President Zuma of South Africa is to make a State Visit to Nigeria starting
on 8 March 2016.
This article, although it is more than a year and a half old, provides some
detailed perspectives on the plight of Nigerai that may still apply.
Copley is an Australian who appears to be based in Washington, D.C., USA; he
recently appeared on RT, commenting on Syria.
  _____  


 

 


 



 

Africa Transforms

 

But Confused US Policies Push it Toward China

 

 

Gregory R. Copley, Oilprice.com, USA, 22 July 2014

 

The US Obama White House seeks to retain Western influence over Africa —
partially through its Africa Leaders Summit — while ceding strategic
“authority” to France. But the plan has backfired, giving strategic
opportunity to China, and opening the gates to African change. And what of
the secret PSD-11 policy paper which defines US approaches to the Middle
East and North Africa?  

 

The global strategic framework has changed beyond recognition in the past
decade, even if the majority of the world’s population cannot grasp it. The
face of Africa, however, is changing as we watch, and will transform beyond
recognition within the coming few years.  

As with most perceptions about change at a global level, external views of
Africa are mired in stereotypes which are decades out of date. The
stereotypes are reinforced by media reporting on the Continent which
addresses almost exclusively the carnage wrought by a few malevolent groups
or leaders, and the extent of corruption in a continent undergoing massive
change. That is not to say that the majority of Africans can grasp the scale
and speed of the change, either. We are all operating with yesterday’s
tools.  

 

Perhaps nowhere is the lack of appropriate approach more evident than in the
US White House’s African strategy.  

 

The irony is that the US governmental approach to Africa — and the US has
essentially become the only power with coercive capabilities — is now based
on ideology, where once it was based largely on pragmatism. The approach of
the People’s Republic of China (PRC) is now based on pragmatism, where once
it was — like the Soviet approach — based on ideology.  

 

That is not to say that US and other Western private sector views on Africa
are not based on the pragmatism of investment. They are. But the US Obama
Administration — increasingly divorced from the business community — is
fixated on promoting a line which ostensibly supports its current
description of “democracy” and coercive approaches to achieving acceptance
of its view of ethics.  

 

It is for that reason that the August 5-6, 2014, Obama Africa Leadership
Summit in Washington, DC, has avoided the Chinese approach, which is to
discuss investment and trade, and to instead focus on punishing “bad”
leaders and rewarding “good” ones in Africa. But it is more complex than
that.  

 

At the same time, the US Defense Dept. and much of the State Dept. are
viewing Africa with a far higher sense of priority and professionalism than
ever before.  

 

The Obama White House, however, favors the end of US and British “hegemony”
over Africa, forgetting, perhaps, that the legacy of Cold War and
colonial-era suasion is now but faded memory. Britain now lacks the ability
to exercise hegemonistic control (or even influence) over its former
colonies, but the Obama White House still wants the UK to “pay” for its
colonial history. This is a significant sub-text to the White House view on
Africa. However, Pres. Obama still wants to be heard and respected in
Africa, yet the inconsistency of withdrawing both carrot and stick while
still expecting to be influential has yet to be understood in Washington.  

 

To many, even inside the US Government, this approach seems to lack logic.
Why would a US Administration abdicate US strategic authority anywhere in
the world? Why would a US Administration reverse almost a century of US
global power projection and reverse the strong access it gave US economic
interests to the global marketplace and resources?  

First, let us deal with the Africa situation (and particularly the West
African region), and then move to broader areas.  

 

The Obama White House is conscious of the reality that factors have
conspired to keep the US from exercising meaningful power projection over
Africa, so it is now relying on the Socialist French Government of Pres.
François Hollande to extend active operations into Africa. The problem is
that the current French Government has — like the UK Government — lost the
skills and influence it once had in Africa.  

 

It now appears, then, that the US Obama White House (specifically on the
wishes of Pres. Barack Obama and France’s Pres. Hollande) has reached a
strategic understanding on how it wishes to “manage” West and Central
Africa. 

