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US/Africa Relations: Critical Minerals, Geopolitics to Drive Trump’s Second-Term Africa Policy

By December 22, 2024No Comments
Donald Trump Set to Rock the World Again when he takes the Oath of office on January 20, 2025 (c) Politico

As Donald J Trump prepares to take power again for a second non-consecutive term on January 28, questions are being asked about how the US will engage with Africa.

Tibor Nagy, the former Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, and Ambassador Rama Yade, Senior Director of the Africa Center at the Atlantic Council, have offered insights into what they see as potential policy stances of the second Trump administration on Africa and what Africa must do to protect its interests in the face of a fresh global scramble for the continent’s resources.

“It’s very difficult to imagine or guess what the new administration could do regarding the promises during the campaign, but we can build from what he did during his first term and maybe from what his advisors say about Africa,” Yade said during a conversation on the Voice of America, VOA.

Trump never personally visited Africa during his first stint at the White House, but his wife, Melania, and Mike Pompeo, the Secretary of State, did. However, Trump welcomed two African leaders to the White House: Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria and Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya. His administration did not host a US-Africa summit; meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin spectacularly kicked off a series of Russia-Africa summits, first in Sochi in 2019.

Russia’s Putin has been Charming African Leaders and making inroads where US Ally- France is being kicked out in pump and fanfare (c) The Moscow Times.

Faced with growing competition from China, the first Trump administration came up with the Development Finance Corporation (DFC) and launched the Prosper Africa initiative to “support US investment across the continent, grow Africa’s middle class, and improve the overall business climate in the region. And in all of this, critical minerals, necessary for the energy transition may guide Trump’s second term’s policy direction in Africa.

“I do believe that the critical minerals and Africa is home to 30% of critical minerals, will be key for the next administration for two reasons. First, the importance of the energy transition, of course, and two, because the competition with adversaries like China or Russia and others is so strong that it’s impossible for the United States to ignore the African continent, no matter who the president is,” Yade said.

Ambassador Rama Yade, Senior Director of the Africa Center at the Atlantic Council (c) allAfrica.com

Critical minerals are minerals that are essential for modern technologies and industries but have a high risk of supply chain disruption. They are key to the global low-carbon future. The continent holds 55% of global Cobalt reserves (key for electric vehicles and Energy storage).

47.65% of Manganese reserves (needed for many green technologies such as concentrated solar power, wind, hydro, and geothermal while also being used in electric vehicles and for energy storage)  and 90% of global  Platinum Group Metals (PGMs) reserves, which are critical to the adoption of green hydrogen, and for decarbonizing difficult sectors such as heavy transport, heating, and industry.

Yade believes these resources have placed Africa at the heart of global geopolitics as the US, China, and Russia compete for their control.

Africa’s Critical Minerals, like this cobalt mining site in the Democratic Republic of Congo, have both become a blessing and a curse to the Black continent as Super superpowers scramble to tap their shares (c) The Hindu

“China is the first trading partner of Africa and has been for 20 years,” Yade said.

“Russia is a rising star in Africa,” Yade noted, and explained that the Kremlin has used the problems in the Sahel to “gain more ground, more credibility.”

She noted that the second Trump Presidency will not only have Russia and China to face in Africa. Increasingly, regional and middle powers such as  Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Emirates, Turkey, India, and  Indonesia are increasingly partnering with African countries, “ which means that Africa has options now.”

“Africans have options. They have the possibility to partner with any country depending on where their interests are, and that’s something that is very important,” Yade said.

Ambassador Tibor Nagy, the former Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, warned that the US can’t continue with its past policy of “lecturing” Africans.

Top US Diplomat Tibor Nagy, who manned the Bureau of African Affairs in the first Trump Administration, has continually called for greater engagement with the continent from a more Transactional Perspective (c) VOA

It’s that approach and the idea of always pushing for democracy when what the people need is legitimacy that has led the US to lose significant ground in Africa.

Recently, protests broke across the Sahel, particularly in Niger, asking US troops to leave. And as Western troops depart, Russia is stepping into the vacuum. Tibor Nagy contends that the Biden administration did the wrong job in the Sahel and that Trump could do things differently despite his American First policy.

“I think the United States mishandled the entire Sahel during the past number of years,” Nagy said, explaining that the Biden administration was “selectively hypocritical” in its characterization of the military takeovers in the Sahel.

“We called Ouagadougou a coup, we called Bamako a coup, with Niger, we waited and waited and waited, and then we called it a coup, and then Chad, we never called it a coup, and the people on the ground realized that. They saw through that, and as a result, the people were very angry with the United States.”

Burkina Faso’s self-declared new leader Ibrahim Traore is welcomed by supporters holding Russia’s flags as he arrives at the national television standing in an armored vehicle in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, October 2, 2022. REUTERS/Vincent Bado

“We tended to lecture the people who came into power, telling them what they did wrong, and as a result, we lost out on Niger. We lost two air bases that cost about $300 million, and when the people came out to protest, none of the signs said we want elections now. What they said was ‘we want stability, peace’, and then across all of Africa, people want jobs.

“When those kinds of coups happen, what they don’t need is to be isolated. That’s when they need engagement. That’s when they need countries like the United States and others to talk to them so that something positive can happen. When you ignore them, when you block them out, when you lecture them, that’s when you have relations that are ruptured. Americans get kicked out, and of course, the Russians are always ready to come in. They can come in very quickly.”

He said that during the second Trump administration, there will be more reality in how the US deals “with those governments because we can talk democracy, democracy, democracy. What the people are really looking for is legitimacy.”

US Troops Depart Key Drone Base in Niger (c) Zambia Monitor

Nagy said Trump’s transactional approach to politics could also benefit Africa because that would translate to a focus on economics, trade, and investments- a smart departure from US historical policy towards Africa that has always been about development aid, humanitarian aid, and many lectures.

“If you’re talking about real partnership, it means business, it means trade, it means listening, you know, that’s a new word for Americans is to listen.”

“And yes, Africa has options,” Nagy said.

French Barkhane force soldiers who wrapped up a four-month tour of duty in the Sahel leave their base in Gao, Mali Wednesday June 9, 2021. After France suspended joint military operations with Malian forces after the junta led by Col. Assimi Goita retook control of Mali’s transitional government May 24 2021, French President Emmanuel Macron announced at a press conference Thursday June 10, 2021 That operation Barkhane would end and be replaced by support for local partners and counter terrorism. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Yade explained that Africa can leverage its options to demand a greater say at the Security Council, reforms to the Bretton Woods Institutions, and better articulate its needs at the G20.

But the continent must also deal with the expectations disconnect between an aging leadership and a burgeoning youth. Nagy said the youths “are not so much into aid and that kind of approach of sympathy, but they want jobs, they want business, they want investment.”

President Joe Biden Visits Angola as he looks to leave Office in January 2025 (c) France 24

He claimed that the viewpoint of the youths in Africa aligned with the views of Donald Trump “because, when the first Trump administration came, we called it a youth tsunami because, in our view, it was one of the greatest forces coming out in the world in the 21st century. And people were not paying enough attention to it. And when you talk to the youth and what they want is jobs, jobs, jobs. They’re online. They can see what young people in the other parts of the world are doing, the kind of jobs they have, and that’s exactly what they want. And that’s exactly what they should have.”

Edited by John Akuroh, with contributions from Benjamin Ngah and Ngwa Shu Nyamboli.

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