United States President Barack Obama will be visiting Nigeria, Kenya
and some other African countries before the end of July, this year if
the information from the Presidential travel trends is anything to go
by.
It would be recalled that President Goodluck Jonathan and other
Africa’s leaders have been some of Barack Obama’s fiercest critics, and
alleged that he had not prioritised the continent since he became the US
president in January, 2009.
During his first term in office, President Obama’s only visit to
sub-Saharan Africa as president was a stopover of less than 24 hours in
Ghana out of the 51 country visits he made.
Reacting to this, Laura Seay, an Assistant Professor of Political
Science at Morehouse College, said that Africa was a low priority for
most American presidents because of geopolitical interests and
historical ties, “and that was the case in the Obama administration.”
She added, though, Africa is becoming more important to U.S. foreign
policy interests.
Though Obama’s National Security Adviser said in November that the
president’s time in the White House was his most valuable resource,
analysts insisted that Obama’s lack of time in Africa reflected
compelling global priorities, not a lack of importance for Africa.
A review of presidential travel shows Europe and North America got
the most visits during the Carter-to-Obama period. France led with 24
visits; the U.K. had 23; Canada and Germany had 20; Mexico and Italy had
19.
African Leaders believe that President Obama was yet to fully
compliment the efforts of Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton who have
made Africa a diplomatic priority in Obama’s first term, visiting 23 out
of the 54 countries in the continent.
According to a US Presidential historian, Obama is likely to spend
more time in Africa in his second term, freed of domestic campaign
politics, second-term presidents can travel more in a continent that has
less strategic importance than Europe and Asia. A rising terror threat
in Mali has also heightened the region’s profile.
US state department officials defended Obama’s record on Africa and
assured foreign journalists at a post-election briefing on US foreign
policy in Chicago that President Obama was planning to embark on an
official visit to Africa in 2013.
According to Elections, and US Foreign Policy Ambassador, John R.
Nay, “President Obama and his strategists were quietly but intensely
working on an official visit to Sub-Saharan Africa that would see him
visiting, among others, South Africa.
“The relationship with the African continent continues to be
important to president Obama and his administration in general. I expect
a far stronger relationship during his second term in office and some
continuous efforts to work closely with South Africa and many other
African countries such as Nigeria and so on. I am not sure about his
schedule but I am sure he will visit Africa soon,” said Nay, a former US
Ambassador to South Africa during former president Nelson Mandela’s
term in office.
The White House and State Department declined to comment on whether
Obama would spend more time in Africa. Johnnie Carson, the State
Department’s top Africa official, said this month that the Obama
administration has helped Somalia stabilise and South Sudan gain
independence and that the U.S. had provided more aid to Africa in the
last four years than any other country.

No comments:
Post a Comment