Africa in Review: Imperialist Foreign Policy
Breeds Military Conflict and Disunity
Global Research, December 27, 2016
From Libya to the Horn of Africa, Washington
and its neo-colonial apparatus stifles Pan-African development
On December 24, an Afriqiyah Airways A320
flight took off from the southern Libyan city of Sebha heading for the coastal
capital of Tripoli. However, the plane was diverted to Malta where 109
passengers on board were allowed to disembark without being injured.
A group claiming to be in solidarity with the
imperialist-ousted Al-Fatah Revolution of September 1, 1969, headed by Col.
Muammar Gaddafi, said they were seeking asylum in Malta in response to the
chaos prevalent across the once most prosperous state in Africa. A man stepped
out of the aircraft and waved a green flag of the Jamahiriya, the political
system in Libya which brought development and internationalist Pan-Africanism
to the country and continent for over 40 years.
Nearly six years ago in February 2011, a
counter-revolution was launched against the Libyan government under the guise
of a fight for “freedom and democracy”. The so-called “Arab Spring” which had
begun in neighboring Tunisia in December 2010 with a mass rebellion, general
strike and the eventual seizure of power by the military and security forces in
January 2011, was later replicated during February 2011 in Egypt.
Unfortunately, in Egypt as well, the military
and police took charge of the transitional process effectively nullifying any
sustainable revolutionary potential. The western corporate media and their
governmental sponsored counterparts framed the counter-revolution in Libya as
part of the “Arab Spring.” Nonetheless, it was quite clear to genuine
anti-imperialists that this constituted a program of renewed neo-colonialism in
North Africa which was willing to ignore the March 8 peace proposals put
forward by the regional African Union (AU) designed to halt a planned bombing
campaign led by the U.S. which started on March 19.
Obviously the two hijackers who requested
asylum in Malta were making a profound political statement. They were saying
that it was the imperialist system of Washington, London, Paris and Brussels
along with their allies in Ankara and Riyadh who were responsible for the
destruction of Libya.
Today Libya is wracked by internecine conflict
where the Pentagon has bombed the country again during 2016 under the pretext
of fighting Islamic State (IS or ISIS) strongholds in Sirte and other coastal
areas of the oil-rich nation. However, it was Washington under the
administration of outgoing President Barack Obama with his then Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton which was hell-bent on destroying Libya and creating the
conditions for the emergence of the Islamic State in Iraq, Syria and now North
Africa. The Obama Doctrine in Africa and West Asia has been an unmitigated
disaster for the peoples of both regions, leaving the U.S. in the same
imperialist posture towards the world as an aggressor which has killed, injured
and displaced tens of millions in pursuit of its neo-colonialist aims.
The Horn of Africa: Somalia, Ethiopia and
Djibouti as Forward Bases of Imperialist Intrigue
Although the previous administration of
President George W. Bush created the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) in early
2008, the military operation has been continued and expanded under Obama.
Somalia is an excellent example of the failed Africa policy over the last eight
years.
With the deployment of up to 22,000 troops
from various neo-colonial dominated African states such as Uganda, Ethiopia,
Kenya, Burundi and Djibouti, stability and prosperity has still not returned to
Somalia. The African Union Mission to Somalia (AMISOM) in early 2016 lost 20
percent of its support from one of its major financiers, the European Union
(EU). Consequently, the future of the operation is not clear leaving yet
another imperialist project in flux.
Not only has AMISOM been occupying Somalia,
the Pentagon and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) maintains a strong
presence in the country along with neighboring states including Ethiopia and
Djibouti. In neighboring Djibouti, at Camp Lemonnier, thousands of Pentagon and
French troops are stationed at a military base. Their presence facilitates not
only Washington and Paris operations in Africa but also throughout the Arabian
Peninsula and the Persian Gulf.
A war against the people of Yemen which has
killed over 11,000 people and displaced several million is hidden from the view
of the U.S. public as is the occupation of Somalia and other Horn of Africa
states. Off the coast of Somalia in the Gulf of Aden, the Pentagon and other
naval forces are patrolling saying they are guarding against “piracy” which has
not been a problem for several years. These military campaigns are designed to
provide fuel to the military-industrial-complex, a multi-trillion dollar
business that is subsidized by the tax dollars of working class and oppressed people
in the U.S.
As long as the American public can be
convinced that their principle enemy is “Islamic terrorism” or “Communism”
through the existence of ISIS, the People’s Republic of China, the Democratic
People’s Republic of Korea, Cuba, etc., and not the billionaires of Wall Street
and the Pentagon chiefs of Washington who order weapons like consumer goods,
the political status-quo will be maintained. The incoming administration of
President-elect Donald Trump has appointed leading military hawks, oil
magnates, fast food low-wage slave drivers, conspiracy theorists and white
supremacists to his government ensuring that the situation will only worsen.
In Ethiopia, where a socialist-oriented
government was overthrown over a quarter-of-a-century ago in 1991, and replaced
by the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) government of the Ethiopian
People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), unrest has erupted inside the
federal system of governance. Leaders within the Oromo and Amhara nationalities
have rebelled saying their interests are being ignored by the government of
Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn.
