Congressman Gregory Meeks (Photo: Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg via Getty Images file)
Democrats and republicans alike supported a bil to "counter malign Russian influence in Africa." Such legislation is reminiscent of the worst days of the cold war. Now a member of the Congressional Black Caucus is leading the retrograde action.
This article was originally published in Covert Action Magazine.
During the Cold War, the U.S. government invoked the pretext of Russian interference to justify a range of crimes, including the assassination of Congolese Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba, the overthrow of Pan-Africanist hero Kwame Nkrumah, the arrest of Nelson Mandela and intervention in the Angolan civil war.
Just when we thought that that era had passed, the House of Representatives on April 27 passed the âCountering Malign Russian Influence Activities in Africaâ Act by a 415-9 vote.
The bill in part would direct the U.S. Secretary of State, using âdetailed intelligence,â to identify in Africa âlocal actors complicit in Russian activities.â
The U.S. in turn may very well seek to punish those actors through economic sanctions or even regime change. âRussian aggressionâ is generally being invoked to justify greater U.S. intervention in Africa, including the expansion of the Africa Command (AFRICOM) and U.S. military base network across the continent.
Exceptional Show of Bipartisan Support
The Nay votes for the âCountering Malign Russian Influence Activities in Africaâ Act all came from Republicans. Supposed progressive stalwarts like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Barbara Lee, Ro Khanna and members of the âSquadâ all voted Yea.
The main sponsor of the bill, Gregory Meeks (D-NY), is Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
After passage of the bill, he voiced his pride in the âexceptional show of bipartisan support,â which he said âdemonstrated how Putinâs war in Ukraine, and the Kremlinâs corrupt and illicit activities in Africa to fund war and other exploits have worked to unify Congress and the international community.â
Meeks continued: âAs we continue to apply pressure on Putin and his agents for carrying out war crimes throughout this unjustifiable war of aggression, we cannot forget that the Russian Federation will continue to seek avenues through which it can pilfer, manipulate, and exploit resources in parts of Africa to evade sanctions and undermine U.S. interests.â
âThe United States not only stands with the people of Ukraine, but with all innocent people who have been victimized by Putinâs mercenaries and agents credibly accused of gross violations of human rights in Africa, including in the Central African Republic and Mali. This bill enlists the resources of the State Department and other federal agencies to examine the Russian Federationâs malign activities in Africa and hold those complicit in these activities to account. The United States will not sit by and watch Putinâs war machine attempt to gain strength to the detriment of fragile states in Africa and elsewhere.â
While the Russians have been involved in some shady operations, many African countries have had long-standing positive ties to Russia and benefitted from its support for African liberation movements during the Cold Warâin contrast to the U.S.âincluding in South Africa.
Meeksâs comments mostly offer a form of projection in that they accuse Russia of trying to exploit Africaâs resources when this is clearly something that the U.S. has done far more extensively and for a much longer period than Russia.
AFRICOM founder Vice Admiral Robert Moeller admitted that one of the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM)âs guiding principles was âprotecting the free flow of natural resources from Africa to the global market.â
The âCountering Malign Russian Influence Activities in Africaâ Act will be used to justify flagrant infringements on the sovereignty of African countries. It attempts to use the Russian bogeymanâlike in the Cold War eraâas a pretext for neocolonial expansion.
The rhetoric surrounding the bill fits with the larger demonization of Vladimir Putin and Russia, which is a desperate ploy by the U.S. ruling elite to try to mobilize the public against a foreign enemy at a time of growing economic crisis and threatening civil discontent.
Richard Dunn is a retired construction professional, trained in Architecture and Energy Management. Heâs been a social justice activist since 1968 and was particularly active with the Walter Rodney defense demonstrations. Richard is an author, a contributing columnist to newspapers, an editor for a music industry magazine and operates a social justice website. Richard can be reached at: richarddunn75@gmail.com.