Conservative Playbook
  • Home
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
No Result
View All Result
Conservative Playbook
No Result
View All Result
Home Type Curated

Washington Has a Better Hand in Africa, but Will It Play It Against Beijing?

by Daily Caller
May 18, 2026
in Curated, Opinions
55 3
Washington Has a Better Hand in Africa, but Will It Play It Against Beijing?
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

DCNF(DCNF)—When President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping sat down in Beijing this week, most of the world was watching for signals about tariffs, Taiwan and technology.

Fair enough. But if you want to understand where the real long-term competition between Washington and Beijing will be won or lost, look south — about 7,000 miles south, to be precise.

Africa is no longer a footnote in great power competition. It is the main event. And America keeps showing up unprepared. 

Africa holds roughly 30% of the world’s proven critical mineral reserves: cobalt, lithium, copper, graphite, rare earths and the building blocks of every battery, semiconductor, and weapons system that will define the next century. Eleven of the world’s twenty fastest-growing economies in 2025 are African.

The continent’s working-age population will grow by 740 million people by 2050, the fastest expansion of any region on earth. And yet Washington’s strategic engagement with Africa has historically oscillated between humanitarian concern and benign neglect, with occasional bursts of attention whenever China does something alarming.

China noticed the opportunity decades before Washington did. Beijing spent twenty years building ports, railways, power plants and telecommunications infrastructure across the continent. This was not out of generosity, but out of strategic calculation.

Speed of execution, state-backed financing and a deliberate indifference to governance questions gave China a head start that cannot be wished away.

But here is what the conventional wisdom misses: China’s early advantage is not the same as a permanent one. Ask Kenya.

In 2014, Nairobi borrowed roughly $5 billion from China’s Export-Import Bank to build the Standard Gauge Railway from Mombasa to Nairobi, a project hailed as a symbol of modernization. Today it is more often cited as a cautionary tale. Passenger numbers missed forecasts, freight traffic disappointed and Kenya now spends more than $1 billion every year servicing that debt — a sum that consumed more than 80% of its external debt servicing budget at its peak. The International Monetary Fund has classified Kenya at high risk of debt distress. The railway got built. The bill is still coming due.

Kenya is not alone. Chad, Ethiopia, Ghana and Zambia have all undergone debt restructuring in recent years, in part due to Chinese loans that looked attractive at signing and ruinous at repayment. The conversation on the continent has shifted. Leaders who once welcomed Beijing’s checkbook without conditions are asking harder questions, and that creates a genuine opening for the United States, if Washington is smart enough to take it.

The Trump administration has the right instincts in places. The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, the Export-Import Bank, and the Prosper Africa initiative represent serious tools for private-sector-led engagement that can compete with Chinese state financing on quality, transparency and long-term reliability.

The administration’s focus on critical minerals supply chain security is exactly the right frame. Cobalt from the Democratic Republic of Congo and copper from Zambia are national security assets, and treating them as such is long overdue.

But tools are only as good as the strategy behind them. And the strategy too often defaults to a single question: how do we counter China? That is the wrong starting point, not because China isn’t a serious competitor, but because African governments can read the room. A relationship built entirely around “we’re not China” is transactional at best and patronizing at worst. Fifty-four countries with a combined GDP of $2.8 trillion deserve a more serious pitch.

The smarter approach starts with what America actually has to offer: transparent financing with enforceable standards, technology that doesn’t come with surveillance built in, private capital that can outlast political cyclesand institutions that survive changes in government on both sides of the Atlantic. These aren’t abstractions; they’re competitive advantages that China genuinely cannot match.

What would a serious strategy look like in practice?

It means showing up before the crisis rather than after. It means DFC and EXIM financing that moves at a speed African governments can actually work with — because if the American answer to a port financing request takes three years and the Chinese answer takes three months, we already know how that ends.

It means treating critical minerals agreements as strategic partnerships rather than extraction arrangements. And it means recognizing that the countries best positioned to resist Chinese pressure are the ones with strong institutions, diversified economies, and real sovereignty — which means American engagement has to build those things, not just exploit them.

The Beijing summit was many things. What it wasn’t was a resolution of the underlying competition for the resources, relationships and strategic geography that will shape the next fifty years. That competition runs through Kinshasa and Nairobi and Lagos as surely as it runs through the Taiwan Strait.

America has the better hand. The question is whether Washington has the patience and discipline to play it.

James Carter is a policy advisor with America’s Economy First. He previously served as director of the Center for American Prosperity at the America First Policy Institute and as deputy undersecretary at the U.S. Department of Labor where he oversaw international affairs. Jacob Choe is an international strategist specializing in Africa, emerging markets, and critical minerals supply chains. He is a member of the Bretton Woods Committee and a Ben Franklin Fellow.

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

Tags: ChinaDaily Caller News FoundationLedeTop Story
Share76Tweet47

Related Posts

Hospitals Promised Less Expensive Care After Merging Into Behemoths — The Opposite Happened

Hospitals Promised Less Expensive Care After Merging Into Behemoths — The Opposite Happened

by Ireland Owens, DCNF
May 17, 2026
0

(DCNF)—A lack of competition in the U.S. healthcare system may be majorly driving up costs nationwide, despite some proponents claiming...

Lee Zeldin

‘FAKE NEWS’: EPA Sets the Record Straight as Former Staff Say Changes Put ‘People at Risk’

by Tyler O'Neil, Daily Signal
May 17, 2026
0

(Daily Signal)—The Environmental Protection Agency is pushing back after former officials claimed that retiring a controversial risk analysis program will put...

Truck

The Hidden ‘Tax’ That’s Bleeding Your Wallet Dry

by Daily Caller
May 17, 2026
0

(DCNF)—Americans may be paying a hidden “lawsuit tax” through higher insurance premiums and higher prices for everyday goods, as trucking...

Cuba’s Officially Out of Oil — Here’s What Happened

Cuba’s Officially Out of Oil — Here’s What Happened

by David Blackmon, Daily Caller News Foundation
May 17, 2026
0

(DCNF)—Cuba’s communist government confirmed on Friday what many of us predicted months ago: The island nation has officially run out...

Trump Iran

Trump Tells Iran ‘Clock Is Ticking, Move Fast’ After New Peace Proposal as Analysts Predict Likely Return to War

by Tyler Durden, Zero Hedge
May 17, 2026
0

(Zero Hedge)—President Trump has warned Iran on Sunday that the "clock is ticking" as Pakistani-mediated talks have not only stalled, but...

Load More
  • Trending
Lara Logan

Lara Logan Says the Deep State and UniParty Swamp Are “Running Out the Clock” on President Trump

April 1, 2026
Musk Newsom Minaj

Gavin Newsom Grasps for Far-Left Transgender Credibility, Gets Dragged by Elon Musk and Nicki Minaj

April 1, 2026
JD Vance

The Highest Compliment Democrats Can Pay JD Vance

April 1, 2026
Ilhan Omar (1)

DHS Obliterates Ilhan Omar After She Demonstrated a Textbook Gaslighting About 5-Year-Old That ICE “Detained”

April 1, 2026
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Contact Us
  • FAQ
  • Home 1
  • Home 2
  • Home 3
  • Privacy Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home

© 2026 JNews by Conservative Playbook.

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?