 

Pres. Hollande has reportedly received tacit — and even partially explicit —
commitments from Pres. Obama that France would have the “strategic lead”
over West Africa, essentially consolidating the Francophone zone which
already exists, plus primary responsibility for Nigeria and the smaller
Lusophone states. This move — without any consultation with the states in
the region — not only moves the US out of the position of primary “ally” or
strategic partner of Nigeria, the largest economy in Africa, but also
intentionally totally isolates the United Kingdom from its one-time “sphere
of influence” as the former colonial power.  

 

Notwithstanding the May 17, 2014, summit of African leaders in Paris hosted
by the Élysée Palace at the request of Nigeria’s Pres. Goodluck Jonathan,
both Pres. Hollande and Pres. Obama reportedly agreed that they needed to
“ring fence” Nigeria to isolate the rest of the region from the effects of
what they perceive as a possible collapse of stability, cohesion, and unity
in Nigeria.  

 

Pres. Hollande’s plan, which was supported by Pres. Obama, was to encircle
Nigeria with the historically Francophone alliance which would exploit “the
coming implosion/crisis” to stifle Nigeria. Both presidents reportedly
agreed that they wanted a predominantly Muslim alliance, effectively run
from Paris, to dominate the region. 

 

There is ongoing speculation — realistic or otherwise — in Washington and
Paris that Nigeria could break up as a nation-state.  

 

Significantly, much of this speculation is based on the fact that the US and
French intelligence, foreign policy, and leadership establishments are not
getting what they believe is a fair and honest flow of in-formation from
Abuja. As a result of this ignorance of realities in Nigeria, very senior
USAFRICOM and other US officials have privately made disparaging remarks
about senior uniformed Nigerian officers as well as about the national
leadership. These attitudes are reinforced by the Nigerian media, which, in
the absence of real understanding in Washington, is widely analyzed in the
US policy communities as the only source available.  

 

There is a recognition by some senior US Congressional and Defense officials
that Nigeria is too important to allow to fall, but there is a sense that
they do not know how to engage the Nigerian military and political
leadership. There is no strong Nigeria advocacy in Washington policy circles
for a credible re-assessment of the situation.  

 

The French leadership, including Pres. Hollande and those around him, has
maintained close ties with Pres. Obama and other White House officials on
African issues (in particular). Both presidents share similar ideological
values, and Pres. Hollande has made it clear that French military forces
would carry the burden of security in West Africa, provided the US paid the
bills. This policy approach accords with Pres. Obama’s personal philosophies
(and those of the first lady, Michelle Obama) to remove both the UK and the
US from “imperialist” hegemony in Africa and the Middle East.  

 

This does not necessarily accord with institutional US thinking in the
Pentagon or State Dept., but does not conflict with the approach of Pres.
Obama’s most important policy advisor, Valerie Jarrett (who has been heavily
engaged on the US-Iranian rapprochement; she was born in Iran). The key
Africa hand on the White House team, National Security Advisor Dr Susan
Rice, has in the past been supportive of Nigeria as an ally of the US, but
she cannot go against the President or Mrs Obama, or Ms Jarrett.  

 

Symptomatic of the French Government’s failure to prioritize Nigeria as an
ally separate from the Fran-cophone West African bloc (despite the comments
of Pres. Hollande, promising support to Nigeria), is the significant fact
that, following the May 17, 2014, Paris Summit, the Government of Cameroon
has continued its refusal to cooperate in a meaningful way with the Nigerian
security services in counter-Boko Haram operations. Pres. Hollande could
have improved that situation if he so chose. There are still lingering
animosities in parts of Nigeria over the Bakassi Peninsula settlement, in
which France very pointedly worked with Cameroon to take the Bakassi
Peninsula land from Nigeria. [The International Court of Justice arbitrated
the dispute over the oil-rich Bakassi Peninsula in 2002, giving it to
Cameroon; after further negotiations and five years of transitional
administration, the area was formally taken into Cameroon in August 2013.]  

