Barack Obama: Africa should stop making economic excuses

Kritic

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Africa: How Obama Can Get the U.S.-Africa Summit Right
BY TOBY MOFFETT AND AUBREY HRUBY, 17 JULY 2014
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GUEST COLUMN

Washington, DC — Washington in early August is known for inactivity. During these long and hot 'Dog Days', Congress departs for its annual recess. Families, including the First one, pack up for an annual vacation.

But this year, the President will host the biggest group of country leaders to ever visit our Capitol for a summit, all at once. This one-of-a-kind event, featuring three days of official meetings, will include participation by leaders from nearly 50 African countries.

Better late than never, one might say. As we all have heard, seven of the 10 fastest growing countries in the world are African. But, in recent years, the United States has had to get in line to engage with Africa. Roads, dams and airports are being built. So are hotels and office building skyscrapers. And pipelines and power plants.

More often than not, it's the Chinese who are doing the building. If not them, it's the Brazilians or Turks or Indians. Even Malaysia, Norway, and Russia are kicking our butt.

The line is getting longer and the competition stronger. Now African countries investing across Africa are making us look bad. After South Africa, Morocco is the second largest investor in Sub-Saharan Africa among nations on the continent.

Maybe this Obama summit will begin to change all that. But these are not your grandfather's African leaders. This generation is, by and large, better educated, more accomplished in fields other than politics, more likely to have been elected in free and fair contests, and more likely to embrace the rule of law than their predecessors.

The leaders do not come begging. They do not come to lobby our President for a new aid package. They are more interested in partnerships than handouts. They are the ones being courted now - by dozens of global companies but, usually, not ours.

We've both been in waiting rooms outside the offices of important ministers in many African countries. We've both noted the high-level business delegations from those other countries march in and out, often departing with major contracts. We've rarely seen American executives there.

This summit won't significantly make up that deficit. But it can provide a solid roadmap for U.S. relations with these countries in the years ahead and a platform for mutual commercial prosperity.

But only if the President and his team pay attentions to these 'dos' and 'don'ts':

The Don'ts

1. Don't preach and patronize. Most political leaders don't enjoy listening to their counterparts talk at them - diplomacy by nature is about dialogue. And in this case, the danger is even greater; most African leaders think the United States is, at best, hesitant on Africa and, at worst ignorant and condescending.

2. Don't treat this as a Lions Club convention. Heads of countries don't do strategic meetings en masse or sit through 'break-out' sessions.

3. Don't raise expectations too high, desperately seeking concrete results from the summit. You've won points just by creating the event. Don't try to overreach with vague and/or warmed-over initiatives. If you try to feature 'accomplishments' that are mostly borrowing on existing programs and already-approved funding, these leaders will see through it.

The Dos

1. Do create important audiences for what these leaders have to say. Most U.S.-based global companies are late to the game (you know who you are!). Insist that CEOs come to DC to listen to these leaders. It's likely they'll be impressed with what they hear. Follow up is everything and the White House must continue to encourage and support U.S. firms as they launch business development efforts in the region so to effectively speed up market success. Do the same with a group of university and college presidents who will be educating the next generation of U.S. and African leaders.

2. Do provide some focus. Talk to these leaders about how to make the Obama "Power Africa" initiative more relevant and effective. Include CEOs of both fossil and renewable-based companies in the discussion. Africa's energy future is diversified and to overlook resources is to slow poverty alleviation and job creation.

3. Do spend time on partnerships to address terrorism, not only its ugly threat but also its origins. Countries like Nigeria, Kenya, Somalia and the countries of the Sahel need some reassurances here.

4. Do use social media to launch a massive discussion between the young people of America and their counterparts in these African countries. Half the people on the world's second most populous continent are under 15 and 70% are under 30. People-to-people diplomacy helped to bring down the Berlin Wall and can be effectively wielded to forge lasting and meaningful ties between the U.S. and Africa. Remember, President Obama captured the hearts and minds of young Americans in his campaigns. He can do it again across borders.

Approaching the summit in this fashion can have very positive effects. Africa is now becoming a recognized part of the global fabric. Multibillion dollar deals are getting done, an African won an Oscar, m-commerce is taking off, there will be an African tech IPO - pretty soon Barack Obama and Nelson Mandela will not be the only African names that Americans know.

