Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

U.S.-Based Africans Organize Events to Counter Biden Administration’s U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit
Julie Varughese
14 Dec 2022
🖨️ Print Article
U.S.-Based Africans Organize Events to Counter Biden Administration’s U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit
Speakers and moderators of the three panels that took place December 11 at the first-ever African Peoples’ Forum in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Abena Disroe-Morris)

The African diaspora gathered for events in Washington DC to counter the claims of U.S. concern for African nations before the U.S. African Leaders Summit. 

This article was originally published in Toward Freedom.

Hundreds of people of African descent convened this past weekend at two events that aimed to be the people’s opposition to the Biden administration’s U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, which is taking place this week amid a military buildup to enforce the summit’s security in Washington, D.C.

The summit is described as a four-day event (Dec. 12-15) that is designed to foster economic opportunities and reinforce the United States’ alleged commitment to human rights and democracy. It is the first summit of its kind since 2014.

“I look forward to working with African governments, civil society, diaspora communities across the United States, and the private sector to continue strengthening our shared vision for the future of U.S.-Africa relations,” U.S. President Joe Biden is quoted as saying on the summit’s website.

However, the summit comes amid dim relations between the United States and many African countries, some of which have decried Western financial and arms support for the war in Ukraine. Western sanctions against Russia have caused price spikes in wheat, with 345 million people in the world expected to experience “acute food insecurity.” Several African countries have relied on Russia and Ukraine for large portions of their wheat imports. However, U.S. officials have been pilloried, too, for saying African countries that continue to trade with Russia would face consequences.

Speakers at both counter events said the Biden summit is really a U.S. attempt to maintain control over the African continent.

Netfa Freeman, an organizer with Pan-African Community Action and a member of the Black Alliance for Peace Coordinating Committee, spoke December 10, at the Global Pan-African Peoples Intervention on the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit. The Global Pan-African Congress organized the event at Howard University’s School of Social Work in Washington, D.C. Freeman read aloud a December 9 statement the Black Alliance for Peace issued.

“The Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) recognizes the ‘U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit,'” the organization states, “as nothing more than collusion between neo-colonial powers and U.S. attempts to advance and maintain dominance over the continent.”

The Biden administration invited leaders of 49 African countries. The exceptions were Burkina Faso, Eritrea, Guinea, Mali, the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic and Somaliland. An unnamed “senior administration official” was quoted in a transcript of a December 8 background press call as citing the African Union suspending most of these countries for why they were not invited. (A background press call is meant to provide off-the-record information to invited press, hence officials went nameless in the transcript. Toward Freedom was not invited.)

However, long-time colonizer and U.S. ally, France, recently announced the removal of military troops in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger. This came after coups and instability in these countries. Mali also recently banned French NGOs. Guinea experienced a coup in 2021 that appeared to be welcomed by its population. Meanwhile, the United States does not recognize Western Sahara, or the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic, as a sovereign state.

While the officials mentioned various civilian-led entities the United States has deployed to cultivate leadership on the continent, none of them spoke about the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM). That is one of 11 combat and technical military structures the United States has deployed throughout the world to ensure control of shipping lanes and resources. AFRICOM’s press officer has denied commerce is its only interest, while acknowledging it is one of AFRICOM’s reasons for being. Meanwhile, its 2022 “posture statement” to the U.S. Congress states, “Africa sits astride six strategic chokepoints and sea lines of communication, enables a third of the world’s shipping, and holds vast mineral resources. When access through these strategic chokepoints is blocked, global markets suffer.”

Speakers at the weekend’s events remarked on U.S. intentions.

“The U.S. government and their scribes are misguiding the public on what the roles of the U.S. government, NATO, AFRICOM & neoliberal leaders are in maintaining the state of unrest and violence in countries so they can steal their resources,” said Jacqueline Luqman, a Toward Freedom board member, who spoke as co-host of Radio Sputnik’s “By Any Means Necessary” on a panel about the role of the media.



That panel was one of three held during the first-ever African Peoples’ Forum. The December 11 event was organized at the Eritrean Civic and Cultural Center in northeast Washington, D.C. Moderators included Eritrean activist Yolian Ogbu and Hermela Aregawi, an independent journalist of Ethiopian descent who has reported on the Horn of Africa.

The five-hour event featured three panels of prominent speakers like Eritrean journalist and activist Elias Amare; and Paul Sankara, brother of assassinated Burkina Faso leader Thomas Sankara; among many others.