 

It should be stressed that the US military and, to the extent it can be
ascertained, the US intelligence community (IC) and Congress, do not know of
or necessarily share the White House/Élysée Palace view of “power sharing”
in the West African region, but they do share a distrust of the Nigerian
Government and the Nigerian Armed Forces, largely based on media reporting.


 

Because of the lack of meaningful information on the conflict in Nigeria,
and the internal political dy-namic in the country, the US military, IC, and
Congress remain in- effective in supporting Nigeria. This is further
compounded by real evidence of corruption in the Nigerian governance
situation. Without a convincing strategic rationale, the key allies of
Nigeria in the US should be expected to follow the White House line, even
though the Congress, Pentagon, and IC have been in profound disagreement
with the White House on most key issues in recent times.  

 

The Obama White House Classified Document, PSD-11, Transforming US Strategy
Toward MENA  

 

The next question is how and where this transforming US approach to West
Africa fits in with the broader US approach — at least under the Obama White
House — to the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), and, indeed, to the
White House’s focus on Islam generally.  

It was apparent, from the start of the Obama Administration at the beginning
of 2009 that Washington viewed the Middle East, North Africa, and
sub-Saharan Africa very differently than any previous Administration. And it
was not merely as a result of the realities inherited from previous
administrations.  

 

Details of a classified 2010 US White House policy paper, PSD-11
(Presidential Study Directive 11) have now begun to appear in the open
media, confirming reporting by Defense & Foreign Affairs of Pres. Barack
Obama’s commitment to withdrawing support for traditional US allies in the
Middle East and Africa and transferring support to the al-Ikhwan al-Muslimin
(Muslim Brothers, or Muslim Brethren: MB) movement. The existence of PSD-11
was made known to al-Hewar Center for Arab Culture and Dialogue in
Washington, DC, and it confirmed a policy of Obama White House support for
the Muslim Brothers which became apparent, symptomatically, from the start
of the Obama Administration in the beginning of 2009.  

 

It is significant that while the Obama policy of support for the Ikhwan
began immediately after Mr Obama took office, the Obama Administration then
formalized and memorialized this position, and conducted an assessment of
the Ikhwan in 2010 and 2011, beginning even before the “Arab Spring” erupted
in Tunisia and in Egypt. Pres. Obama personally issued PSD-11 in 2010,
ordering an assessment of the Ikhwan and other “political Islamist”
movements, including the essentially Ikhwan-based ruling Adalet ve Kalkinma
Partisi (Justice and Development Party: AKP) led by Prime Minister Reçep
Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey. It concluded that the United States should shift
from its longstanding policy of supporting “stability” in the Middle East
and North Africa (that is, support for “stable regimes” even if they were
authoritarian), to a policy of backing “moderate” Islamic political
movements.  


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This policy was strongly supported by Turkish Prime Minister Erdoðan, who
saw in it the prospect for the revival of neo-Ottomanist Turkish power.
Ankara began riding on the back of this transformed US mandate to begin its
series of misadventures against Israel, Syria (and therefore implicitly
against Iran), and further afield, including Africa.  

 

It is understood that details of PSD-11 were leaked to al-Hewar by
pro-Ikhwan officials in the White House to ensure that Pres. Obama would not
go back on his commitment to support the movement. New York analyst Daniel
Greenfield wrote: “Al-Hewar, which actually got hold of the documents, is
linked to the International Institute of Islamic Thought … which is a Muslim
Brotherhood front group.  Figures in the Muslim Brotherhood had threatened
to leak understandings with Obama Inc. This is the next best thing. It warns
Obama that if he tries to forget about them, they can prove that the
relation-ship was official policy.”  



It is now apparent and logical that the Obama Administration has extended
the policy or approach of PSD-11 to include Nigeria.  

