Donald Trump may find it impossible to maintain his inattention
to Africa at a meeting on Friday and Saturday of the world's richest
countries.
A proposed Compact with Africa is one of the
top agenda items at the Group of 20 summit in Germany, which is
expected to include an address by Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta.
Germany,
this year's coordinator of the G20, has fashioned the compact as an
opportunity for African nations to attract more private investment by
carrying out governance reforms in partnership with wealthy nations and
multilateral institutions such as the World Bank.
As the leader of what remains the world's superpower, Trump can potentially help ensure the success of the Compact with Africa. Though the US president has so far exhibited little interest in Africa.
The
president has given almost no indication of his Africa policy, and key
Africa-focused posts in his administration remain vacant six months
after he took office.
Oil interests
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, host of the G20 meeting in Hamburg, is
expressing pessimism about Mr Trump's engagement with Africa, both at
the upcoming summit and in the longer term.
“The US
will probably not engage in Africa to the extent that would be
necessary, particularly since they barely have oil interests any more in
Africa and the Arab world,” Mrs Merkel said on Wednesday.
Sub-Saharan
countries' oil exports to the United States have fallen sharply during
the past decade as new technology has enabled the US to boost domestic
production of fossil fuels.
In 2015, the US imported
only 247,000 barrels of crude oil per day from Nigeria, Angola and other
sub-Saharan sources, compared to 1.8 million barrels in 2005.
US principles
The
Compact with Africa's tenets also appear congruent with a set of
principles for US policy laid out last year by a scholar considered the
likeliest choice to head the State Department's Africa Bureau.
J
Peter Pham, an Africa specialist at the Atlantic Council think tank,
urged the Trump administration to give priority to facilitating private
investment in African countries seen as worthy of US involvement.
Mr
Pham suggested in a paper titled “A Measured US Strategy for the New
Africa” that more emphasis be placed on US business interests in Africa
and less on US government aid initiatives.
The
Trump administration should engage with those African countries that
“prove themselves to be good bets by their effectiveness and,
consequently, the legitimacy they are accorded by their own people,” Mr
Pham wrote.
The G20 summit may reveal whether the
Trump-led United States intends to approach Africa with the “more
realistic expectations” outlined by Mr Pham.
No comments :
Post a Comment