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Thursday, 15 December 2022
The Luciferian Lies of Mystery Babylon USA: Biden tells leaders US is 'all in' for Africa: Oh Really
U.S. President Joe Biden speaks during the Leaders Session – Partnering
on Agenda 2063 at the U.S. - Africa Leaders Summit on December 15, 2022
in Washington, DC. The Summit brings together heads of state, government
officials, business leaders, and civil society to strengthen ties
between the U.S. and Africa. PHOTO/AFP
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What you need to know:Biden, while announcing $100 million for
security, also said the United States would invest $75 million to
counteract "democratic backsliding."
US President Joe Biden threw his support Thursday behind a larger
African role in the world as he also vowed to champion democracy in a
continent where China and Russia have enjoyed rising clout.
"The United States is all in on Africa and all in with Africa," Biden
told nearly 50 African leaders who have spent three days in a wintry
Washington summit that featured a gala White House dinner.
"Africa belongs to the table in every room -- every room for global challenges that are being discussed," Biden said.
Biden, who in September called for an African permanent seat on the
UN Security Council, backed a permanent African Union role in the Group
of 20 economies and said he was planning a visit -- the first by a US
president since 2015 -- to sub-Saharan Africa.
The summit is the first of its kind since African leaders came in
2014 to see Barack Obama, whose successor Donald Trump made no secret of
his lack of interest in Africa.
China for the past decade has eclipsed the United States as an
investor, and Russia in recent years has sent in mercenaries and sought
diplomatic support against Western pressure.
Biden announced $2.5 billion in new assistance on food as price
increases lead to hunger across the continent, especially in the
drought-struck Horn.
"Russia's brutal war in Ukraine has led to the disruption of food and
energy supplies that affect all of our economies," Vice President
Kamala Harris told a luncheon.
She told African leaders that "international rules and norms are
under threat -- for example, sovereignty and territory integrity,
unimpeded commerce and peaceful resolution of disputes."
Democracy in 'DNA'
The Biden administration has been more veiled in its criticism of
China, which has poured in funding for high-profile infrastructure
projects and lent more than $120 billion across the continent since the
start of the century.
The United States at the summit laid out $55 billion in projects over
the coming three years including in green energy, training for health
workers and modernization of internet networks, with the private sector
also pledging $15 billion led by investment in technology.
In a contrast with China, which has been happy to do business with
all African regimes, the United States has made a point of stressing
democracy, even if Biden still invited leaders seen as authoritarian.
"The United States will always lead with our values," Biden told the African leaders.
"Support for democracy, respect for the rule of law, commitment to
human rights, responsible government, all are part of our DNA."
Biden, while announcing $100 million for security, also said the
United States would invest $75 million to counteract "democratic
backsliding" including by strengthening electoral authorities and civil
society.
On Wednesday, Biden met jointly with the leaders of six nations that
hold elections next year including Nigeria and the Democratic Republic
of Congo, sub-Saharan Africa's largest countries in population and size
respectively, to seek promises on free elections.
Mark Green, a former congressman and head of the US Agency of
International Development, said that the United States was focused on
building self-reliance in Africa, while China was looking to "reinforce
aid dependency."
"If a Chinese investment in Africa leads to greater self-reliance,
somebody in Beijing is going to lose his or her job," said Green, now
president of the Wilson Center.
China denies US accusations it is putting developing nations into a
"debt trap" and in turn has called on Washington not to see Africa
through the prism of geopolitical competition.
Will not 'dictate' to Africa
African leaders largely welcomed the summit. But the continent has also been reluctant to take sides among major powers.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken, speaking to reporters at the end
of the summit, said: "America will not dictate Africa's choices. Neither
should anyone else."
Senegalese President Macky Sall, the current chair of the African
Union, welcomed US support for the institution and voiced appreciation
for Biden's summit.
But he also called for the United States to end longstanding rights
sanctions on Zimbabwe and voiced alarm over a bill in the US Congress
that would impose sanctions on African countries over dealings with
Russia.
"This would be the first time in international relations that a whole continent is targeted," Sall said.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, with Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin (2nd L) speaks during a meeting with Angolan President Joao
Lourenco, at the US-Africa Leaders Summit in Washington, DC, on December
13, 2022. PHOTO/AFP
Rolling red carpet to Africans, US warns of 'destabilizing' China, Russia
The US-Africa summit is the first since Barack
Obama invited leaders in 2014, with his successor Donald Trump making
no secret of his lack of interest in Africa.
