Rex Tillerson, Washington's
Secretary of State, started his swing on 6
March through Africa – Ethiopia,
Djibouti, Kenya, Nigeria and Chad –
with a bellicose warning to China
over its regional policy. Despite t...
Rex Tillerson, Washington's
Secretary of State, started his swing on 6
March through Africa – Ethiopia,
Djibouti, Kenya, Nigeria and Chad –
with a bellicose warning to China
over its regional policy. Despite the
billions of dollars from China that has been sluicing through Africa,
Beijing was simply building up a coterie of client states according to
Tillerson. Many of the Chinese loans would create dependency rather
than development, he insisted. As a show of United States goodwill,
Tillerson announced a US$533 million contribution towards famine relief
in East Africa as he set off for Addis Ababa.
The real stakes of the Tillerson tour are security: strategic
rivalry with China but also to boost regional counter-terrorism
operations. Djibouti is the sharpest edge of the Washington-Beijing
rivalry. Djibouti, which hosts US, Chinese, French, German and Japanese
military bases, irritated Washington four years ago when it more than
doubled the rent for the base. Djibouti's break with United Arab
Emirates and its port company, DP World, further annoys
Washington as
President Omar Guelleh's
government may hand over DP World's terminal
at Doraleh to a Chinese company, according to speakers in Congress in
Washington on 6 March.
Marine General Thomas Waldhauser
told Congress that if China
controls Doraleh, that would affect US capacity to run its base in
Djibouti and resupply its ships. Washington was now far behind in a
strategic race with Beijing in Africa, he added.