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U.S.-African Partnerships: Advancing Common Interests

Fri, September 15, 2017

Ambassador Yamamoto: Let me just take a couple of minutes to talk about the United States, and what we're doing to prepare for new challenges over the next four years, and reaffirming, and encouraging you that things are going well, and in a good direction. I'm very humbled that I was asked to come back. I was at the National Defense University, teaching our future leaders…so I feel very good about that.

With USAID, OSD, the CIA, and the NSC, we've all worked together for years and years, and so we know exactly what it is that has come before, what we need to achieve now, and what to move forward on. The other thing, too, that is really striking and remarkable, is that looking at Africa, is not to keep Africa in isolation, but to see it in a context of other issues, globally, and also the trend lines. So when we talk about Africa, we're going to talk about all the issues that are confronting the United States, and also the world. And I want to say that we're going to take some new initiatives, but what we also want to do is an affirmation of what has been done before. We want to do expansion on areas which have been highly successful, and which are critical not only to our national strategic interests, but also to the future of Africa, and then also to focus on areas where we can make a difference.

So, let me go into a couple of issues. The fundamental issue is that we need strong institutions, and not leaders who are dictators or strong leaders. Those are the fundamental issues that we're going to be looking at and be focused on, and then we're going to look at how the programs that we've worked on can be expanded. I heard Bill Gates today give an interview and he said, "You can't look at Africa and say all the good things in a 10 second soundbite." But, following from Bill Gates' point of view, if you take a Kodak picture of Africa today, you can see a lot of challenges. But if you see it over 20 years, you can see the dramatic differences and transformation that have occurred. That's what our colleagues have said, and so the question that comes then is, "How do we build on those good transformational issues, and how do we expand and make a difference?"

And so one of the things is following up on our Under Secretary's speech today. We have our four pillars, but they're not in isolation, and they're much more expansive and evolving. So, we have counterterrorism, we have conflict resolution, economic development, and governance, but they're interchangeable, and they're mutually supportive. So, let me give you some of the examples that we're looking at right now in Africa. First is in Liberia, which is really at the fundamental crossroads of democratic elections from two civil wars. It's now going into a third democratic election, and you're seeing a president, Johnson Sirleaf, who has abided by the Constitution to step down, and that becomes a model for other leaders across the continent. We look at democratic countries, as the trend line has shown, from a few to almost two dozen, which has a tremendous impact with the State Department and the military.

I did data-dumping for the National Security Council, and we were looking at all the evaluations we've done over the last – you know, since the '80's – and we were looking at 18-19 evacuations yearly. We have 278 embassies and consulates around the world and a lot of the evacuations were in Africa. But if you look at those trend lines today, they're very different. They're shifting. It's not just countries that are in crises and turmoil, and that Africa looks, in that context, as a continent that is on the move, that's transforming, that's developing, that's progressing.

Going into Liberia, when I was there in Liberia with John Blaney, we were looking at the transition from Charles Taylor. There was no electricity, everything was generators, and we said, "No way on God's green Earth could we really, overnight, start doing the electrification, the power planning." However, the FCC and a $257 million contract agreement with Liberia is now producing electricity.

The other issue, too, is that we are looking at a population that is 50% youth, and then they're looking at what is it for them for their future, and then we're looking throughout Africa and the trend lines on Africa. In some ways it reminds us of the State Department, how young our diplomats are, and how much oversight and mentoring this requires. But if we look at 2050 as we look at the trend lines, Africa will be the most populous continent, Nigeria will be the 3rdmost-populous country, and the issue is, what is it that we're going to do, and need to do, to address the needs of a youth that's probably going to be 70% of the continent? How is it that we're going to meet not only economic needs, but also development needs, job needs, etc.? We're heading towards megacities across the globe, and one of the things that we debated at the National Defense University is you don't want to create mega-poverty zones either. You want to have opportunities, and one of the things that the Under Secretary articulated was that we're going to look at trade investment, and we're going to look at economic opportunities in the context of how that promotes and supports democracy and good governance issues.

We look at Ethiopia, which Bill Gates had highlighted as making dramatic changes in the ability to feed itself, but more important is the efforts that USAID has done to really expand trade opportunities. I remember talking to Prime Minister Meles after he bought several billion dollars of Boeing 787s, and he said, "I just preserved 35,000 jobs in America. What will you do for us," and I said, "Well, we're going to work on that." And, in the end, we helped create over 100,000 jobs in Ethiopia, and that was our payback, and that's what I think a lot of the leaders have asked us to do.

The other issue, too, is Kenya. Kenya's on – probably on – the threshold of a great election on October 17, but it's the issues that we need to focus on and work with, and just talking to – over the weekend – the leadership on both sides, saying – both the government and the opposition – is that the eyes of the world and the U.S. government is on you, on Kenya. We're not going to take eyes away from it. Kenya matters. If our largest embassy is in Nairobi, Kenya, that means we have a stake in that country, and Africa has a stake, and this government's looking at where the trend lines will go after October 17.

Some of the other issues that we're looking at is AWEP (the African Women Entrepreneurship Program), and one of the things that I noticed from everywhere I've been to - from Somalia to Afghanistan - is girls' education, and women entrepreneurs, as really the fundamental programs that we need to develop and expand as helping communities and helping societies. The other one that we're doing is YALI (Young African Leaders Program), Power Africa, and also a number of other programs and projects that we will continue to highlight, affirm, expand, and in many areas, focus. But I wanted – there's one message to convey to you – is that the people involved in Africa today, we know each other, we're doing the best we can. But more important is that we're listening, and that how ever you can mentor us and guide us, we will listen very carefully, so thank you very much.

Moderator:Thank you, Ambassador


Distributed by APO on behalf of U.S. Department of State.
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