---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Ashworth <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2017 08:38:31 +0300
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] Does team Trump have an Africa plan?
To: Group <[email protected]>

Analysis: Does team Trump have an Africa plan?

US diplomacy can play a useful role in Africa, but nobody in the State
Department is picking up the phone right now.

James Reinl
Al Jazeera 04/09/17

When Kenya's top court annulled last month's presidential election
results, Donald Trump's mind was elsewhere. The US president was
tweeting about stock market growth and his old political nemesis,
Hillary Clinton.

In fairness, the billionaire has a lot on his plate at the moment -
from Hurricane Harvey's devastation trail to North Korea's nuclear
arms test. But, as is often noted, sub-Saharan Africa struggles to
place high on the global agenda.

Nearly eight months into his presidency, Trump has yet to nominate an
Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs. Other jobs lower
down in the State Department, Pentagon and White House are vacant;
there is no US ambassador in either South Africa or Congo.

Officials and experts told Al Jazeera that an inattentive US made
violent flare-ups in South Sudan, Burundi, and other hotspots more
likely, while giving China space to capitalise on sub-Saharan Africa's
economic growth at Washington's expense.

"The problem isn't that Africa isn't a front-burner issue in the White
House, that is only the case in exceptional circumstances," Vanda
Felbab-Brown, a researcher with the Brookings Institution think-tank,
told Al Jazeera.

"It's that the competent, highly skilled bureaucracy has been made
totally dysfunctional by so many positions not being confirmed," she
said.

After Kenya's Supreme Court scrapped that country's election results
on September 1, a statesmanlike phone call from the West Wing could
have put the brakes on any sabre-rattling from President Uhuru
Kenyatta or his opponent, Raila Odinga, she said.

"It was a massive and unprecedented decision by the court and, right
or wrong, it's made a volatile situation in Kenya even worse. It's a
moment like this that you really want high-level officers calling from
the White House, and that's not necessarily happening," Felbab-Brown
said.

Africa is home to 1.2 billion people in 54 diverse countries, but also
some of the world's most protracted conflicts in Somalia, Democratic
Republic of Congoand elsewhere. Two areas are particularly worrisome
to policymakers right now.

Burundi has suffered from periodic low-level violence since 2015, when
President Pierre Nkurunziza decided to seek a third term in office.
The International Crisis Group, a watchdog, warns of tensions
spiralling into "mass atrocities and a regional proxy conflict".

Others point to South Sudan, which collapsed into civil war two years
after winning its independence from Sudan in 2011. Fighting has since
claimed hundreds of thousands of lives and forced 3.5 million people
to flee their homes.

Last month, it emerged that US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
planned to abolish his department's special envoy to Sudan and South
Sudan and a second diplomatic trouble-shooter to the Great Lakes
region and Congo.

In a letter, he wrote about combined savings of more than $5 million
from scrapping the envoys and support staff - in line with the Trump
administration's goal of slashing the State Department's budget by 30
percent.

"Dissolving the office of a special envoy is usually done when their
task is complete," Raymond Gilpin, an expert in the Africa Center for
Strategic Studies, a Pentagon think-tank, told Al Jazeera.

"With what's going on in South Sudan and the humanitarian catastrophe
that's unfolding in northern Uganda, and refugees crossing the border
from South Sudan, I think that task is far from complete."

Cuts are already having real-world consequences. In July, Trump pushed
back a deadline on whether to lift US sanctions against Sudan by three
months, amid divisions in his administration and a lack of staff in
key posts, including in the National Security Council.

Trump's lack of enthusiasm for Africa was on display at the Group of
20 summit in Hamburg, Germany, that same month. It was closed-door
talks on African development that Trump famously stepped away from,
giving up his chair to his daughter, Ivanka.

Tillerson argues that, despite swinging cuts, US diplomacy will still
"be effective". According to reports, the appointment of J Peter Pham,
a scholar, as assistant secretary on Africa was held up in Congress
and an alternative was being sought.

The US footprint in Africa has not vanished. This month, Trump
appointee Mark Green, head of the US Agency for International
Development, has been in South Sudan, urging President Salva Kiir to
work harder for peace and warning that US support for the country was
under review.

Last month, US trade envoy Robert Lighthizer visited the tiny West
African nation of Togo to review a Clinton-era free trade deal with
sub-Saharan Africa, though little progress was made on renewing the
so-called African Growth and Opportunity Act.

Aubrey Hruby, a scholar at the Atlantic Council and co-author of The
Next Africa: An Emerging Continent Becomes a Global Powerhouse, said
Trump's pro-business team was missing a trick on a mineral-rich
continent with a growing middle class.

US exports to sub-Saharan Africa have doubled to $21.81bn from
$10.96bn in 2000, according to US Commerce Department data, but they
were dwarfed by China's $102bn in exports to the region in 2015.

Washington cannot catch up with Beijing's huge road, rail and other
infrastructure schemes in Africa, but businesspeople can turn good
profits there in the finance and entertainment sectors where US firms
excel, Hruby said.

"We haven't developed anything like a Trump administration business
programme for Africa yet. A lot of us have been waiting to have
someone in the right seat in the White House and the State Department,
but we can't wait forever," Hruby told Al Jazeera.

African diplomats in the US say they are looking to the upcoming UN
General Assembly, an annual political jamboree in New York, to
spotlight the African security issues that are failing to get enough
international attention.

Ethiopia's UN ambassador, Tekeda Alemu, said he hoped to use his
country's presidency of the UN Security Council this month to
spotlight South Sudan, where internecine fighting has forced a million
people to flee into neighbouring Uganda.

Applied correctly, diplomatic pressure could end the ethnic
bloodletting, he said.

"It's achievable; it's doable. If there is a necessary goodwill
commitment you could make progress," Alemu told Al Jazeera. "If the
countries of the region speak with one voice, if the Security Council
speaks with one voice."

But, he noted, despite Trump's presence in midtown Manhattan for UN
the confab, the US had not confirmed whether the president, Tillerson,
or any other American heavyweight would take part in Ethiopia's debate
on peacekeeping on September 20.

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/09/analysis-team-trump-africa-plan-170903201627210.html

END
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John Ashworth

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