LUANDA, Angola
United States President, Joe Biden arrived in Angola on Monday for his long-awaited first presidential visit to sub-Saharan Africa .
Thousands of people lined the
streets as Biden entered Angola's capital, Luanda.
Biden first stopped in the
Atlantic Ocean island nation of Cape Verde for a brief, closed-door meeting
with Prime Minister Ulisses Correia e Silva. In Angola, Biden plans to meet
with Angolan President João Lourenço, visit the National Slavery Museum and
travel to the port city of Lobito for a look at the rail project.
His visit comes with weeks
left in his presidency, as Republican Donald Trump prepares to take office on
Jan. 20.
Biden promised
to visit Africa last year after reviving the U.S.-Africa Summit in
December 2022. The trip was pushed back to 2024 and delayed
again this October because of Hurricane Milton, reinforcing a
sentiment among Africans that their
continent is still low priority for Washington.
The last U.S. president to
visit sub-Saharan Africa was Barack Obama in 2015. Biden did attend a United
Nations climate summit in Egypt in North Africa in 2022.
“I just kind of push back on
the premise that this is some Johnny-come-lately trip at the very end,”
national security spokesman John Kirby told reporters on board Air Force One on
the way to Angola, noting that top administration officials had visited Africa,
including Vice President Kamala Harris. “This is something he (Biden) has been
focused on since he became president of the United States.”
Critical minerals are a key
field for U.S.-China competition and China
has a stranglehold on Africa’s critical minerals.
The U.S. has for years built
relations in Africa through trade, security and
humanitarian aid. The 800-mile (1,300-kilometer) railway upgrade is a different
move and has shades of China’s Belt
and Road foreign infrastructure strategy that has surged ahead.
The Biden administration has
called the corridor one of the president’s signature initiatives, yet Lobito’s
future and any change in the way the United States engages with a continent of
1.4 billion that’s leaning heavily toward China depends on the incoming administration of
President-elect Trump.
“President Biden is no longer
the story,” said Mvemba Dizolele, the director of the Africa Program at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank.
“Even African leaders are focused on Donald Trump.”
The U.S. has committed $3
billion to the Lobito Corridor and related projects, administration officials
said, alongside financing from the European Union, the Group of Seven leading
industrialized nations, a Western-led private consortium and African banks.
“A lot is riding on this in
terms of its success and its replicability,” said Tom Sheehy, a fellow at the
United States Institute of Peace, a nonpartisan federal research institution.
He called it one of the
flagships for the G7’s new Partnership for Global Infrastructure and
Investment, which was driven by Biden and aims
to reach other developing nations as a response to China’s Belt and
Road.
Many are optimistic that the
Lobito project, which isn’t due for completion until well after Biden has left
office, will survive a change of administration and be given a chance. It goes
some way to blunting China, which has bipartisan backing and is high
on Trump’s to-do list.
“As long as they keep labeling
Lobito one of the main anti-China tools in Africa, there is a certain
likelihood that it’s going to keep being funded,” said Christian-Géraud Neema,
who analyzes China-Africa relations.
Kirby said the Biden
administration hoped Trump and his team saw the value in Lobito but “we are
still in office. We still have 50 days. This is a key major development not
just for the United States and our foreign policy goals in Africa, but for
Africans.”
The Lobito Corridor will be an
upgrade and extension of a railway line from the copper and cobalt mines of
northern Zambia and southern Congo to Angola’s Atlantic Ocean port of Lobito, a
route west for Africa’s critical minerals. It also ultimately aims to extend
from Zambia and Congo to Africa’s east coast through Tanzania and be a
coast-to-coast rail link.
While Biden’s administration
called it a “game-changer” for U.S. investment in Africa, it’s little more than
a starting point for the U.S. and its partners with China
dominant in the mining in Zambia and Congo. Congo has more
than 70% of the world’s cobalt, most of which is heading to China to
reinforce its critical mineral supply chain that the U.S. and Europe have to
rely on.
Lobito was made possible by
some American diplomatic success in Angola that led to a Western consortium
winning the bid for the project in 2022 ahead of Chinese competition, a
surprise given Angola’s long
and strong ties with Beijing. China financed a previous redevelopment of
the railway.
The Biden administration
accelerated American
outreach to Angola, turning around what was an antagonistic relationship
three decades ago when the U.S. armed anti-government rebels in Angola’s civil
war. U.S.-Angola trade was $1.77 billion last year, while the U.S. has a
stronger stake in regional security through a strategic presence on the
Atlantic Ocean, and Lourenço’s role mediating in a
conflict in eastern Congo.
In Angola, Biden will announce
new developments on health, agribusiness, security cooperation as well as the
Lobito Corridor, White House officials said.
The visit, the first by a
sitting U.S. president to Angola, will “highlight that remarkable evolution of
the U.S.-Angola relationship,” said Frances Brown, a special assistant to the
president and senior director for African affairs at the National Security
Council.
It will also draw attention to
a perennial challenge for America’s value-based diplomacy in Africa.
International rights groups have used Biden’s trip to criticize the
Lourenço government’s authoritarian shift. Political opponents have
been imprisoned and allegedly tortured, while security and other laws have been
passed in Angola that severely restrict freedoms, throwing some scrutiny on
Washington’s new African partnership.
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