The United States warned Tuesday that China and Russia were
destabilizing Africa with their growing inroads as it rolled out the red
carpet to the continent's leaders and pledged billions of dollars in
support.
Forty-nine African leaders flew into the Washington cold for the
first continent-wide summit with the United States in eight years as
President Joe Biden seeks to use personal diplomacy to win back
influence.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, at a panel with several African
presidents at the start of the three-day summit, charged that US rivals
had a different approach.
President Museveni (C) arrives at Andrews Air Force Base on December 12, 2022 to attend the US-Africa Leaders Summit. PHOTO/PPU
Austin said China was expanding its footprint in Africa "on a daily basis" through its growing economic influence.
"The troubling piece there is they're not always transparent in terms
of what they're doing and that creates problems that will be eventually
destabilizing, if they're not already," Austin said.
Russia was "continuing to peddle cheap weapons" and deploying "mercenaries across the continent," he added.
"And that is destabilizing as well."
But the Biden administration has been careful not to present Africans
with an us-or-them choice, believing it is futile to try to turn the
tide on China's massive infrastructure spending.
Health and space cooperation
Biden plans to unveil $55 billion for Africa over three years. In one
of the first announcements, the White House said the United States
would invest $4 billion by the 2025 fiscal year to train African health
workers, a rising priority for Washington since the Covid-19 pandemic.
The summit also brought in NASA, with Nigeria and Rwanda becoming the
first African nations to sign the Artemis accords, a US-led bid for
international cooperation on traveling to the Moon, Mars and beyond.
Members of the National Guard block the streets near the Walter E.
Washington Convention Center, the site of the US-Africa Leaders Summit
that brings together leaders from across Africa to meet with US
President Joe Biden and other US representatives, in Washington, DC,
December 13, 2022. PHOTO/AFP
The Horn of Africa has been devastated by five consecutive failed
rainy seasons, with Somalia already struggling after decades of
turbulence and Al-Shabaab jihadist rebels.
"These climate shocks have weakened the society," Somali President
Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said, ahead of expected announcements by Biden on
climate efforts in Africa.
Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi, in talks
with Blinken, blamed climate change for floods that have killed some 100
people in the capital Kinshasa.
In Somalia, Mohamud also claimed successes against the rebels, days
after Somali forces seized the key town held by jihadists since 2016
with the help of US air strikes and an African Union force.
But he warned that military means alone were insufficient.
"I have been telling my colleagues today that engaging with the
society and the community is what makes these terrorists like a fish
that has run out of water; they cannot exist without a community," he
said.
The Biden administration has stressed working with the African Union, both on the security and diplomatic fronts.
Biden during a speech Wednesday is expected to outline US support for
the African Union to gain a formal berth in the Group of 20 club of
major economies, months after he threw support behind a permanent
African seat on the UN Security Council.
African Union chief Moussa Faki Mahamat hailed US support but warned
that there was still far more focus on fighting extremists in the Middle
East.
"This double standard has had disastrous consequences for Africa and for peace and democracy in the world," he said.
The Artemis accords, which already include European allies, Japan and
several Latin American powers, come as China rapidly expands its own
lunar program and as tensions with Russia threaten its post-Cold War
work with the United States on space.
China has rejected criticism of its role in Africa, with its
ambassador in Washington, Qin Gang, saying the continent should not be a
place for "major powers' competition."
In Beijing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told
reporters on Wednesday that Washington "should respect the will of the
African people and take concrete actions to help Africa's development,
instead of concentrating its efforts on smearing and attacking other
countries."
The US-Africa summit is the first since Barack Obama invited leaders
in 2014, with his successor Donald Trump making no secret of his lack of
interest in Africa.
Security remains a major focus of the United States, which has used the summit to focus on some of the continent's hotspots.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, a onetime US ally whose
relations with Washington soured sharply over the Tigray war that broke
out two years ago, paid his first visit to Washington since the
conflict.
Meeting him inside central Washington's convention center, Secretary
of State Antony Blinken voiced hope over an agreement signed last month
in South Africa between Ethiopia's government and Tigrayan rebels.
"We have, I think, a historic moment for the country," Blinken told him.
Climate and security
The United States also announced another $411 million in assistance
for Somalia where a new assessment found "catastrophic" hunger, even
though the United Nations said aid has averted a full-blown famine.