Follow us on social

google cta
2022-08-08t151616z_2018621084_rc2fsv9ljoz5_rtrmadp_3_usa-safrica-scaled

Biden's new Africa strategy is shortsighted and stale

The administration hasn't learned from past mistakes, is overly focused on great power competition, and can’t quit the counterterror lens.

Analysis | Africa
google cta
google cta

On August 8, the Biden administration launched its Africa Strategy, amid trips to the continent by Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield. However, the strategy document lacks new ideas and basically restates the Obama administration’s 2012 strategy.

The authors frame Africa in the context of what is by now boilerplate language about a perceived values-based struggle with China and Russia. The authors also — although they give counterterrorism relatively little weight in the top-line objectives — suggest in the body of the text that Africa’s version of the “War on Terror” will continue unabated.

Already, when it comes to China and Russia, administration officials are not getting the kinds of responses they might like from African leaders. Blinken, in a speech this week laying out the Africa strategy to an audience in Pretoria, South Africa, said that “the United States and the world will look to African nations to defend the rules of the international system that they’ve done so much to shape” — and specifically mentioned Ukraine.

Yet even a long-time U.S. ally such as Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni publicly told Thomas-Greenfield, on her visit there, that he is non-aligned: “If you really want to help the third world, why don’t you leave the third world out of a conflict where we are not participating?” Museveni does not speak for all African leaders, yet alone all Africans, but he is far from unusual in holding such attitudes.

The travel agendas of Blinken and Thomas-Greenfield also highlight the gap between rhetoric and reality for the Biden administration and indeed every administration in Washington when it comes to Africa. Each president chooses to partner with “presidents-for-life” on the continent whose record contrasts starkly with the “open societies,” to use the Biden administration’s language, that Washington claims to support.

Uganda’s Museveni has been in power since 1986. Rwanda, Blinken’s final stop, has a president who has been in power since 1994. Both Museveni and Rwanda’s Paul Kagame have been credibly accused of ordering serious abuses against their political opponents, up to and including the assassinations of Rwandan dissidents outside the country. Officials in the White House and at Foggy Bottom cannot be ignorant of these facts, which gives the “all of the above” flavor of the strategy document an air of cynicism; some parts of the document are seemingly meant to be taken more seriously than others. African leaders get that: any American administration might encourage the existing democracies on the continent, but no administration will undercut authoritarian allies.

Turning to counterterrorism, the strategy document buries the relevant section deep in the text, but the language is open-ended: “The United States will prioritize counterterrorism (CT) resources to reduce the threat from terrorist groups to the U.S. Homeland, persons, and diplomatic and military facilities, directing unilateral capability only where lawful and where the threat is most acute.” This sentence leaves room for interpretation. U.S. policymakers and military officials have not hesitated to argue that militants around the world, including in Africa (especially Somalia), pose threats to the United States or its overseas personnel and facilities.

Meanwhile, some of those U.S. personnel are deployed overseas precisely to fight perceived militant threats, making them targets for militants (as occurred in Niger in a 2017 ambush against U.S. troops) and thereby creating a self-perpetuating cycle.

The administration’s document goes on to say: “We will primarily work by, with, and through African partners, in coordination with our key allies, on a bilateral and multilateral basis to achieve shared CT objectives and promote civilian-led, non-kinetic approaches where possible and effective.” This language, too, is familiar and vague. After all, “by, with, and through” can include major military operations.

The document contains little critical assessment of the past, even in a section entitled “reflections on three decades of U.S. policy.” That section includes the following line: “The U.S. CT approach has removed high-value targets, disrupted plots to attack our interests, and invested in the civilian and military capacity of key partners to degrade the threat, but the threat posed by terrorism and other forms of violent extremism continues to demand our attention.”

The authors declined to pursue the obvious question — why did the past approach, which is being carried over into the future — not work? Instead, the section closes by filing this and other policy failures under “historical achievements and current challenges.” Relatedly, the document offers few metrics for gauging success. How will the Biden administration know if the strategy is working? And if they cannot measure success, then “strategy” will give way to inertia.

Even in an era where “great power competition” is supposedly displacing the “War on Terror” as the master framework for foreign policy, Washington continues to view many developments in Africa through an overly CT-focused lens. As the administration rolls out the strategy, one of Thomas-Greenfield’s stops was Ghana, a country with a strong democracy and relative prosperity. Yet now Ghana, like three other countries in coastal West Africa — Cote d’Ivoire, Togo, and Benin — faces threats of militancy, both as spillover from their conflict-stricken neighbor to the north, Burkina Faso, and from local tensions that may give militants room to recruit.

Those local tensions, however, are delicate, varied, complex, and political. There is no guarantee that even national authorities will foresee and forestall emerging linkages between, for example, (a) long-running conflicts over land, chieftaincies, and political power, and (b) the potential for militants to present themselves as champions of the constituency that feels slighted. Moreover, accusing any particular group of being actual or potential militants can create another kind of self-fulfilling prophecy. Again and again, authorities and soldiers in Mali and Burkina Faso blundered when confronted with this dynamic, and every step towards securitizing local politics made things worse.

