Joe Biden is on the first visit to Angola by a U.S. president to promote American investments in the sub-Saharan African country and visit a museum dedicated to slavery. At the museum, he will acknowledge the historical connection between the two nations through the trafficking of people.
A significant focus of Biden’s trip is to highlight the United States’ pledge of $3 billion for the Lobito Corridor project. This initiative involves the redevelopment of a railway network that will connect Zambia, Congo, and Angola, easing the transportation of raw materials within the continent and for export purposes. Apart from U.S. funding, the project has also received financial support from the European Union, the Group of Seven countries, a Western-led private group, and African banks.
The primary goal of the project is to strengthen U.S. involvement in a region abundant in essential minerals crucial for batteries in electric vehicles, electronic gadgets, and clean energy technologies. The project also aims to counterbalance China’s significant investments in mining and processing African 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 infrastructure strategy in Africa and other parts of the world.
Biden is to fly to the Angolan coastal city of Lobito on Wednesday for a firsthand look at a port terminal that is the Atlantic Ocean outlet for the corridor.
White House national security spokesperson John Kirby said the Biden administration “has absolutely transformed” U.S.-Africa relations and that the corridor’s completion is “going to take years but there’s already been a lot of work put in.”
That means much of it may fall to Biden’s successor, Republican Donald Trump, who takes office on Jan. 20. Asked whether the project could proceed without future support from Trump, Kirby said it was “our fervent hope that as the new team comes in and takes a look at this that they see the value too, that they see how it will help drive a more secure, more prosperous, more economically stable continent.”
Kirby, speaking aboard Air Force One as Biden flew to Angola, said the corridor was about more than simply Washington trying to outpace Beijing geopolitically.
“I would say there is no cold war on the continent. We’re not asking countries to choose between us and Russia and China. We’re simply looking for reliable, sustainable, verifiable investment opportunities that the people of Angola and the people of the continent can rely on,” he said. “Too many countries have relied on spotty investment opportunities and are now wracked by debt.”
The last U.S. president to visit sub-Saharan Africa was Barack Obama in 2015. Biden attended a United Nations climate summit in Egypt in North Africa in 2022.
Biden had promised to visit Africa last year, after reviving the U.S.-Africa Summit in December 2022. But the trip was delayed until this year and then pushed back again this October because of Hurricane Milton – reinforcing a sentiment among Africans that their continent is still a low priority for Washington.
On Tuesday, Biden is to attend an official arrival ceremony and met with Angolan President Joao Lourenco. Biden welcomed Lourenco to the Oval Office in November last year.
Biden also is to meet with leaders of African business engagement groups he helped found and then visit Angola’s National Slavery Museum. The site was once the headquarters of the Capela da Casa Grande, a 17th century temple where slaves were baptized before boarding the ships that took them to America.
Kirby said Biden will give a speech there on Tuesday acknowledging “both the horrific history of slavery that has connected our two nations, but also looks forward to a future predicated on a shared vision that benefits both our people.”
After arriving in Angola’s capital, Luanda, on Monday evening, Biden met briefly with Wanda Tucker, a descendent of William Tucker, the first enslaved child born in the United States, the White House said. Wanda Tucker is the faculty chair of psychology, philosophy and religious studies at Rio Salado College.
William Tucker’s parents were brought to colonial Virginia from Angola in August 1619 aboard the Portuguese ship the White Lion.
Biden also met with business leaders, African community leaders and members of Congress — including Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester, a Democrat who is also a senator-elect from Delaware, and California Democratic Rep. Sara Jacobs.
Copyright © 2024 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.