The recent report that
U.S.-backed forces declared victory in the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa is one of
several examples proving the tides are turning against the notorious
terrorist group. It also affirms the battle-tested notion that when the United
States builds coalitions with other nations, even the most challenging of tasks
can be accomplished.
But the
challenge to terminate ISIS (and terror groups like it) still exists, as
evidenced by the recent ambush attack in Niger that killed four U.S. soldiers,
along with numerous other Nigerien casualties. With their Syrian stronghold
vanquished, surviving ISIS fighters will flee to other countries to avoid death
or capture; and African nations are prime targets for ISIS and their homegrown
compatriots.
We cannot
allow dispersed ISIS members to claim strongholds in Africa, especially as
recent developments have shown that the continent is finally trending upward.
At no other
point in history have more Africans been supporting their families, starting
businesses, and living in democracies and free economies. These are the green
fields of the continent. Likewise, there are tender shoots emerging:
healthcare, communications, transportation, and finance are seeing great
promise. And as always, there are withering nations that will require
cultivation if they are to ever recover.
Africans must
be responsible for Africa. Wars, famine, and corruption have been largely
caused by a few despotic or radical elites within the old Africa leadership.
Conversely, the great hopes and successes we see
today are forged by Africans from all walks of life, pulling themselves and their communities upward.
today are forged by Africans from all walks of life, pulling themselves and their communities upward.
Those
successes have been helped seeded, watered, and fertilized by the
international community, with the U.S. playing a central role. America’s
support for Africa stems from years of bipartisanship in Congress and the Oval
Office. I expect that to remain in place with the Donald J. Trump Administration.
As Dr. Peter Pham of the Atlantic Council wrote, “U.S. objectives in Africa
should focus on promoting economic prosperity and development, strengthening
security and stability, and encouraging good governance as ends in themselves
and because doing so is in the national interest.”
As a Nigerian
who has seen his own nation grow and develop, I believe the U.S. should play an
indispensable role in Africa by focusing on four pillars: security, human
development, trade, and governance.
First off,
security. Political and leadership vacuums are created when people are
insecure, allowing insurgent groups, such as ISIS, a place to thrive. U.S.
security assistance via U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) and bilateral
partnerships promote professionalism in our armed forces, technical assistance
to troops, and hardware to do the job well.
The second
pillar is human development. A child who does not know where her dinner is
coming from has no time for school. She is unlikely to be vaccinated against
the most preventable of diseases and is at-risk of being an orphan. Those are
hard facts. America’s humanitarian spirit in the form of PEPFAR, the
President’s Malaria Initiative, and other generous programs – have saved
millions of lives. Education programs have lifted kids from cruel futures
toward a life of knowledge and sufficiency. Power Africa, a U.S. agency for
international development projects, will provide electricity to underserved
areas allowing schools, clinics, and businesses to prosper.
Third is
trade. Africa’s economic engine is primed. As we diversify our economies away
from oil and minerals, we are creating a knowledge economy. Our entrepreneurs
and innovators are leading the way on technology, resource development,
agriculture, and healthcare. America should continue to contribute know-how to
our business leaders and governments for regulatory reform and encourage
private investment to take deep root. A great example of this is the
U.S.-initiated “African Growth and Opportunity Act,” which has effectively moved
Africa into a rules-based, globally-connected trading system.
The last
pillar: governance. Resilient states must be effectively and efficiently
governed by democratically elected leaders at the national and local level.
Strong civic and government institutions have benefited from U.S. assistance in
capacity-building and technical training. Democracy and governance work will be
vitally important at the local level since breakneck urbanization is further
hampering cities and mega-cities such as Lagos and Kinshasa.
Finally,
African leadership must come from within. While outside pressure from the West
may yield some positive influence on Africa’s good, bad, and mediocre leaders,
the fact is that legitimate leaders
must emerge. The U.S. can play a role in making such an environment possible, providing some of the essential elements that allow individuals and societies to flourish.
must emerge. The U.S. can play a role in making such an environment possible, providing some of the essential elements that allow individuals and societies to flourish.
President
Trump had it right in his comments at the United Nations, in which he called
for sovereign individuals and sovereign nations to join in common cause: “…let
this be our message to the world: We will fight together, sacrifice together,
and stand together for peace, for freedom, for justice, for family, for
humanity, and for the almighty God who made us all.”
This piece first appeared on Washington Examiner
Source: The Cable
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