The continuation of U.S. dominance is
essential to imperialist foreign policy imperatives in the Horn of Africa and
its environs. Even according to the Washington Post, which has served as
staunch defender of the Obama administration in recent years, said in an
article that: “It is difficult to overstate the importance of Ethiopia to
Africa’s stability. It has the continent’s second-largest population — nearly
100 million people — one of its fastest growing economies and a powerful
military that helps stabilize a string of troubled countries around it. The
United States — and many other countries — have invested extensively in aid
programs to help the Ethiopian government wrest the country out of poverty and
bring it to middle-income status. If it succeeds — and becomes a democracy as
well — it could be a model for developing nations everywhere. Ethiopia has
witnessed double-digit growth in the past decade. But this rapid economic
expansion has resulted in strains, especially when new factories and commercial
farms are being built on land taken from farmers. The central Oromo region,
which has historically felt marginalized — despite having the largest segment
of the population and some of the richest farmland — has been particularly hard
hit.” (Dec. 24)
One of the cornerstones of the Ethiopian
Revolution of 1974-1991 was its land reform program which took control of huge
sections of the country from monarchical rule and administration after the fall
of His Imperial Majesty (H.I.M.) Haile Selassie I during the first months of
the uprising. Yet today, at the aegis of imperialism, the land is being turned
over to multi-national corporations for the establishment of profit-making
enterprises that provide miniscule benefits for the masses of workers and
farmers in Ethiopia.
This same Washington Post article goes on to
say: “Protests erupted there in November 2015 over the land grabs, corruption
in the local government and lack of services such as running water, electricity
and roads. The demonstrations later spread to the northern Amhara region, which
has grievances of its own with a government that residents maintain is
dominated by the Tigrayan minority group. It has been the worst unrest in
Ethiopia since Tigrayan-led rebels overthrew the Marxist government in 1991.
Amnesty International estimates at least 800 people have died in the
suppression of protests over the past year. People have also increasingly singled
out Tigrayans for their woes, accusing them of getting the best jobs and
dominating the economy. There have been cases of attacks on Tigrayans in the
north of the country, and there are fears the unrest could take on a more
ethnic dimension. After dozens were killed during a botched attempt to disperse
a crowd at an Oromo religious festival in October, mobs attacked factories and
commercial farms across the country and the government declared a state of
emergency. Violence has since dropped off, and the government has said it is
addressing grievances and has already made significant progress, especially in
the Oromo region.”
A government-imposed state of emergency was
lifted in December along with the release of 10,000 people who were arrested
during the unrest. Nonetheless, the Washington and Wall Street establishment
are nervous about the future political situation in the region.
Also in South Sudan, another project of the
Obama administration which pushed for the partitioning of the country which took
place in 2011, the two main factions of the Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement/Army (SPLM/A) have been split over the last three years. Former
Vice-President Reik Machar has reportedly fled the country where he is
perceived as a threat to the government of President Salva Kiir.
The United Nations, which already has 12,500
troops and other personnel forming a parallel government in the country, is
insisting on the deployment of yet another 4,000 soldiers. This has caused a
strain in relations between the government in Juba and its U.S. sponsors. A
recent Obama administration sponsored UN Security Council resolution designed
to impose an arms embargo against President Kiir and his ministers failed due
to the abstention of eight members. Seven voted in favor of the resolution
falling short of the nine needed for it to pass.
Sudan before the partition was emerging as an
oil-producing state independent of western controlled oil petroleum
conglomerates. The People’s Republic of China had substantial oil concessions
in the country. Today, both the North and the South are suffering from their
dependence on imperialism. The government in Khartoum is now following the lead
of Riyadh having joined the Saudi Arabian and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
proxy war against Iran by participating in the bombing and ground campaign
designed to destroy the Ansurallah (Houthis) and their growing influence inside
the poorest and least developed state in the region.
The Imperialist War Against Africa Continues
After eight years of the Obama administration
it is quite clear to any objective analyst that the conditions for the peoples
of Africa and West Asia are far worse than at any time in the post-World War II
period. The UN Refugee Agency says that the number of displaced persons in the
world today is the highest ever recorded in human history, some 65 million.
These developments have not happened
spontaneously. They are part of a failed but calculated policy of maintaining
world dominance.
In the recent unrest in the Democratic Republic
of Congo (DRC), opposition groups staged violent demonstrations aimed at
forcing the resignation of President Joseph Kabila. Despite the fact that over
20,000 UN troops are stationed in the vast mineral-rich Central African state,
it was the leadership of the Catholic Church which intervened to negotiate an
agreement to end the violence. President Kabila will remain in office for at
least another year until elections can be organized. A Government of National
Unity has been created with Prime Minister Samy Badibanga as its leader.
The DRC has been a source of instability since
its national independence from Belgium in June 1960. Its first elected Prime
Minister Patrice Lumumba was labelled a Communist by the-then U.S.
administration of Dwight D. Eisenhower and subsequently overthrown, abducted,
tortured and executed at the aegis of the CIA in January 1961.
An interview with the DRC ambassador to the
Republic of Zimbabwe, Dr. Mawampanga Mwana Nanga, which was published by the
Herald newspaper on December 24, he emphasized that: “First of all, you have to
keep in mind that there are those who talk so loudly about democracy. When it
suits them, they push democracy, when it doesn’t suit them, they obstruct
democracy. There are dark forces that want to recolonize this continent.”
This discussion went on to say: “The protests
are happening because of the so called dark forces who don’t want Africa to be
at peace. Those who pull the strings in the background. They did everything to
derail the negotiations and they are die hard extremists like Mr. Etienne
Tshisekedi who did not want to come to the dialogue.”
Therefore, as long as Africa is divided the
imperialists will be in a position to dictate the terms of political
developments on the continent. What is needed is a total break with the western
program of neo-colonial dependency.
The upcoming year 2017 will prove critical in
the future of Africa in light of the unchartered waters of the Trump
administration, the instability in the United Kingdom and the EU stemming from
the gradual dissolution of the Common Market, and the collapse of the war of
instability and genocide in Syria. Africa must develop its own political and
economic course or remain in perpetual impoverishment and tutelage.
The original source of this article is Global
Research
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