As Obama Lectures Kenya, What Lessons Must US Learn from Africa?

As President Barack Obama spent the weekend in Kenya—from where he departed on Sunday after making a rousing and personal speech about his personal and ancestral ties to the Africa country—many news outlets were marking the occasion by noting it as his first-ever trip as commander-in-chief to the home country of his father and extended family.

“I am proud to be the first American president to come to Kenya – and of course I’m the first Kenyan American to be president of the United States,” Obama said during the speech to a packed stadium in Nairobi, which was repeatedly interupted with loud rounds of applause.

However, given that in order to prepare for the presidential visit it was necessary for Kenyan military and police forces to conduct the “biggest ever security operation” in the nation’s history, some observers took the opportunity to make more critical observations about how Obama’s foreign policy choices in the region have impacted local people and undermined stability during the course of his presidency.

Remarking on the overwhelming military presence in the capital of Nairobi, Abdullahi Halakhe, a regional security analyst, told Agence France-Presse ahead of Obama’s arrival that “the level of security [was] suffocating,” 

Aboyami Azikiwe, who runs the Pan African News Wire, took the opportunity of the presidential visit to explain that its implications go far beyond the personal and should compel people to ask important questions about the U.S. role in Africa.

“U.S. policy toward east Africa has not been a rational policy,” explained Azikiwe. Though often an ignored part of the geopolitical conversation in the United States, Obama’s policies in Africa, despite his heritage, have done  little to benefit either the African people or most people in the United States. Under Obama’s leadership, argues Azikiwe, the U.S. has “stressed military and counter-terrorism, not economic development and the U.S. government has not shown serious interest in trade with Africa on an equitable basis.”

When it comes to military operations, he continued, “The U.S. government has backed both Kenya and Ethiopia intervening in Somalia with predictably terrible results. Much of U.S. policy in the region is built around AFRICOM [United States Africa Command] which was started in the Bush administration and Obama has continued to back.”

As the Los Angeles Times reported just ahead of Obama’s arrival on Friday, recent weeks have seen a dramatic uptick of U.S. airstrikes against alleged Al Shabab militants in Somalia. However, as many critics have noted, drone strikes and other forms of U.S. military intervention have long acted as destabilizing factors across Africa and elsewhere – not the promised antidote to Islamic extremism, chronic violence and poverty, or political fractures.

According to the LA Times:

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT