(CNN) -- Taken at face value, a Barack Obama presidency should be a big
deal for Africa. On Election Day I attended an all-nighter organized in
Lagos by the U.S. Diplomatic Mission to celebrate America's democracy.
Two large screens relayed CNN's coverage while a succession of speakers
-- including a recently re-elected Nigerian governor -- took to the
stage to reflect on America and its democratic ideals.Outside the hall
sat a mock polling booth, where guests filled a ballot paper and dropped
it in a box, watched over by life-size cardboard cut-outs of the two
contenders.
In the early hours of the morning the results were
tallied and announced. Obama took 219 Nigerian votes, to Mitt Romney's
30. A friend standing with me when the results were announced couldn't
help wondering aloud who those 30 people were who had chosen Romney over
Obama. As I pointed out in a recent CNN piece, Nigerians, like the rest
of sub-Saharan Africa, have an "instinctive fondness" for Mr. Obama,
and for an obvious reason: he is a "son" of the continent -- his father
was born in Kenya; his grandmother still lives there. Just before I left
the event, a friend observed that he still hadn't found a single
Nigerian who could point to any reason why they were rooting for Obama,
beyond his African roots.That obsession with Obama appears to obscure
the fact that his predecessor -- the white, Republican George W. Bush --
demonstrated a more obvious commitment to the continent during his
first presidential term.
In 2003, a few months after the U.S.
invasion of Iraq, Bush signed into law a bill establishing the U.S.
President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), in fulfilment of a
promise made during his State of the Union Address earlier that
year.Obama: 'The best is yet to come'Albright on foreign policy in
2013Obama's second term agenda Under the terms of the plan, Bush pledged
$15 billion towards fighting HIV/AIDS. In 2008 he renewed the
commitment for another five years.Before him, President Bill Clinton --
honored by the Congressional Black Caucus, months after he left office,
as America's "first Black President" -- created the African Growth and
Opportunities Act (AGOA), a landmark piece of legislation that opened up
American markets to African countries.Obama, on the other hand, has
demonstrated what has been interpreted as a studied detachment towards
sub-Saharan Africa. His only visit in his first four years, to Ghana in
2009, lasted less than 24 hours.
Dr. Folarin Gbadebo-Smith,
Director of the Lagos-based Centre for Public Policy Analysis, argues
that Obama is in a "conflicted position" -- compelled to exercise
caution in his engagement with Africa "for fear that such a position
will become ammunition in the hands of the lunatic right, Tea Party
types and those who insist he is not an American and is really a
Muslim."But if the affection of the continent towards Mr. Obama -- at an
all time high in 2008 when he first took office -- has cooled in the
last few years (ostensibly as a response to his perceived nonchalance),
his re-election appears to have reawakened the enthusiasm."We look
forward to the deepening of relations between our two countries during
your second term in office," Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki said in a
congratulatory message. From Nigeria came a message by a presidential
spokesperson, saying "President Jonathan looks forward to continuing to
build on Nigeria and Africa's developmental collaboration with the
United States in the next four years."
With the pressure of
re-election now gone, Smith says "the second term would be a more
opportune time for Obama to work with Africa."
While Michelle Obama
visited the continent in 2011, the least that many Africans will be
expecting from Obama during his second term would be a powerfully
symbolic visit of his own to Africa.But that trip, if it ever happens,
would be the easiest of the Africa-focused tasks in the Oval Office
in-tray. And it would also do little to clarify the monumental
complexity of dealing with a rapidly changing African landscape.For one,
there's China's aggressive engagement with the continent, which appears
to be happening at the expense of countries like America.In 2009,
Obama's first year in office, China overtook America as Africa's largest
trading partner. America's discomfiture with that state of affairs
bubbled to the surface most recently last August, when Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton, during a visit to Senegal, lamented that "the
days of having outsiders come and extract the wealth of Africa for
themselves, leaving nothing or very little behind, should be over in the
21st century."
There is also the aftermath of the Arab Spring.
The murder of the U.S. Ambassador to Libya is evidence of how much
things have changed in the region in the last two years.
And then
there is the rise of extremist Islam in West Africa. In January 2009,
Hillary Clinton told a U.S. Senate committee that "combating al Qaeda's
efforts to seek safe havens in failed states in the Horn of Africa"
would be a key part of America's Africa policy.The years since then have
seen the rise of Boko Haram in Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation,
and of extremists in Northern Mali.Last June, the White House unveiled a
new sub-Saharan Africa strategy built around four "objectives":
Democracy, Trade & Investment, Peace & Security, and
Development. But it remains to be seen whether Obama will unveil an
Africa project on a scale comparable to AGOA and PEPFAR.Not that he is
obliged to, anyway.
And with the American economy still in dire
straits, and requiring full time attention, he is unlikely to get much
backslapping at home for expending his energy on matters that have no
direct bearing on America's near future.
http://edition.cnn.com/2012/11/11/opinion/us-election-obama-africa/index.html?hpt=hp_c2
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