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African nations don't want to choose sides
Published in China Daily on August 23, 2022. African nations don't want to choose sides - Chinadaily.com.cn
African nations don't
want to choose sides
By YIFAN XU in Washington | CHINA DAILY |
Updated: 2022-08-23 07:13
While it's too early to tell if US Secretary
of State Antony Blinken's recent visit to Africa will expand US influence
there, African countries also want to develop effective relations with China
and don't want to be pressured into choosing sides, experts in the United
States said.
"We most certainly shouldn't get into an
'us or them' posture with Africans. That creates a no-win situation for
everyone concerned," Charles Ray, who is chair of the Africa Program at
the US-based Foreign Policy Research Institute, and who served as US ambassador
to Cambodia and Zimbabwe, told China Daily.
Blinken visited three sub-Saharan African
countries-South Africa, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda-from Aug 7 to 12. The
visit was built on Blinken's previous trip to Africa, but the global environment
has become more complex since then.
"This context includes both intense
competitions between advanced and emerging powers and the strengthened ability
of countries in Africa to contribute to solving global challenges," Landry
Signe, a senior fellow in the Global Economy and Development Program and the
Africa Growth Initiative at the Brookings Institution, wrote in a blog.
Ray said, "My recent conversations with
African intellectuals tell me that they want effective relations with both
countries, and the US-China competition notwithstanding, it is to their
benefit.
"I honestly believe that if both sides
approach their relationships in Africa in a mature, rational manner, there is
no reason the countries there can't have relations with both," he said.
During his visit, Blinken said that the US
sees Africa's 54 nations as "equal partners" in dealing with global
problems.
Ray said that Blinken's comment on the equal
partnership with the nations of Africa is "exactly the right thing to
strive for", though he added that it's too early to tell if the trip would
expand US influence in Africa.
Alex Vines, director of the Africa Program at
Chatham House, a policy institute based in London, said, "I think we will
see more African countries not wanting to get pigeonholed and so become
nonaligned."
There have been intensive, high-level visits
to Africa and other diplomatic activities by a number of countries recently.
Last month, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov visited Egypt, Ethiopia, Uganda and the Republic of Congo.
Almost simultaneously, French President
Emmanuel Macron visited Cameroon, Benin and Guinea-Bissau.
Samantha Power, administrator of the United
States Agency for International Development, and US Ambassador to the United
Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield also visited African countries recently.
Furthermore, according to the White House, the
US will host a US-Africa leaders summit in December.
Michelle Gavin, a senior fellow for Africa
policy studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, a US think tank, said in a
blog that "high-level visits should signal commitment, not just
competition" and warned of "two pitfalls".
"First, to make meaningful progress in
advancing shared interests with African states, it's important that US
officials are sincere when they deny that US attention to African partners is
primarily about boxing out Russia or China," Gavin said. "The other
danger is to imagine that high-level visits and emergency aid packages, in and
of themselves, are enough to overcome long-festering neglect."
In recent decades, China has been investing in
African countries and playing a significant role in the region. China appointed
a special envoy to the Horn of Africa in January to deal with security affairs
and reiterated that it would play an even bigger role for peace and stability
in the region.
Ray, of the Foreign Policy Research Institute,
said, "Not only do I think that the US and China can work together on some
issues like climate change and its impact on Africa, but it is imperative that
we do work together.
"It is not unusual for countries to
disagree on certain issues, but they should not allow those differences to
escalate into hostilities. We need to work on our mutual interests and manage
our disagreements without becoming disagreeable. As the world's two largest
economies and the two largest carbon emitters, we have a moral obligation to
our people and the rest of the world to act responsibly."
Ray added that "Africa's young,
fast-growing population will impact the world in coming decades, and this must
be recognized by other nations like the US and China. As sovereign nations, it
is (African countries') right to decide with whom they have relations."
Vines, of Chatham House, said, "I do
think that (in) China-West relations, there is a prospect of working together
on global issues that impact humanity."
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