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I decided against resurrecting a necro-thread – the topically closest being from 2003 and not exactly full of ideas or information – but Mods may wish to merge this with something I missed.)
It looks as though it’s the annual “let’s all wring our hands about Africa” weekend for Canada’s opinion leaders, amongst whom we must count the publishers and editors of the Globe and Mail and the National Post and the organizers of the forthcoming Munk Debates.
The agent provocateur for this little burst of attention is Dambisa Moyo, an African economist with a few controversial ideas.
The validity, or otherwise, of Moyo’s ideas is not at issue; she’s not a pioneer in suggesting that most Western aid to Africa has done as much harm as good.
There are, broadly, two views on aid to Africa: one school, we can safely call it the Stephen Lewis school believes that all that needs to be done is, guiltily, to throw more and more and more money at Africa. Some of it, he agues, must, eventually, stick, and that which doesn’t is “owed,” anyway, as “payment” for the evils of colonialism. The other school, the one we might call the Calderesi-Moyo school says that the traditional pattern of aid for Africa has failed and we need to take another hard, cold eyed look at what we want to do and why we want to do it.
But the problem isn’t aid, per se. It is security and I posit that Africa will, over the next few decades, equal and then dwarf the security threat posed by radical Islamist movements today.
The Arab/Persian Islamist threat is based on some comprehensible “grievances.” Even if we reject those grievances and even if we, correctly, refuse to offer redress, we can understand what infuriates bin Laden et al. The same is not true for Africa. The “threat” from Black Africa is inchoate but it is very real. In fact chaos, itself, is at the root of the African security threat. The 50± “nations” of Africa are, in the main, a bit of a joke. There are only about two dozen functioning “national” governments – the rest are facing separatist movement, break-away states and provinces and outright civil wars. The African “economy” – never strong – is a shambles. Systems, like education and public health, are collapsing. AIDS is destroying the very fabric of society. The “casualty rate” from AIDS will exceed anything that made the First World War so frightening in its social implications. Soon children will be raising children.
Africa will explode into a series of increasingly violent and dangerous crises – an explosion is, after all, just a very rapid series of little fires. Each “fire” may be unique and unrelated to the next. They may relate to money or trade, race or ethnicity, religion, and so on. But the individual problems will not matter when they come at us with increasing frequency, as an explosion. We will have to “do something.”
Of course the time to “do something” is now, when the “something” can be done without great cost or violence. But we have decided, without discussion, on a “hands off” policy so we will not do anything now; we will wait, and wait, and wait for the inevitable explosion. Then the ‘something” will involve more than just one Canadian Army battle group and one Canadian air wing serving in larger, poorly organized "coalitions of the willing".
But we – the collective Western we, led in our opinions by folks like those who publish and edit our major media outlets – have decided to ignore Africa. I think we’ve done so mainly because it’s just too complex. We can wrap our collective mind around Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda, as I said, their “grievances” are comprehensible, even as they are false. Many of Africa’s grievances appear, to most of us, to be more like self inflicted wounds – somehow more worthy of censure than of relief. There is also, I think, more than just a whiff of racism in our attitudes towards Africa and Africans. We appear to suspect that Africans are, somehow or other, not quite ready for self-government in the 21st century. Discussions – in books and the media and amongst the talking heads on TV (the source of most “information” for most people) – drift, more often than not, towards the “idea” that the solution to Africa’s problems will, somehow or other, require re-colonization. The idea is that only Westerners (or Chinese or Indians) can “manage” a complex socio-economic makeover of the sort that many experts suggest Africa requires. And empire and imperialism are bad words in America (and Europe), despite Niall Ferguson’s attempts to paint a fresh face on a mouldy old corpse.
Almost every year superannuated rock stars, earnest, grey G-8 “leaders” and opinion makers in the media and academe trot out a new “plan for Africa.” About a week later all is forgotten - and maybe a few ill conceived loans are forgiven. It is possible – I do not know about the probability – that we might “fix” many of Africa’s problems over the next decade with about the same amount of money (and a whole lot fewer lost lives) than one or two years of military operations will, inevitably, cost. Since we will not do that we can count on spending a lot more money, over many, many years, in a long, dirty “war” (or series of wars) that will make us look fondly back at the Afghan adventure.