'Dogs Days' or not, some great things can happen in DC this year.

Toby Moffett is a former member of Congress from Connecticut and a senior advisor at Mayer Brown, LLP. He has represented African countries, companies and NGOs for more than twenty years. Aubrey Hruby is a Visiting Fellow at the Africa Center at the Atlantic Council and is a consultant helping countries do business across African markets.
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stop with all this about what barack should do... you've been saying this since 09. get the point.
 

Blackking

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Africa's weath/natural resources is still being stolen to this day, bytch nikka.
Exactly.. I didn't even believe he said this shyt when my nigha told me.

They can look forward after they get the boots off their neck..... then if that happened the west would conduct patrice lmumba type activities as usual.
 

88m3

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Exactly.. I didn't even believe he said this shyt when my nigha told me.

They can look forward after they get the boots off their neck..... then if that happened the west would conduct patrice lmumba type activities as usual.

Are countries in Africa at least partially responsible for their position?
 

Blackking

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@Blackking 's economic powerhouse Russia getting damn near a billion


:heh:

@Futuristic Eskimo
I wish I had a piece of one of the most influential and powerful nations on earth. moscow beats nyc w number of billionaires and the mainstream media tells me russia will be a top ten economic powerhouse til at least 2020.
 

88m3

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I wish I had a piece of one of the most influential and powerful nations on earth. moscow beats nyc w number of billionaires and the mainstream media tells me russia will be a top ten economic powerhouse til at least 2020.

AP261192624546.jpg
 

Blackking

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Are countries in Africa at least partially responsible for their position?
They are only responsible for not sending militaries to shut down European companies, rejecting foreign aid... allowing perverted cac missionaries to enter, allowing African leaders who support Real African progress to be killed.

They are responsible for not slaughtering the first white people who landed.

They are responsible for not being nationalist enough.

For not killing corrupt leaders and not stealing the refineries and cac businesses talking back their resources

So yeah I place 10%on them.
 

humble forever

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Exactly.. I didn't even believe he said this shyt when my nigha told me.

They can look forward after they get the boots off their neck..... then if that happened the west would conduct patrice lmumba type activities as usual.
let's hear how you feel about china operating in africa


fact is african leaders and government officials are fukking sellout pieces of trash, and yall are in here placing all the blame on external actor. b-b-but they woudn't sell out of they weren't so poor and the evil countries with boots on their necks had a conscience and didn't bribe people



yall the type of people to make excuses for someones shytty behavior till you die

GTFOH :pacspit::camby:
 

Blackking

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let's hear how you feel about china operating in africa


fact is african leaders and government officials are fukking sellout pieces of trash, and yall are in here placing all the blame on external actor. b-b-but they woudn't sell out of they weren't so poor and the evil countries with boots on their necks had a conscience and didn't bribe people



yall the type of people to make excuses for someones shytty behavior till you die

GTFOH :pacspit::camby:
:mjlol:
 

88m3

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They are only responsible for not sending militaries to shut down European companies, rejecting foreign aid... allowing perverted cac missionaries to enter, allowing African leaders who support Real African progress to be killed.

They are responsible for not slaughtering the first white people who landed.

They are responsible for not being nationalist enough.

For not killing corrupt leaders and not stealing the refineries and cac businesses talking back their resources

So yeah I place 10%on them.

Sounds like a bit more than 10% but at least you see there are faults.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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I don't think it's "blame". I get what he's saying. I think it's more "you got fukked over, the mufukkaz in power aint gonna give you shyt for free, so take it upon yourselves as a group to build yourselves up".

Of course it's easier said than done, but I do think the countries in Africa should take control of their shyt. If it means the people kicking out all of these mufukkaz who get rich off of Africa's resources without giving back, so be it. If it means "war", I think many would fall back seeing as how China would have their back in many of these countries.

Even here in the states, I do think we have WAY more power than we think in this country, ESPECIALLY economically. We can EASILY shut down and/or hurt the pockets of a lot of mufukkaz if we banded together. All these other groups go out of their way to help each other, we still have work to do in that area.
This is PRECISELY what I was trying to get nikkas to accept in that clusterfukk of a thread in TLR.

I'm not shytting on my people, but we truly need to adopt a mentality of entitlement instead of feeling like marginalized people.

Yes, we all acknowledge the obstacles, but it seems like many of us have capitulated.
 
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