Since America has lost influence in African Sahel it has adopted China’s African foreign policy of ‘see-no evil’

Since America has lost influence in African Sahel it has adopted China’s African foreign policy of ‘see-no evil’

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The recent Special Operations aid to Equatorial Guinea appears to be the latest facet of a US charm offensive to woo the country’s president, Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, a tyrant now in his sixth decade in power, as America has lost influence in the African Sahel.

“We hope that this donation is the beginning of additional cooperation,” said Commander Michael White, the defence attaché to the US Embassy in Equatorial Guinea, after US Special Operations Command Africa spearheaded a modest donation of humanitarian aid to the tiny, oil-rich Central African nation.

US Ambassador to Equatorial Guinea David Gilmour expressed hope that the recent donation of medical supplies would be the “first of many opportunities to partner with” the government there. It follows high-level engagement by the administration of President Joe Biden with Obiang’s regime.

“This seems to run counter to every value that the Biden administration publicly espouses when it comes to democracy, human rights, and anticorruption,” said Cameron Hudson, a former Africa analyst at the CIA, now at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies.

He adds, “The administration is doing everything it can to maintain a military foothold on the continent. And if we don’t already have a foothold, to create one. So establishing or deepening relationships with particularly odious regimes like Equatorial Guinea are not off the table.”

Efforts to improve relations with the notorious kleptocracy come as the US has been forced to scale back its military reach on the continent. (Kelly Cahalan, a spokesperson for US Africa Command or AFRICOM, said the command was unaware of any increased US engagement with Equatorial Guinea.) The Pentagon curtailed military ties with Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger following coups and reduced its counterterrorism activities in Cameroon due to human rights abuses by the country’s military.

Earlier this month, Niger’s ruling junta, which includes a number of officers trained by the US military, announced it was severing a longstanding security cooperation agreement with the United States “with immediate effect.”

Crisantos Obama Ondo, Equatorial Guinea’s ambassador to the US, did not respond to requests for an interview.

Equatorial Guinea has been plagued by oppression, corruption, and poverty for decades. After seizing power in a military coup in 1979, Obiang and his family have ruled it as their personal fiefdom. Despite significant oil wealth, the country suffers widespread poverty due to rampant embezzlement.

The most recent State Department report on human rights in Equatorial Guinea details credible reports of extrajudicial killings, torture, “inhuman” punishment, arbitrary arrest and political imprisonment by the state, among many other abuses. It also chronicles corruption at all levels of government, especially the top: “The president and members of his inner circle continued to amass personal fortunes from the revenues associated with monopolies on all domestic commercial ventures as well as timber and oil exports.”

In 2011, the US Justice Department seized a beachfront mansion in Malibu, California; a private plane; and a fleet of luxury cars – purchased with looted funds laundered in the US – from Teodoro “Teodorin” Nguema Obiang Mangue, the president’s son and now Equatorial Guinea’s vice president. The US settled the case after Teodorin forfeited nearly $30 million in assets.

Swiss prosecutors took possession of 11 of the younger Obiang’s luxury cars in 2016, seizing Lamborghinis, Ferraris, Bentleys, a Bugatti, and a Rolls-Royce. In 2021, France seized $170 million of Teodorin’s assets including a 101-room mansion near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.

The seizures have not affected Teodorin’s conspicuous consumption, typified by his penchant for enjoying the high life on a luxury superyacht and, last year, staying in a $75,000-a-night New York hotel suite while asking the United Nations for aid.

In recent years, US officials have publicly fretted about China establishing a naval outpost in West Africa. “The thing I think I’m most worried about is this military base on the Atlantic coast, and where they have the most traction for that today is in Equatorial Guinea,” Gen Stephen J. Townsend, then-chief of AFRICOM, told the House Armed Services Committee in March 2022.

In an October 2023 analysis for Congress, the Defence Department reported it was “likely” that China has considered locating a “military logistics” facility in Equatorial Guinea. Earlier this month, Gen Michael Langley, the current AFRICOM commander, warned the Senate Armed Services Committee: “China is actively pursuing a naval base on Africa’s Atlantic coast.”

AFRICOM also conducted a maritime capability assessment for the country in 2021.

That same year, when a Navy ship made a port call there, a US news release called Equatorial Guinea “an important partner of the United States.” A visit by another ship in 2022 prompted Navy commander Tim Rustico to highlight the “great opportunity to continue building our partnership with Equatorial Guinea.”

“US forces worked … with the government of Equatorial Guinea to facilitate this engagement signifying sustained relations between the two nations,” reads an Army news release about the February donation of $24,000 worth of supplies, including baby formula and first-aid kits to the country where most of the population lives on less than two dollars a day, but where the president has a reported net worth of $600 million.

Tutu Alicante, the head of EG Justice, a nonprofit organisation that promotes human rights in Equatorial Guinea, said that the Biden administration’s high-level engagement with the Obiang government was even more damaging than providing aid.

Since Biden took office, Obiang his son, or both have met with Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Molly Phee, Principal Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer, CIA Deputy Director David Cohen, and Maj. Gen. Kenneth Ekman, the director of strategy, engagement, and programs at AFRICOM.

The Centre for Strategic and International Studies’s Hudson said, “Equatorial Guinea seems blatant about the fact that they are very much for sale to the highest bidder. They are very happy to be courted by Washington and Beijing because they occupy a strategic spot in the world and sit on a strategic resource and they have the money to allow them an independence that other countries in the region don’t have.”

“Equatorial Guinea seems blatant about the fact that they are very much for sale to the highest bidder.”

Following rigged presidential elections in 2022 — in which Obiang won 95 percent of the vote — Phee wrote a letter to the newly re-elected president. Posted to X by an Equatoguinean government official, the letter shows that Phee welcomed “close collaboration” in which their countries would “act together” and seize “opportunities to strengthen” and “enhance our mutual security.” (The State Department verified the authenticity of the letter to The Intercept, but did not respond to other questions about engagement with Obiang’s government.)

“The United States is committed to a world in which human rights are protected … and those who commit human rights abuses are held accountable,” said Phee’s boss, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken in a 2021 statement defining the Biden administration’s core principles. “President Biden is committed to a foreign policy … centered on the defence of democracy and the protection of human rights.”

Experts said engagement with Equatorial Guinea makes a mockery of this pledge and undermines US credibility across Africa.

“The hypocrisy of publicly saying that democracy, human rights, and anticorruption are the cornerstone of your foreign policy and then to go down a path that does not put those values into any kind of real practice is most troubling,” Hudson told The Intercept. “It sends a message to everyone on the continent that everything we say is negotiable.”

  • A Tell / The Intercept report
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