It looks as though it’s the annual “let’s all wring our hands about Africa” weekend for Canada’s opinion leaders, amongst whom we must count the publishers and editors of the Globe and Mail and the National Post and the organizers of the forthcoming Munk Debates.
The agent provocateur for this little burst of attention is Dambisa Moyo, an African economist with a few controversial ideas.
The validity, or otherwise, of Moyo’s ideas is not at issue; she’s not a pioneer in suggesting that most Western aid to Africa has done as much harm as good.
There are, broadly, two views on aid to Africa: one school, we can safely call it the Stephen Lewis school believes that all that needs to be done is, guiltily, to throw more and more and more money at Africa. Some of it, he agues, must, eventually, stick, and that which doesn’t is “owed,” anyway, as “payment” for the evils of colonialism. The other school, the one we might call the Calderesi-Moyo school says that the traditional pattern of aid for Africa has failed and we need to take another hard, cold eyed look at what we want to do and why we want to do it.
But the problem isn’t aid, per se. It is security and I posit that Africa will, over the next few decades, equal and then dwarf the security threat posed by radical Islamist movements today.
The Arab/Persian Islamist threat is based on some comprehensible “grievances.” Even if we reject those grievances and even if we, correctly, refuse to offer redress, we can understand what infuriates bin Laden et al. The same is not true for Africa. The “threat” from Black Africa is inchoate but it is very real. In fact chaos, itself, is at the root of the African security threat. The 50± “nations” of Africa are, in the main, a bit of a joke. There are only about two dozen functioning “national” governments – the rest are facing separatist movement, break-away states and provinces and outright civil wars. The African “economy” – never strong – is a shambles. Systems, like education and public health, are collapsing. AIDS is destroying the very fabric of society. The “casualty rate” from AIDS will exceed anything that made the First World War so frightening in its social implications. Soon children will be raising children.
Africa will explode into a series of increasingly violent and dangerous crises – an explosion is, after all, just a very rapid series of little fires. Each “fire” may be unique and unrelated to the next. They may relate to money or trade, race or ethnicity, religion, and so on. But the individual problems will not matter when they come at us with increasing frequency, as an explosion. We will have to “do something.”
Of course the time to “do something” is now, when the “something” can be done without great cost or violence. But we have decided, without discussion, on a “hands off” policy so we will not do anything now; we will wait, and wait, and wait for the inevitable explosion. Then the ‘something” will involve more than just one Canadian Army battle group and one Canadian air wing serving in larger, poorly organized "coalitions of the willing".
But we – the collective Western we, led in our opinions by folks like those who publish and edit our major media outlets – have decided to ignore Africa. I think we’ve done so mainly because it’s just too complex. We can wrap our collective mind around Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda, as I said, their “grievances” are comprehensible, even as they are false. Many of Africa’s grievances appear, to most of us, to be more like self inflicted wounds – somehow more worthy of censure than of relief. There is also, I think, more than just a whiff of racism in our attitudes towards Africa and Africans. We appear to suspect that Africans are, somehow or other, not quite ready for self-government in the 21st century. Discussions – in books and the media and amongst the talking heads on TV (the source of most “information” for most people) – drift, more often than not, towards the “idea” that the solution to Africa’s problems will, somehow or other, require re-colonization. The idea is that only Westerners (or Chinese or Indians) can “manage” a complex socio-economic makeover of the sort that many experts suggest Africa requires. And empire and imperialism are bad words in America (and Europe), despite Niall Ferguson’s attempts to paint a fresh face on a mouldy old corpse.
Almost every year superannuated rock stars, earnest, grey G-8 “leaders” and opinion makers in the media and academe trot out a new “plan for Africa.” About a week later all is forgotten - and maybe a few ill conceived loans are forgiven. It is possible – I do not know about the probability – that we might “fix” many of Africa’s problems over the next decade with about the same amount of money (and a whole lot fewer lost lives) than one or two years of military operations will, inevitably, cost. Since we will not do that we can count on spending a lot more money, over many, many years, in a long, dirty “war” (or series of wars) that will make us look fondly back at the Afghan adventure.