a
civil society case against Shell Oil in May 2012 in which Shell
argued it should have no human rights liabilities because of its
corporate status, a position that the US rejected when it came to US
citizens’ rights to sue. “But when the Supreme Court ordered a
rehearing in the case, and asked whether human rights lawsuits could
be brought when the abuses happened outside the US,” according to
EarthRights International’s Marco Simons, Washington actually sided
with Shell. “Obama is saying that if a foreign government abuses
human rights, we can bomb them, like we did with Libya. But we can't
hold anyone accountable in court, because that would threaten
international relations.”
“AfriCom
will dominate the diplomatic and development instruments of power in
Africa.”
This
essentially pro-corporate predatory perspective has informed
Washington’s “3D” strategy. “The concept of cooperation among
diplomacy (State Department), development (US Agency for
International Development) and defense in order to dry up support for
extremists and terrorists has been adopted by the US government,”
explains US Air War College researcher Stephen Burgess. “The
criticism from think tank experts and others is that the military
dominates because of the preponderance of resources and the large D
of the military swamping the much smaller D of diplomacy and
development. The critics believe that AfriCom will dominate the
diplomatic and development instruments of power in Africa.”
AfriCom
was initially rejected by every African country that then Pentagon
chief Donald Rumsfeld desired as host country, says Burgess. “Only
the reversal of the directive to place the command on the continent
brought grudging acceptance, along with US offers of training
exercises and other forms of security assistance.” For in this
“American way of diplomacy, the military leads the way with
well-resourced and powerful and regionally focused combatant
commands. Congress is willing to fund the military and not the State
Department and the US Agency for International Development.”
Confirms
a leading US Africanist scholar, Michigan State University
sociologist David Wiley, “The continuing US budget for the Egyptian
military is more than the entire US aid budget for HIV, food
emergencies, and other programs for the entire continent. Carson also
needs to be tweaked for his participation in folding together the US
military, intelligence, State Department, USAID, and other agencies
into the new ‘whole of government’ philosophy that results in the
military being the face of US policy and programs in Africa.” In
the words of Carson’s State Department colleagues, “Civilian
power is as fundamental to our national security as military power
and the two must work ever more closely together.”
That
means wherever there is socio-ecological, religious and economic
pressure, such as Uganda and Somalia, Washington’s instinct is the
iron fist, followed by denialism and “goo-goo” good-governance
rhetoric. “From Carson's presentations two years in a row at the
annual African Studies Association meetings, most of us felt we heard
the same speeches we heard in the Bush Administration,” says Wiley.
Add
Mauritian rights activists Rams Seegobin and Lindsey Collen, “It is
clear that the Obama administration is following essentially the same
policy that has guided US military policy toward Africa for more than
a decade. Indeed, the Obama administration is seeking to expand US
military activities on the continent even further.” For, as they
point out, while hesitant to put its own people in harms’ way in
Africa, Obama has budgeted for weapons deals to assist regimes with
human rights violations in Morocco, Kenya, Nigeria, Algeria,
Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda and the DRC amongst others.
In
Kampala, the authoritarian rule of Yoweri Museveni has lasted three
decades, and in 2005, Carson – no longer working for the State
Department – explained in the Boston Globe that his longevity was
“motivated by a desire to protect those around him, including his
son and half-brother, from charges of corruption for alleged
involvement in illegal activities.” Complained Uganda Daily Monitor
journalist Tabu Butagira, “It is such a paradox that Mr Carson, as
chief of Barack Obama administration’s diplomatic engagement with
the continent, flies to Kampala regularly to confer with Museveni on
wide-ranging issues, including regional security operations and
democracy. When this newspaper asked him if he felt Museveni of 2011
was a worse dictator than that of 2005, Mr. Carson said the US
considers him a ‘duly elected President of Uganda.’”
“Wherever
there is socio-ecological, religious and economic pressure, such as
Uganda and “Somalia, Washington’s instinct is the iron fist,
followed by denialism and ‘goo-goo’ good-governance rhetoric.”
Apparently
because Uganda has vast, newly-discovered oil reserves at Lake
Albert, the Museveni of 2011 qualified that year for $45 million in
US military equipment, 100 US troops, four drone planes to hunt
Shabab and an impressive network of Western oil companies fused with
mercenaries, as the London NGO Platform recently revealed. The “Kony
2012” viral video may be a useful surface-level distraction to
justify US intervention, but as Steve Horn of Alternet argues: “If
there is one thing that is nearly for certain, it is that the Lord's
Resistance Army and Joseph Kony, as awful as they are, likely have
nothing to do with this most recent US military engagement in Uganda.
In the end, it all comes back to oil.” Horn’s evidence is not
only that Kony has not been seen for years in Uganda, but that Obama
also “quietly waived restrictions on military aid to Chad, Yemen,
Sudan, and the Democratic Republic of Congo” even though their
armies all have recent documented records of recruiting child
soldiers.
Horn
warns, “Throughout all of this, it is vital to bear in mind the
bigger picture, which is that the United States and China have been
competing against one another in the new ‘Scramble’ for Africa's
valuable oil resources.” Horn is pessimistic, “knowing the
players involved, and seeing the geopolitical and resources
maneuvering taking place in the Lake Albert region.” He predicts a
conflict between Western firms backed by US army and mercenary
firepower on the one hand, and the Chinese National Offshore Oil
Company on the other: “If the United States and its well-connected
guns-for-hire have any say, Tullow Oil, Heritage Oil, ExxonMobil will
take home all the royalties, and CNOOC will be sent home packing.”
In Museveni’s most recent meeting with Carson, a few weeks ago in
Addis Ababa, the Ugandan dictator remarked, “A lot of time has been
wasted on clichés such as Africa needs good governance.” According
to a Xinua report, he “dismissed the linkage between economic
growth and good governance saying that many African countries that
have not had political instability are as backward as those that have
gone through instability.”
