AFRICOM: What President Bush Omitted to Say in Ghana

Wednesday, February 20, 2008
After his meeting with President John Kufuor of Ghana on February 19th, President Bush reiterated to a press gathering that his administration’s strategy is "to support African leaders to deal with Africa’s problems." Responding to speculation about sending more U.S. troops to Africa to secure U.S. interests, he added that the role of the new U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) is to provide military assistance – like peacekeeping training – to African nations, so that they will be more capable of dealing with African conflicts.

Before leaving for Africa, on February 14th, President Bush told the BBC’s Matt Frei that he had a "firm, heartfelt commitment to the continent of Africa." However, he tempered his warm, fuzzy feelings for the continent and its people with a pointed reference to his Global War on Terrorism. After reminding Frei that in Africa "[w]e have people who are suffering from disease and hunger and hopelessness," the President added that "the only way a radical can recruit is to find somebody who's hopeless."

President Bush omitted this perspective in Accra – and to explain that AFRICOM reflects the centrality of the Global War on Terror to twenty-first century U.S. foreign policy – particularly the belief that failed states are breeding grounds for terrorist organizations and radical regimes.

While emphasis on the Global War On Terror has been a big part of ‘marketing’ AFRICOM to domestic constituencies, neither President Bush nor any official in his administration will share such perspectives with African counterparts. Africans, it seems, are presumed not to read Western media or to log onto U.S. Government websites where they will find ample evidence that the U.S. has chronically under-invested in non-military instruments for state-building. They will also see that the Department of Defense is pushing hard for a "unity of effort" that uses all U.S. government agencies and their grantees – military and civilian – as "force multipliers" in the war on terror.

The U.S. strategy for global engagement has focused increasingly on the military as its main foreign policy action arm, with significant consequences for the U.S. and the world. From 2002 to 2005, the Department of Defense’s share of U.S. official development assistance increased from 5.6 percent to 21.7 percent, while the staffing, programs, and operational capacities of the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. Department of State have steadily eroded over the past 25 years.

However, Africans most need development assistance that puts responsible governments and poor people first on the agenda, irrespective of their perceived strategic importance by the U.S. military. Importantly – also from a counter-terrorism perspective – Africans question the motives behind U.S. policy and U.S. aid. They can distinguish short-term public relations-oriented aid from long-term development approaches. Instead of "winning hearts and minds," AFRICOM may well end up fueling cynicism and anti-American sentiments on the continent.

AFRICOM is the latest example of the stark imbalance in a U.S. foreign policy toolkit that remains ill-equipped to tackle the enormous poverty and justice challenges on the continent. Millions of Africans will die of poverty and conflict related hunger and disease over the next decade. If President Bush really wants to help African leaders solve their own problems, he should be openly discussing how the U.S. can develop a more cohesive and long-term approach to African development that is built on a foundation of security and good governance. In return, African leaders should be asking the President how he thinks a new U.S. combatant command that looks at Africa through a counter-terrorism lens will really help to reduce poverty and injustice.

--Mark Malan, Peacebuilding Program Officer

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President’s Corner: Bush’s Africa Trip Calls for Action on Darfur

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Last week Refugees International sent a letter to President Bush suggesting actions he could take in Liberia and Rwanda, two of the five countries he is visiting in Africa, to promote regional stability. But the biggest security challenges in Africa today are occurring in a country that Mr. Bush is not visiting—Sudan.

The news from Sudan is unremittingly bad. In Darfur, where President Bush has accused the Sudanese government of committing genocide, the killing and displacement continue. In a report this week, the Darfur Relief and Documentation Centre in Geneva said: “In a new wave of violence and destruction in Darfur, the government of Sudan and its allied Janjaweed militia, supported by heavy military equipment including Antonov bombers and helicopter gunships, attacked and destroyed a vast area in West Dafur State.”

A new joint United Nations-African Union peacekeeping force, called UNAMID, is deploying to Darfur, but Sudan’s government in Khartoum has repeatedly slowed and obstructed the new force. Worse, government forces attacked a UNAMID convoy last month.

In a briefing to the White House press corps on the President’s trip yesterday (Feb. 13), National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley said that “this force is deploying but very slowly. And we think the sooner the force is deployed, the sooner we can create better security, a better environment for humanitarian assistance and a better context for people … politically.”

The U.S. has provided large and generous amounts of humanitarian aid to help support the more than two million people displaced during five years of fighting in Darfur. Sadly, however, despite President Bush’s concern about genocide in Darfur, the U.S. has done too little to support peacekeeping in Darfur.

Consider these facts:

  • The U.S., which owns the world’s largest fleet of military helicopters, has turned a deaf ear to the UN’s calls for helicopters to support UNAMID.
  • The current fiscal year 2008 budget falls $334 million short of meeting the U.S. share for funding the expanded peacekeeping force in Darfur.
  • The fiscal 2009 budget that President Bush sent to Congress earlier this month asks for only $414 million of the projected U.S. commitment of $550 million for UNAMID, a shortfall of $136 million.
  • The U.S. and its allies remain passive while the government of Sudan interferes with the deployment of UNAMID and continues its genocidal attacks against civilians. The U.S. and European powers, for example, have refused to enact rigid travel and financial sanctions against top Sudanese officials. As a result, Sudan’s President al Bashir, continues to travel to international meetings in Europe.

When it comes to Darfur, U.S. actions don’t match its rhetoric. The U.S. needs to take a tougher stance against genocide, and President Bush should announce his intentions while in Africa. It would be fitting for him to outline a tougher policy when he visits the memorial to the victims of the Rwanda’s 1994 genocide in Kigali on Feb. 19.

--Ken Bacon

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