Author: Elliot Smith
Site of publication: CNBC
Type of publication: Article
Date of publication: August 8th, 2022
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in South Africa on Monday to begin a three-country tour as major powers jostle for influence on the continent.
The tour will also take the top U.S. diplomat to the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Rwanda, and follows a recent tour by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who visited Egypt, Uganda, Ethiopia and the Republic of Congo in July.
French President Emmanuel Macron recently visited Cameroon, Benin and Guinea-Bissau in a bid to revitalize France’s relations with its former colonies.
In a speech on Monday, Blinken said the rest of the world should no longer “dictate” to African nations, and outlined the Biden administration’s priorities for the content, such as supporting investment, security, Covid recovery, clean energy and democracy.
The underlying purpose of the trip — Blinken’s second since President Joe Biden’s administration took office — will be to try to contain Russian and Chinese geopolitical influence on the continent, according to Alex Vines, director of the Africa program at Chatham House.
“South Africa is a country which doesn’t have a good relationship with the United States. The party of government, the African National Congress, regularly issues declaration communiques criticizing the United States, and so the effort there is how to improve the relationship and at least have a more constructive dialog with South Africa,” Vines told CNBC on Monday.
He suggested that this is the reason why South Africa is Blinken’s first port of call, and that particular attention will be paid to aligning the two countries’ perspectives on Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Military ties
A number of African governments have been reluctant to overtly criticize Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, and many abstained from a draft U.N. resolution in March condemning the Kremlin and calling for a withdrawal from Ukraine.
The underlying purpose of the trip — Blinken’s second since President Joe Biden’s administration took office — will be to try to contain Russian and Chinese geopolitical influence on the continent, according to Alex Vines, director of the Africa program at Chatham House
The resolution passed overwhelmingly with 141 nations voting in favor, but the African nations among the 34 that abstained from the vote were: South Africa, Mali, Mozambique, the Central African Republic, Angola, Algeria, Burundi, Madagascar, Namibia, Senegal, South Sudan, Sudan, Uganda, Tanzania and Zimbabwe.
Over the past few years, Russia has built a number of military alliances with governments in African countries facing violent insurgencies or political instability, including Libya, Mali, Sudan, the Central African Republic and Mozambique.
Russia’s Lavrov claimed that his tour of Africa was not about Ukraine. He instead focused on Africa’s “intrinsic value” to Russia as a trade partner and highlighted the contracts Moscow has on the continent for exports of food, fertilizers and energy.
In a recent blog, the European Council on Foreign Relations said that while that message was tailored to African sensitivities, the primary objective of Lavrov’s trip was “political theater.”
“Despite Western attempts to isolate Russia over its all-out war on Ukraine, Lavrov is using Africa to demonstrate that his country still has partners in some parts of the globe,” said Theodore Murphy, director of the Africa program at the ECFR.
“The second objective of the trip is to expand Russia’s influence in Africa. Lavrov hopes to achieve this by exploiting the strategic error the West made by asking African countries to choose a side over Ukraine.”
Central to the hard power Russia is using to ingratiate itself in the region is the private mercenary Wagner Group, which has been active in counterinsurgency operations in countries such as Mali, the CAR and Libya. The Kremlin denies any links to the controversial group, which has been accused of human rights violations.
Blinken addressed Wagner Group directly on Monday, accusing the group of exploiting instability to “pillage resources and commit abuses with impunity.”
The U.N. has long had a substantial peacekeeping mission, MONUSCO, operating in the DRC. However, the government last week expelled its spokesman Mathias Gillmann after protests against the mission in which 36 people, including four U.N. peacekeepers, were killed.
With the U.S. a major contributor of funds to the U.N., Vines suggested that this may also draw Washington’s attention to ensuring tensions in the region can be defused.
‘Echoes of the Cold War’
In discussing the significance of strategic and critical minerals, Chatham House’s Vines acknowledged that the situation has “echoes of the Cold War.”
However, he highlighted that the competition for geopolitical, economic and military influence on the African continent extended beyond the U.S., Russia and China. Notably, these include Turkey, the EU, the U.K. and even Japan, which holds the eighth Tokyo International Conference on African Development in Tunis, Tunisia on Aug. 27.
“Russia is trying but it doesn’t have the deep pockets and the presence that it did when it was the Soviet Union, so it’s an irritant but it’s not, I think, a long-term challenge on the African continent in the way that it was during the Cold War,”
Although this is unlikely to manifest itself in the form of a hot war in Africa, he pointed to some “proxy activity” already taking place in the form of the Wagner Group’s presence and involvement in various pockets of domestic or regional unrest.
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