Letters from an American - December 12, 2024
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December 12th, 2024.
Ten days ago, on December 2nd, President Joe Biden arrived in Angola, the first U.S. president
to visit Central Africa since President Barack Obama traveled there in 2015.
In the United States, the story got lost under the president's pardon of his son,
Hunter Biden, but it is the far more important one since events in the 54 countries on the continent
of Africa are key to the global future. The Biden administration has made it a point to
strengthen relations between the U.S. and Africa. It recognizes the importance of a continent whose 1.5 billion people are expected to climb
to 2.5 billion in the next 25 years,
as Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post
pointed out last Thursday.
The median age of Africa's inhabitants is 19,
and by 2050, it is expected that one out of every four humans on Earth will be
African.
The administration has worked to ease African distrust of the U.S., stemming from its history
of enslavement, its tendency to back right-wing forces during the post-World War II and Cold
War period when African nations threw off colonial rule, and the disdain with which
Trump treated African countries during his administration.
The Biden administration hosted the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit in December 2022,
backed the admission of the African Union to the Group of 20, and pledged more than $6.5 billion
to the continent to aid security, support domestic institutions,
and advance civil rights and the rule of law.
During Biden's term, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen,
US Ambassador to the United Nations,
Linda Thomas-Greenfield, First Lady Jill Biden,
and Secretary of State Antony Blinken
have all visited the continent.
In March 2023, Vice President Kamala Harris visited Ghana, Tanzania, and Zambia.
In Angola last week, Biden said that the U.S. is all in on Africa.
He was in Angola to highlight the Lobito Corridor, a development project centered around
a rail line linking the port of Lobito, Angola on Africa's Atlantic coast with the city of Kolwezi,
Democratic Republic of the Congo, or DRC, in Africa's interior mining region. Biden traveled
to Angola for a summit on the Lobito project, as well as other infrastructure
investment in the region, joining leaders from Angola, DRC, Tanzania, and Zambia on their own
continent to demonstrate his conviction that the African people themselves must determine their
own future. The White House, other democratic countries, regional development banks, and international
investors have put more than $6 billion behind the Lobito corridor.
They're hoping to ease the transport of critical minerals from interior countries like Zambia
and DRC to Lobito.
It currently takes a truck about 45 days to make the journey from the interior to Durban,
South Africa.
The railway would cut the trip out of the interior to about 45 hours.
The railway will strengthen global supply chains for those minerals, while also benefiting
local people, local governments and the local region in Angola, Zambia and DRC.
The project includes investments in clean energy, agriculture, trade between countries,
and clearing the mines from Angola's decades-long civil war along the route,
all of which will create good jobs for local workers.
It's a game changer. Imagine how transformative this will be for technology, clean energy,
for farming, for food security as a whole. It's faster, it's cleaner, it's cheaper,
and most importantly, I think, it's just plain common sense," Biden said at the summit.
The Lobito corridor is the flagship project of a new investment program from the Group of Seven, or the G7,
called the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment, or PGII.
The G7 is a forum of advanced economies that share values of liberal democracy,
and the PGII is the answer to China's Belt and Road Initiative,
which has invested billions in
infrastructure in developing African countries, but brings with it the risk of debt traps
for the governments that borrow from it.
PGII is designed to connect democratic countries, the private sector, and development banks
to create sustainable and transparent investment in quality infrastructure.
On December 5th, Eugene Robinson noted in the Washington Post that Republicans are blasting
Biden's announcement last Tuesday of a billion dollars in additional humanitarian aid to
31 African countries to address famine and displacement.
Biden said that this help was the right thing for the wealthiest
nation in the world to do, and Robinson noted that it is also smart. Ultimately, it will be Nigerians,
South Africans, Ethiopians, Angolans, and the people of other African nations who decide the
continent's future, he wrote. They will remember who was there beside them all along, and who was not.
Russia has also been working to gain influence in Africa, with an eye to
extracting the continent's valuable minerals.
It turned to the continent after Putin's 2014 invasion of Ukraine began to
isolate Russia from other nations and their resources.
The Russian Wagner Group of Mercenary Fighters has been a key player in Ukraine began to isolate Russia from other nations and their resources.
The Russian Wagner group of mercenary fighters has been a key player in Africa since then,
often called in by authoritarian leaders to suppress political opposition in exchange
for access to mines or other valuable resources.
Russia has become the biggest supplier of arms to the continent.
The fall of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad threatens Russia's ability to continue to operate in Africa.
As Mike Ekel of Radio Free Europe explained on Monday, Russia launches most of its African operations from the Hamaimim airbase and the Tartus naval base on the Mediterranean coast of Syria.
Their loss would hamstring those operations.
Russian officials are trying to negotiate with the insurgents who overturned Assad's
regime in order to secure those bases as well as Russia's other footholds in the country.
They have gone from calling the insurgents terrorists to referring to them as armed opposition,
and Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Putin has no plans for a public
meeting with Assad.
The Syrian ambassador in Moscow told Russian media, the escape of the head of this system
in such a miserable and humiliating manner confirms the correctness of change
and brings hope for a new dawn.
Former Russia and Soviet diplomat Nikolai Sokov
told Pyotr Sauer of The Guardian,
Moscow prefers to deal with those who have power and control
and discards those who lose them.
But as the Institute for the Study of War noted,
Russia's inability to preserve Assad's
regime will make the African autocrats see it as an unreliable partner, an impression
the Kremlin's rapid about face will do little to relieve.
On Monday, a senior administration official emphasized the same idea of self-determination
that Biden's administration applied to development in African countries.
He told reporters that Assad's collapse is a day for Syrians, about Syrians.
It is not about the United States or anyone else.
It's about the people of Syria who now have a chance to build a new country, free of the
oppression and corruption of the Assad family and decades of misrule.
We owe them support as they do so and we are prepared to provide it.
But the future of Syria, like the fall of Assad today, will be written by Syrians for
Syrians."
That system, the officials suggested, caused Assad's fall.
It is impossible not to place this week's events in the context of the decisions the
president has made to fully back Israel against Iran and its proxy terrorist groups, including
Hezbollah and Ukraine against Russia, the official said.
After bipartisan support for that position, the official added, Hamas is on its back,
its leaders are dead, Iran is on its back, Hezbollah is on its back, Russia is on its back.
It's just abandoned its only ally in the Middle East. Now the Assad regime, Russia and Iran's main
ally in the Middle East, has just collapsed. None of this would have been possible
absent the direct support for Ukraine and Israel
in their own defense provided
by the United States of America.
The official recounted the importance of sanctions
against the Assad regime and noted that the US
has maintained a military presence in Syria
to counter the Islamic extremists of ISIS, targeting
75 ISIS targets immediately after Assad's fall to ensure that ISIS does not regroup
in the chaos of the moment.
The official noted that the administration still believes there is a path to a cease-fire
and the release of hostages in Gaza, especially in the wake of Assad's fall
and the dramatically changed balance of power in the region. A path through a
Middle East that is far more stable, far more aligned with our interests, and far
more aligned with the interests of the people of the Middle East who want to
live in peace without wars and in prosperity in a region that is more integrated and prosperous and peaceful.
Today, Secretary of State Blinken traveled to Jordan and Turkey,
where he met with King Abdullah II and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
to promote an inclusive, Syrian-led government transition in Syria.
Journalist Mike Echol noted that the fall of the Assad regime
this past weekend was a tectonic event,
reverberating across the entire Middle East and further.
Considering the ties of Russia to Syria
and the role Syrian bases have played
in Russian influence in Africa,
those reverberations will, in some form, echo across the African continent.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Massachusetts, recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.