The Obamas Do Africa
A Black Agenda Radio commentary by BAR executive editor Glen Ford
“The U.S. is not in the business of fair and mutually beneficial trade – it’s 
about the business of imperialism.”
The President and his family are spending a week in sub-Saharan Africa, 
with Senegal, Tanzania and South Africa on the itinerary. The focus of 
the trip, if you believe the White House, is trade, an arena in which the 
United States has been eclipsed by 
China since 2009. China, by some measurements, now does nearly twice as 
much business with Africa as the U.S., and the gap is growing. It is now 
commonly accepted that the Chinese offer far better terms of tradeand 
investment than the Americans, that they create more jobs for 
Africans, and their investments leave behind infrastructure that can 
enrich their African trading partners in the long haul.
No one expects Obama to offer anything on this trip that will reverse 
America’s declining share of the African market. That’s because the U.S. is not 
in the business of fair and mutually beneficial trade – it’s 
about the business of imperialism, which is another matter, entirely. 
The Americans ensure their access to African natural resources through 
the barrel of a gun.
So, while the Chinese and Indians and Brazilians and other economic 
powerhouses play by the rules of give and take, the U.S. tightens its 
military grip on the continentthrough its ever-expanding military command, 
AFRICOM. 
To justify its rapid militarization of Africa, Washington plunges whole 
regions of the continent into chaos. U.S. policies, under presidents 
Clinton, Bush and Obama, have utterly destroyed Somalia, made the Horn 
of Africa a theater of war, drawn the northern tier of the continent 
into America’s cauldron of terror, and killed six million people in the 
eastern Congo.
“The Americans ensure their access to African natural resources through the 
barrel of a gun.”
The face of America in Africa iswar, not trade; extraction of minerals by 
military intimidation, not conventional commerce. Washington’s priority is to 
embed AFRICOMever deeper into the militaries of African states – rather than 
configuring more favorable trade relationships on the continent. But you won’t 
learn that from the U.S. corporate media, which chooses to focus 
on the $100 million cost of Obama’s African trip, or to look for human 
interest angles on Obama’s decision not to touch down in his father’s 
homeland, Kenya. However, even that angle is too sinister for deeper 
exploration by the corporate press, because Kenya’s absence from the 
itinerary is meant as a threat.
The United States is angry because Washington wanted the Kenyan people to 
elect a different president, one more acceptable to U.S. policymakers. 
The Americans expected the whole of Kenyan civil society to bend to 
Washington’s will, and reject the candidacyof Uhuru Kenyatta, simply to please 
the superpower. When that didn’t 
happen, it was decided that Kenya must be shunned, despite its past 
services to U.S. imperialism. 
Skipping Kenya was a warning that more serious repercussions may lurk in the 
future – which is a potent threat, because the U.S. controls most of the guns 
of Africa. As the U.S.-backed warlord in Somalia said in Jeremy 
Scahill’s excellent film The Dirty War, “The Americans are masters of war.” 
War, and the threat of war, is the 
reality behind every U.S. presidential visit, to Africa and everywhere 
else. Whether the terms of trade are good or bad, the declining U.S. 
empire will get access to the resources it needs, or thousands – 
millions! – will die.
For Black Agenda Radio, I’m Glen Ford. On the web, go to BlackAgendaReport.com.
BAR executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted at 
[email protected].

http://www.blackagendareport.com/content/obamas-do-africa


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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