Summary
·
The
initiatives and interactions of China and the US in Africa illustrate a belief
that their competition in Africa has been – and can be – both peaceful and
productive
China’s foreign ministry published a 4,000-word analysis entitled US Hegemony and its
Perils on 20 February. It’s an indictment of alleged US foreign interference, intimidation and interventions that began 200 years ago.This
was followed by President Xi Jinping’s accusation at the Communist Party
National Congress in March that the US was pursuing an unprecedented global policy
to contain and suppress Chinese development.
US
official reaction to the Chinese accusations has been muted. But the recent US
shooting down of an alleged Chinese spy balloon escalated tensions. There are
fears that escalating US-Chinese tensions might threaten the independence of
African and other nonaligned nations.
Although
Chinese rhetoric is harsh, the initiatives and interactions of China and the US
in Africa illustrate a belief that their competition in Africa has been – and
can be – both peaceful and productive.
Political hegemony
China’s
indictment ranges from US efforts at hemispheric domination beginning in the
early 19th century to fomenting the “colour revolutions” – non-violent protests
that overthrew autocratic regimes in the three post-Soviet republics Georgia,
Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan.
But,
China’s vision of the US glosses over the volatility of US domestic politics.
Domestic concerns can alter foreign policy, a leader’s ideology, and political
and historical circumstances.
Domestically,
China too has undergone several political upheavals since the civil war that
brought the Communist Party to power in 1949. If China underestimates US
domestic swings, US analysts may exaggerate the global impact of Chinese
internal pressures.
At
higher levels of diplomacy, China and the US have used summits with African
leaders to set broad guidelines of cooperation in trade and investment,
climate, public health, building infrastructure and other areas. These should
help African leaders decide areas of comparative advantage for them, in dealing
with the two major powers. The Forum on China-Africa Cooperation differs from
US initiatives, the most recent being the US-Africa Partnership in Promoting
Peace, Security, and Democratic Governance. Neither major power appears to me
to harbour hegemonic presumptions, as African leaders test their abilities to
be productively nonaligned.
These
high-level channels to both superpowers might yield more if African regional
economic communities and the African Union made more concerted efforts to
develop complementary and cumulative strategies for pressing African
priorities. Extending the US African Growth and Opportunity Act to ensure
favourable access to US markets is one example. Managing debt obligations for
China’s important “Belt and Road” investments in African infrastructure is
another.
Military and economic hegemony
The
differences in what Africa had to contend with during the US-Soviet Cold War
and today’s US-China rivalry are most pronounced in areas of military and
economic hegemony.
Neither
China nor the US seem poised to use Africa to test political military resolve,
as the US and Soviets did when they fought proxy wars in Angola during the
1970s, for example.
African
national and multilateral bodies should lobby China and America to back
African-led peace operations within African states.
Globally,
economic interdependence between China and the US will remain vital for
sustained growth and prosperity for both nations. Presidents Joe Biden and Xi
Jinping are committed to reviving their domestic economies. They both want
greater equality, less corruption, and sustained growth. Neither appears to
want or need to foment conflicts in Africa.
African
governments rightly pursue support from both China and the US for regional
integration and cooperation, such as the African Continental Free Trade Area.
Greater Chinese and US economic engagement in response to African collective
appeals could also become a confidence building measure between China and the
US. This rarely happened during the Cold War. Back then, the US was aligned
with European colonial powers and the apartheid regime in South Africa. The
Soviets backed liberation forces. Today, such polarisation doesn’t exist.
The
Chinese statement on US hegemony rightly notes the US is plagued by domestic
violence and has a history of failures in military interventions. [US analysts
acknowledge] this.
But
US domestic resistance to new foreign military adventures became bipartisan and
popular for the past decade.
African
nations should hold America and China to account for their avowed commitments
to respecting core UN principles of sovereign equality and territorial
integrity. Equally, they must hold Russia to account for blatantly violating
those principles by invading Ukraine.
Technological hegemony
Benefits
and risks of new technologies are well known. Communication, data retrieval and
collection, and artificial intelligence bring both promise and peril that
Africa must navigate carefully. This is becoming all the more pressing as
progress in artificial intelligence accelerates. Neither China nor the US need
to be hegemonic in making available technologies that spur Africa’s
development.
More
issues of contention need to be resolved with the help of scientists and
scholars from China, US, and Africa. The availability of Huawei 5G is a
particularly contentious issue. Perhaps interested scientists and members of
the African Research Universities Alliance could work with their Chinese and US
counterparts to establish guidelines and mediation capabilities.
Cultural hegemony
US
crimes against Africans began in earnest in 1619 with the trans-Atlantic slave
trade. Its sediments persist today.
But?
The African diaspora has become a key political constituency of the Democratic
Party. It is a fast growing demographic. In music, sports, arts, these
Americans are invaluable conveyors of soft power in Africa.
China
does not have similar ties with Africa. But, it has recently become more active
culturally across the continent, as evident in its network of Confucius
Institutes. China has also become the biggest donor of foreign scholarships,
enabling future African leaders to study in China. Graduates enrich African
universities and, interacting with graduates of US institutions of higher
education, represent potential channels to explore options for three way,
useful collaboration in their fields of applied research.
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