 

Through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit, thousands of pages of
documentation of the US State Dept.’s dealings with the Muslim Brothers
were, as of late June 2014, in the process of being de-classified and
released to the public. US State Department documents obtained by
investigators under the FOIA confirmed that the Obama Administration
maintained frequent contact and ties with the Libyan Muslim Brotherhood. At
one point, in April 2012, US officials arranged for the public relations
director of the Libyan Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammad Gaair, to come to
Washington to speak at a conference on “Islamists in Power” hosted by the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.  

 

The founder of Nigeria’s Boko Haram movement, Mohammed Yusuf, had been
engaged with the Muslim Brothers (known in Nigeria as the “Yan Brothers”)
before becoming a salafist and influenced by the writings of Ibn Taymiyyah
(13th and 14th centuries, CE). 

 

Links between the Ikhwan in Libya (where it is amassing its “Free Egyptian
Army” in Cyrenaica) and Boko Haram are not inconceivable. It is almost
certain that some of the Libyan arms caches (both from the former Qadhafi
Administration’s stockpiles and from the Ikhwan who worked to overthrow
Qadhafi with assistance from the US Government and Qatar) could have been
provided to Boko Haram by the Libyan Ikhwan.  

 

The Libyan Muslim Brothers-affiliated Justice and Construction Party (Hizb
Al-Adala Wal-Bina), led by Misrata-born former political prisoner (during
the Qadhafi era) Mohamed Sowan, was created on March 3, 2012, with direct
assistance from the Obama Administration and the Turkish Government.  

 

It is significant that, although PSD-11 recommends support for “moderate”
Islamist groups, the US Government support for extremist groups in Libya
transcended the “traditional” Muslim Brothers. This is at the heart of the
Benghazi scandal which the Obama Administration has been at pains to
suppress, given that the Obama policy consciously supported the injection of
weapons and extremists into Libya to overthrow Qadhafi, and then, after
Qadhafi’s death, began moving some of the arms out of Libya — via Turkey,
with the Turkish Government’s assistance — to extremists in Syria. Support
for anti-US Islamists, in fact, led to the September 11, 2012, attack on the
US Consulate in Benghazi, resulting in the death of Amb. J. Christopher
Stevens, who was actively engaged in the covert arms movements. 

 

So much ambiguity and confusion has attended US foreign and strategic policy
since the election of Pres. Obama that all foreign observers implicitly ask
the question: “What is it that Washington wants?”  

 

The question implies that there is a single Washington policy, which has
never been true; there have always been competing policy priorities in the
US capital. The stronger faction of the day prevailed, and it has always
been a moveable feast.  

 

The real question is: what does the White House want? And what — quite
separately — do the institu-tional bodies of government want? They are not
the same, and the four institutional foreign policy pillars — the State
Department, the Defense Department, the Congress, and the Intelligence
Community — have differing views from each other, let alone from the White
House. But the White House can and does call the agenda.  

 

It is fair to say that most professionals engaged in defense and strategic
policy in the US are only now becoming aware of the extent of change which
the Obama White House has attempted to bring — and has already succeeded in
bringing — to US foreign and strategic policy. For the past six or so years,
most policy professionals in these four arenas of Washington power have
indicated that they did not believe that the White House was undertaking the
policies advocated in PSD-11. The revelation of PSD-11, coupled with
now-explicit evidence of the six years of deliberate policy steps by the
White House, is now becoming apparent.  

 

What the White House seems to want in Africa is not necessarily what the US
has historically wanted from the continent. The historical goal has been
trade (access to resources and markets), and geopolitical advantage over
rival power blocs (during the Cold War meaning the USSR).  

 

Obama Administration objectives in Africa (and the Middle East) seem more
ideological (or belief- based), and PSD-11 in some ways supports that
conclusion.   