All this becomes background for understanding why it was unwise for Thomas-Greenfield to even visit northern Ghana, let alone for her to shine a spotlight on precisely the local conflicts that are now under intense scrutiny. How must this appear to people in the northern regions of these West African coastal states, who face new waves of ethnic stereotyping, militarized borders, and collective punishment by soldiers and police? The idea that a superpower is keeping tabs on who becomes chief in your town, and may brand you a terrorist if you don’t like the outcome, is going to make people paranoid and angry.

There is a refrain that Washington repeats, especially every time one of these strategies is released, about how the United States considers African countries “partners” and not subordinates. Yet there is always a “but” or an “at the same time.” U.S. Africa policy ultimately remains over militarized and deeply hypocritical, however deep the language on counterterrorism is buried and however much the conflict with Russia and China is portrayed as a conflict of values, rather than one of interests.


U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken gives a speech on the U.S. Africa Strategy at the University of Pretoria's Future Africa Campus in Pretoria, South Africa, August 8, 2022. Andrew Harnik/Pool via REUTERS
google cta
Analysis | Africa
'In Trump we trust': Arab states frustrated with stalled Gaza plan
Top image credit: (L to R) Comfort Ero, CEO & President of the International Crisis Group, Moderator, Jose Manuel Albares, Minister of Foreign Affairs, European Union, and Cooperation of Spain, Badr Abdelatty, Foreign Minister of Egypt, Espen Barth Eide, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Norway, and Manal Radwan, Minister Plenipotentiary, Cabinet of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Saudi Arabia, take part in a panel discussion during the 23rd edition of the Doha Forum 2025 at the Sheraton Grand Doha Resort & Convention Hotel in Doha, Qatar, on December 6, 2025. (Photo by Noushad Thekkayil/NurPhoto via REUTERS CONNECT

'In Trump we trust': Arab states frustrated with stalled Gaza plan

Middle East

Hamas and Israel are reportedly moving toward negotiating a "phase two" of the U.S.-lead ceasefire but it is clear that so many obstacles are in the way, particularly the news that Israel is already calling the "yellow line" used during the ceasefire to demarcate its remaining military occupation of the Gaza Strip the "new border."

“We have operational control over extensive parts of the Gaza Strip, and we will remain on those defence lines,” said Israeli military chief Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir on Sunday. “The yellow line is a new border line, serving as a forward defensive line for our communities and a line of operational activity.”

keep readingShow less
‘This ain’t gonna work’: How Russia pulled the plug on Assad
Top Image Credit: Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (Harold Escalona / Shutterstock.com)

‘This ain’t gonna work’: How Russia pulled the plug on Assad

Middle East

In early November of last year, the Assad regime had a lot to look forward to. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had just joined fellow Middle Eastern leaders at a pan-Islamic summit in Saudi Arabia, marking a major step in his return to the international fold. After the event, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who had spent years trying to oust Assad, told reporters that he hoped to meet with the Syrian leader and “put Turkish-Syrian relations back on track.”

Less than a month later, Assad fled the country in a Russian plane as Turkish-backed opposition forces began their final approach to Damascus. Most observers were taken aback by this development. But long-time Middle East analyst Neil Partrick was less surprised. As Partrick details in his new book, “State Failure in the Middle East,” the seemingly resurgent Assad regime had by that point been reduced to a hollowed-out state apparatus, propped up by foreign backers. When those backers pulled out, Assad was left with little choice but to flee.

keep readingShow less
Donald Trump Lee Jae Myung
Top image credit: President Donald Trump is awarded the Grand Order of Mugunghwa by South Korean President Lee Jae Myung during a ceremony at the Gyeongju National Museum, South Korea on Wednesday, October 29, 2025. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)

South Korea isn't crazy about US-led anti-China bloc

Asia-Pacific

In response to what is seen as increased Chinese aggression in Asia, Beijing’s growing military capabilities, and inadequate deterrence, an increasing number of U.S. policymakers and experts now call for Washington to create a grand, U.S.-led coalition of allies to counter and confront China.

Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and Australia would supposedly form the allied core of such a coalition. And the coalition’s major security function would be to deter a Chinese attack on Taiwan. In this, Tokyo and Seoul would apparently play a particularly prominent role, given their proximity to Taiwan, their own significant military capabilities and housing of major U.S. military bases.

keep readingShow less
google cta
Want more of our stories on Google?
Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

LATEST

QIOSK

Newsletter

Subscribe now to our weekly round-up and don't miss a beat with your favorite RS contributors and reporters, as well as staff analysis, opinion, and news promoting a positive, non-partisan vision of U.S. foreign policy.