Indeed,
it is appropriate to ask why backwardness prevails in countries that
are only “useful” insofar as they have resources. Of course, oil
and minerals are not Washington’s only economic objective. As
WikiLeaks revealed after a February 2010 meeting with Ethiopian
dictator Meles Zenawi, “Carson encouraged Meles to hasten steps to
liberalize the telecommunications and banking industries in
Ethiopia,” according to the secret State Department cable. An
additional economic objective, also revealed at that meeting, was the
destruction of the Kyoto Protocol’s binding cap on greenhouse gas
emissions, a project that Obama and the heads of Brazil, China, India
and South Africa agreed to in Copenhagen at a UN climate summit in
December 2009. As WikiLeaks demonstrated, much diplomacy in
subsequent weeks was aimed at achieving buy-in even if that entailed
bribery and coercion.
The
same approach – refusing to make substantive greenhouse gas cuts
even if it results in the unnecessary death of 185 million Africans
this century, according to Christian Aid – was taken to extremes in
Durban at the United Nations climate summit last December. According
to the New York Times, at the recent World Economic Forum in
Switzerland, a top aide to chief US State Department negotiator Todd
Stern remarked that “the Durban platform was promising because of
what it did not say.” After all, revealed Trevor Houser, “There
is no mention of historic responsibility or per capita emissions.
There is no mention of economic development as the priority for
developing countries. There is no mention of a difference between
developed and developing country action.”
These
are the kinds of policy perspectives that make sense from the
standpoint of Washington’s self-interest, and that in the process
will loot and fry the African continent. But with Obama half-Kenyan
by ancestry (a factor regularly raised by right-wing commentators who
even make ridiculous claims as to the land of his birth), this
treatment should not be considered as specifically anti-African;
instead, it is best described as pro-corporate. For Washington’s
whacking of Africa is not so different than the whacks its rulers
give everywhere.
Obama’s
Traditions
The
dozen worst acts of political treason that Obama has committed
against US progressives who worked hard to elect him were, according
to Moravian College political scientist Gary Olsen,
•
recycling discredited
economic advisors like Robert Rubin and Tim Geithner
•
rescuing ruthless Wall
Street speculators
•
extending the Bush-era
tax cuts for the super-rich
•
abandoning his healthcare
‘public option’ and quickly selling out to private insurers
•
going back on his pledge
to close the Guantanamo Bay prison
•
maintaining 50,000 troops
in Iraq while substituting mercenaries for others
•
a pitifully inadequate
stimulus package
•
doing virtually nothing
about the real unemployment rate of 18 percent and shrinking
paychecks
•
a record-setting Pentagon
budget
•
pushing anti-labor trade
deals
•
reneging on his campaign
promise to reform management-friendly labor laws and reducing
payments to social security, and finally
•
in Obama's Vietnam, the
disastrous and immoral Afghanistan War which costs taxpayers $2
billion per month, 98,000 US troops remain on the ground.
Subsequently,
further information has become available about former constitutional
law professor Obama’s personal role in civilian-killing drone
warfare (including US citizen victims), cyberterrorism, warrantless
eavesdropping, suppression of civil liberties, lack of transparency
and other apparent contradictions. However, do these contradictions
represent, as Prendergast put it, a vexing quandary – or instead, a
tradition?
“Washington’s
whacking of Africa is not so different than the whacks its rulers
give everywhere.”
Arguing
the latter case, consider a prediction made 16 years ago by then Yale
professor Adolph Reed. Jr.: “In Chicago…we’ve gotten a
foretaste of the new breed of foundation-hatched black communitarian
voices: one of them, a smooth Harvard lawyer with impeccable
credentials and vacuous-to-repressive neoliberal politics, has won a
state senate seat on a base mainly in the liberal foundation and
development worlds. His fundamentally bootstrap line was softened by
a patina of the rhetoric of authentic community, talk about meeting
in kitchens, small-scale solutions to social problems, and the
predictable elevation of process over program – the point where
identity politics converges with old-fashioned middle class reform in
favoring form over substances. I suspect that his ilk is the wave of
the future in US black politics here, as in Haiti and wherever the
International Monetary Fund has sway.”
For
South Africans, there’s another whack to suffer: Obama’s eight
percent funding cut to the AIDS programmes that help people here in
Durban get life-saving AntiRetroViral (ARV) medicines. Hilary Thulare
of the AIDS Healthcare Foundation helped arrange a protest to
complain about “lack of access to HIV testing, treatment and
prevention, wavering political commitment to funding the global AIDS
response, and the excessive AIDS drug pricing by pharmaceutical
companies so that treatment is available for more patients,” and
observed that Obama “already pulled out funding for ARVs from Saint
Mary’s Hospital, McCords Hospital and Ithembalabantu Clinic in
Umlazi.” (I personally know people adversely affected.) The
cut-backs are consistent with Obama’s overall favoring of big
corporations which want to sell AIDS drugs for massive profits, as
opposed to universal access that necessarily relies upon generic
medicines, as demonstrated during his 2009 India visit. As a result,
according to American University professor Sean Flynn, Obama
“endorsed a set of policy proposals in its trade negotiations with
developing countries that is much worse for access to medicine
concerns than those of any other past administration.”
Africa
and so many other examples show how the Obama Administration has
become a rotten fusion of the worst instincts within neoliberalism
and neoconservatism. I hope that on November 6, he soundly defeats
Mitt Romney, who is worse on all counts except the ability to
huckster people in Africa that Washington acts in their interests.
Patrick
Bond directs the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s Centre for Civil
Society, http://ccs.ukzn.ac.za

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