 

Despite that, much of the US Government still concentrates, with regard to
Africa and the Middle East, on the process of supporting traditional US
goals: strategic influence and stability, to dominate trade. Certainly, the
US’ economic and military resources to support the traditional, or the new
White House, strategies have diminished in recent years, which makes the
projection of any US posture weaker and more disorganized than could have
been the case under better economic circumstances.  

 

The reversal of US global strategic policy by the Obama White House means
that the US has less power, and less prestige, to support any posture it
might wish to project. It now speaks loudly to compensate for carrying a
smaller stick. In many respects, in many parts of the world, its power now
resides extensively in being able to punish its friends while being less
able to coerce its adversaries. It is now the PRC which, in Africa, for
example, seems to have the power to reward its friends.  

 

It was being openly discussed in Washington policy circles that the reason
for the lack of one-on-one engagement by Pres. Obama with the more than 50
African leaders at the August 2014 Africa Leaders Summit is that his
advisors did not think that he had sufficient grasp of the bilateral
relations between the US and most African countries. Significantly, the
Chinese African leadership summits have always entailed one-on-one
(bilateral) talks with visiting heads-of-government, and the commitment by
the Chinese leadership of some form of investment for each one of them. This
was not the model for the Washington, DC, Obama African summit.  

 

His “broad engagement”, lecturing to the visiting leaders, then, put the
power back into the hands of two key officials: Assistant Secretary of State
for African Affairs, Amb. Linda Thomas-Greenfield, and (less visibly, but
more importantly) Valerie Jarrett, 57, Senior Advisor to the President and
Assistant to the President for Public Engagement and Intergovernmental
Affairs. Both women are African-American (Ms Jarrett was born in Shiraz,
Iran); both have strong opinions on the US rôle in Africa, which they appear
to view as providing coercive leadership to ensure compliance with
Washington’s view of “good governance” and “human rights”.  

 

Amb. Thomas-Greenfield seems to have indicated that human rights issues were
now the most significant aspect of US engagement in Africa, and trade was
now a secondary issue, even though the US share of African trade and
investment has been declining. [Ms Jarrett’s engagement on the rapprochement
with Iran has left the management of the African Summit to Amb.
Thomas-Greenfield and her team.]  

 

The US could readily compete with China in Africa. But the White House seems
stuck in the coercion frame of mind.  

 

On the other hand, the White House — and particularly First Lady Michelle
Obama — seemed concerned about the fate of the 200+ Nigerian schoolgirls who
were kidnapped by Boko Haram from Chibok Government Girls’ Secondary School
on April 14, 2014, in Borno State, in north-eastern Nigeria. This incident
was used substantially to punish the Nigerian Government of Pres. Goodluck
Jonathan for inactivity against Boko Haram.

The United States promised support to find and free the girls (who, in fact,
represent a small fraction of the victims of Boko Haram even in its actions
in 2014).  

 

But what has the US, in fact, delivered to support counter-Boko Haram
operations?   

 

A number of states are engaged in providing “support”, but the reality is
that few of the US military dispatched to the region are actually based in
Nigeria, where the conflict is focused. Most of the US forces are based in
N’djamena, across the border in nearby Chad. Very little actionable
intelligence is being provided to the Nigerians. That is not to deny that
the Nigerian Armed Forces themselves have some issues to grasp in order to
better fight the war, but the US has actually done little to help the
Nigerians in this current conflict.  

 

Trust-building with the US is the order of the day, and the Nigerians
recognize that. But trust-building with whom? Not, it seems, with the White
House. But resuming good relations with the Defense and Intelligence
Communities of the US may help Abuja “wait out” the remaining two years of
the Obama Presidential term.  

 

But will Africa, and particularly West Africa, be changed beyond recognition
by then?  

 

By Gregory R. Copley of GIS/Defense & Foreign Affairs.

 

From:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Africa-Transforms-But-Confused-US-
Policies-Push-it-Toward-China.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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