Aregawi announced to the audience of a couple of hundred mostly African-descended people that the event was so successful, the forum may take place quarterly to create more opportunities for African anti-imperialist activists to come together. The event was pulled together in just three weeks’ time, she said.

To continue with the momentum in opposition to the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, BAP has organized a week of actions, December 13-16, to raise awareness about the nature of the U.S. role in Africa.

“BAP calls for the dismantling of NATO, AFRICOM and all imperialist structures,” the organization’s statement reads. “Africa and the rest of the world cannot be free until all peoples are able to realize the right of sovereignty and the right to live free of domination.”

Julie Varughese is editor of Toward Freedom.

US Africa Summit
AFRICOM
African Diaspora
Africa

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Raïs Neza Boneza
Macron, Madagascar, and the Return of France’s Old Colonial Ghosts
12 November 2025
In 2025, Françafrique didn’t die — it just booked a seat on a French military plane.
Black Alliance for Peace Africa Team
In Honor of Comrade Abiodun Aremu: A Teacher and a Fighter for African Liberation
15 October 2025
We honor the life of Nigerian organizer Abiodun Aremu, a true Pan-Africanist whose legacy demands we intensify the fight for African
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
Gaza Is Not Rwanda: Its Suffering Should Not Perpetuate that of Congolese
24 September 2025
Likening the suffering of Gazans to that of Rwandan Tutsis perpetuates the narrative that has dominated the African Great Lakes Regio
Tunde Osazua
The Never Ending U.S. Killing Fields of Somalia
24 September 2025
Somalia remains a laboratory for imperialist military attacks and interventions intended to prevent the formation of a stable and sec
Abayomi Azikiwe
Lawsuit Exposes White House Secret Agreement to Deport Migrants to Ghana
24 September 2025
A fifth African state, the Republic of Ghana, has been subjected to widespread criticism and legal actions for its participation in illegal dep
Francis Phillip
The Imperial Contradiction Behind the 2023 Fuel Subsidy Removal in Nigeria
17 September 2025
Nigeria’s inability to refine its own oil is a legacy of British and US imperialism designed to maintain dependence.
Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
The Second Africa Climate Summit Reveals The New Face of Colonialism; Technocrats and Cryptocolonization (Part 1, The Setting).
10 September 2025
The Africa Climate Summit is a greenwashing front for a new wave of colonialism.
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
Delirious New Cold Warrior Ted Cruz Proposes US/Israel/Taiwan/Somaliland Pact
20 August 2025
Senator Ted Cruz has written an open letter urging Trump to recognize Somaliland, causing jubilation among Somaliland secessionists.
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
Zionists Accuse Yves Engler of Genocide Denial
30 July 2025
The Canadian branch of B'nai B'rith has accused author, activist, and
Abdirahman M. Ahmed
Using Lessons from the Horn of Africa to Protect the Alliance of Sahelian States
04 June 2025
The Horn of Africa was filled with hope in 2018, when Somali President Mohammed Abdullahi Mohammed, Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki, and Ethi

More Stories


  • Chris Gilbert , Cira Pascual Marquina
    Culture and Resistance: The Palmarito Afro-Descendant Commune (Part II)
    15 Oct 2025
    Afro-Venezuelan communards on the southern shore region of Lake Maracaibo discuss the intersection of culture and organization.
  • Mohammad al-Ayoubi
    No Rule Without Resistance: Gaza’s Post-War Future and the Collapse of Foreign Illusions
    15 Oct 2025
    As western powers push technocracy over sovereignty, Palestinian resistance movements warn that there can be no reconstruction without liberation.
  • David Kenner
    Arab States Deepened Military Ties with Israel While Denouncing Gaza War, Leak Reveals
    15 Oct 2025
    Israeli and Arab military officials have come together for meetings and trainings, facilitated by U.S. Central Command, on regional threats, Iran and underground tunnels.
  • Roger D. Harris
    Will the US Attack Venezuela?
    15 Oct 2025
    Solidarity activist and analyst Roger Harris takes stock of the rapidly escalating US military threats against Venezuela.
  • BAR Radio Logo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio October 10, 2025
    10 Oct 2025
    In this week’s segment, we hear about a graphic novel that presents the history of Black armed resistance in the U.S. But first, we discuss the city of Chicago and how activists and communities are…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us