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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
: Nigeria
Clinton's Nigeria visit seeks to strengthen US influence in
Africa
By Trevor Johnson and Chris Talbot
1 September 2000
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Clinton's visit to Nigeria was part of attempts by the United
States to strengthen its influence in Africa, after the debacles
of recent years.
Behind the rhetoric that success in Nigeria could lift
the whole region towards prosperity and peaceas national
security adviser Sandy Berger put itis the fear that America
is losing out to other western powers in an area of great economic
importance.
After the US military debacle in Somalia and the failure of
the Nigerian-led ECOMOG forces to bring stability to Sierra Leone,
the US government has recognised that it has been badly wrong-footed
on its African policy. The most obvious sign of this was the ability
of Britain to send its own force to Sierra Leone and effectively
take over the leadership of the intervention in that country.
Moreover, when Clinton visited Africa in 1998, he spoke of
an Africa renaissance led by the continent's new
leaders. Since then the regimes he visited on his earlier
tour, Uganda, Rwanda, Ethiopia and Eritrea, have been locked in
wars and virtually every country has been plunged into deeper
debt and poverty as a result of IMF structural adjustment programmes.
Now the US is seeking to aggressively assert its economic and
military might on the continent.
The Clinton regime is concentrating on what it calls conflict
containment in Africa. The aim is to do this through the
main regional powers, Nigeria and South Africa, and this was the
theme of Clinton's visit. In the last weeks the US announced that
it was training a new Nigerian armed force, increasing the number
of US trainers in Nigeria from 40 to 200. This week, the first
of these American military personnel arrived to train and equip
five Nigerian battalions that Clinton said would be ready to enter
Sierra Leone at the beginning of next year.
Underlining the importance of Africa's oil and mineral wealth,
a Washington Post article pointed out that the United
States imports as much oil from Africa as from the entire Persian
Gulf, and US energy imports from Africa are expected to increase
substantially over the next decade. This was reflected on
Clinton's visit by his being surrounded by hundreds of businessman,
particularly from the oil sector (Chevron, Exxon-Mobil and Texaco),
keen to exploit Nigeria's resources.
Nigeria has plans to increase its oil production by 50 percent
to around 3 million barrels per day. This is a welcome development
for the US becausedespite Nigeria being only its fifth largest
source of oilit is keen to exploit any possible avenue to
persuade the OPEC countries to increase output and decrease prices.
Politically, however, Clinton's visit was hardly an unqualified
success. He is basing US policy on a highly unstable and deeply
unpopular regime. Having come to power 15 months ago, full of
promises and amid widespread hopes of genuine improvements with
the ending of military rule, President Obasanjo has quickly become
discredited with the mass of the population.
He has dutifully sought to carry out the bidding of the IMF,
but faces growing public disaffection due to mounting unemployment,
poverty and fuel shortages. In the preparations for Clinton's
visit, Obsanjano had the shanties of the poor bulldozed in Abuja
and drove beggars off the streets. The number of Nigerians living
below the poverty line approached 80 million in January this year,
out of a population of 120 million. There has been a fall in life
expectancy from 52 to 49 years, due mainly to the increase in
AIDS. Factories are running at below 25 per cent of capacity,
and the infrastructure is in a state of decay. Unemployment is
being worsened by the privatisation of industries and the resulting
job cuts.
On top of this, Nigeria is wracked by ethnic violence that
threatens to escalate into civil war at any time.
Clinton has no answer to these explosive social problems. He
said he came to pledge American support for the most important
democratic transition in Africa since the fall of apartheid,
but there was no serious gesture of US assistance to help alleviate
Nigeria's desperate poverty. Apart from using its influence to
secure a $1bn credit facility with the IMF, the US has done nothing
to help Nigeria tackle the huge $30 billion debt built up under
previous military rulers. Although US aid to Nigeria increased
this year to $108 million, this is an infinitesimal sum compared
to Nigeria's debt interest payments. Obasanjo called repeatedly,
in public as well as in private, for the US to aid his government
by easing Nigeria's debt burden. He was bluntly told by Clinton
to be patient and to prevent internal bickering in
parliament from obstructing the implementation of IMF policies.
After Nigeria, Clinton visited Tanzania where an eight-hour
stop was planned so that he could attend the expected dramatic
conclusion of the two-year Burundi peace process led by former
South African president Nelson Mandela. Burundi's civil war has
continued since 1993 with the loss of several hundred thousand
lives. As in neighboring Rwanda, Burundi is divided into ethnic
Tutsiswho form about 15 percent of the population but dominate
the government and armyand the Hutus, who make up almost
85 percent of the population. However negotiations between the
various factions involved in the war have collapsed. The two main
rebel Hutu groups were not even taking part in the negotiations,
and both the Burundi government and other parties involved in
the talks balked at the deal authored by Mandela at the last moment.
Clinton was forced to fly back without this particular feather
in his cap.
See Also:
US reasserts its interests
in Africa, sending troops to Nigeria
[16 August 2000]
Clinton's tour
A bid to
make Africa profitable for US capital
[26 March 1998]
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