Why American presidents keep visiting the same few African countries

ABDI LATIF DAHIR

Melania Trump has just concluded her trip to Africa, her first major solo international swing as US first lady. In her choice of nations to visit -Ghana, Malawi, Kenya, and Egypt – she followed in the footsteps of not just former first ladies but also American presidents.

Franklin D. Roosevelt was the first US president to set foot in Africa, landing in Bathurst in British Gambia in 1943. Roosevelt was on his way to Casablanca in Morocco to strategize on the course the allied forces would take in fighting World War II and demanding the “unconditional surrender” of their enemies. Given that Nazi U-boats prowled the Atlantic, Roosevelt could not travel on a ship and thus became the first US president to travel on official business by airplane.

Since then, eight other American presidents have visited the continent, both for a brief disembarking from a plane or a full-on state visit. George W. Bush is top on this list, having toured 11 states across Africa, according to the Office of the Historian at the US Department of State. Bill Clinton visited 10 nations as president, while Obama went to nine. In total, however, US leaders have only visited 16 of the 54 countries that make up Africa, making repeated stops in a few of those nations.

Trips to African countries by US presidents are undertaken either for security and geopolitical reasons or humanitarian purposes, says Alex Vines, head of the Africa programme at the London-based think tank Chatham House. And since Africa has long been viewed as an addendum and not key to US geostrategic interests, “it is not surprising,” he says, that US presidents only focus on specific countries – even during the Obama administration.

Egypt is the country most visited, with every president from Jimmy Carter to Barack Obama making a stop there at least once. The North African nation sits at a crucial nexus connecting Africa to Asia, the North Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, besides straddling a key border with Israel. As the most populous Arab nation, US officials have worked to nurture the relationship between Cairo and Tel Aviv for decades, ensuring that stability in the region and the 1979 peace treaty were upheld in exchange for billions of dollars in annual aid to Egypt.

Countries including Nigeria, Kenya, have also welcomed American presidents given that they are seen as vital allies in the African theatre of the “war on terror.”

Besides security, US presidents have also journeyed to countries where there is a “greater convergence” between economic prosperity and principles of human rights and democracy, says Landry Signé, Rubenstein fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Africa Growth Initiative. This is exemplified in Obama’s trip to Ghana in 2009, where he called the West African nation a “vibrant” democracy that shows “a face of Africa that is too often overlooked by a world that sees only tragedy or the need for charity.”Senegal has also been a popular choice, Signé argues, because it has a history of broad political participation, and as a Francophone nation, helps extend US influence beyond English-speaking nations.US presidents, Signé says, are more likely to welcome African presidents to the White House than to visit their countries. “This supposes that Washington is the epicentre of US-Africa relations and that African leaders must appeal to the US president in order to attempt to change relations.”

This is in contrast to China whose top leadership makes regular trips to Africa in order to advance diplomatic, economic, and military interests. African leaders are also taking note, collectively trooping to Beijing whenever the opportunity arises. -Quartz

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