The World Outline, September 12, 2013
In
a strange parallel to the great nineteenth century’s ‘Scramble for
Africa’, the world’s poorest continent is set once again to become the
object of fierce Western competition. However, whereas Cecil Rhodes and
Rudyard Kipling waxed lyrical about colonial possessions and the ‘White
man’s burden’, today the prize takes the form of lucrative defence
contracts and licenses for the local manufacture of hardware. As you
might imagine, this is a very different ‘scramble’ altogether.
Africa, which accounts for twenty
percent of the world’s landmass and approximately fifteen percent of its
population, is expected to spend over $20bn on defence projects over
the next decade. As the European defence market becomes ever more bereft
of big spenders and Asian markets face strong competition from China,
Africa’s 54 states will constitute the last major geopolitical frontier
for defence companies.
A significant majority of the weapons
and military vehicles currently found in areas such as the Congo, Rwanda
and Somalia are antiquated and relatively primitive. In many cases,
Soviet assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) are the most
easily obtained weapons, and derivatives of the famed Kalashnikov AK-47
rifle remain the most common feature of those arsenals outside of NATO’s
remit.
In fact, a Nigerian news source suggests that
‘At least 70 million [are] in circulation around the world’, lamenting
that ‘millions…have cluttered Africa’. It is of little surprise that
‘countries such as China and the Ukraine continue to hawk their
stockpiles’ to African militias at cut-down prices; anything to be rid
of old wares.
Perhaps the most dangerous element of
these weapons is their pure simplicity, resulting in almost miraculous
durability. The AK-47 is famed for being ‘nearly indestructible’, and
can allegedly be buried under ground for years and still operate with
virtually no maintenance. Clearly there is a considerable problem with
the prevalence of cheap arms on a mass scale, but amid this on-going
concern is a growing security challenge likely to add fuel to the fire.
At the end of last month, Defense News reported
that with the spread of ‘terrorists and Islamic militants’ from the
Middle East to Africa, governments will soon require greater defence
capabilities to guarantee security. Analysts have pointed to the
National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (NMLA), an insurgent
group in Mali believed to hold links with Al Qaeda, as an example of the
future trend that may overwhelm susceptible states. At the more extreme
end of the scale is groups such as Ansar Dine (‘Defenders of Islam’ in
Arabic), a fundamentalist militia operating in Mali that calls ‘for the national imposition of Sharia law’.
French military involvement has perhaps
been an indication of just how serious the threat to local security is,
and Europe will certainly be looking to contain the problem. With gentle
coercion, African defence ministries will look to negotiate ‘better
firepower, improved armed mobility and stronger force protection’ as the
danger becomes more widespread.
South Africa has been a pioneer during
this new wave of interest, and has allegedly negotiated licensing deals
with ‘Swiss, US, Russian, Brazilian, Malaysian and French companies.’
Local rifle producer Truvelo has partnered with Colt Defense, the famed
American arms manufacturer, to produce sniper rifles that meet increased
‘police and military’ demand. A similar deal was penned between South
African aerospace company Denel and Swiss firm B&T ‘paving the way
[for the production of] small arms ranging from sub-machineguns to
grenade launchers’.
In other regional deals, Algeria is
interested in purchasing armoured vehicles from Turkish company Otokar,
whilst last year the Serbian Military Technology Institute negotiated
with the Kenyan government for armoured vehicles and artillery.
Ammunition factories are to be established in Libya and Egypt, and other
deals for hardware with Sudan and Somalia are in the pipeline.
Fundamentally, African governments will be looking to ‘protect newly
found on-shore and off-shore hydro-carbon resources, such as natural gas
and petroleum’.
Whilst there is undoubtedly considerable
demand for state-of-the-art weaponry in the region, and governments are
well within their rights to improve the security of their national
interests, large-scale arms deals do raise questions over the future of a
continent already stricken with poverty and secular violence. Defence
contractors will understandably always be looking to increase profits
and expand their trade, but it is uncertain how much ethical
consideration is given before technology is handed over.
It is concerning that so much government
money will be invested into arms deals when the UN has warned that 22
of the 24 lowest Human Development Index nations are in Sub-Saharan
Africa, and in some instances GDP per capita is less than $200 a year.
However, pumping aid into the region is not necessarily the answer. A
2005 report suggested
that a staggering proportion of the $500bn of aid sent to Africa over
the last forty years has been embezzled through corrupt institutions;
the so-called ‘leaky begging bowl’. It would be interesting to know how
much of this will fund armaments over the next decade.
On face value, at least, it seems
irresponsible to hand over so much destructive technology when the
proliferation of small arms is already of major concern. Yet, as seen
among the BRICs, Africa’s emerging states are looking to exert influence
on the global stage and sustain the regional balance of power. The
extremes of religious fundamentalism, previously a threat associated
with Western foreign policy, will now have a much greater impact on
countries such as Mali and Egypt. Considerable assurances will be
required that governments will not allow their purchases to fall into
the hands of dissident groups.
The West’s ‘burden’ has become an
unforgiving exercise in addressing Africa’s chronic deficiencies, whilst
also providing it with the tools to foster instability. It is, of
course, naive to think that disarmament is either realistic or
desirable, but the situation in Africa is a complex web of security,
poverty and exploitation. Perhaps the UN’s adoption of the Arms Trade
Treaty this year after twenty long years of deliberation will go some
way toward reversing the problem. It sets out
to ‘prohibit states from transferring conventional weapons to countries
when they know those weapons would be used to commit or facilitate
genocide, crimes against humanity or war crimes’.
Photo Credit via Flickr: hdptcar
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου