Tigray crisis: Senator Coons鈥 mission signals Biden鈥檚 Africa challenges
Having an Africa specialist who鈥檚 a Biden friend convey U.S. concerns over the Tigray crisis speaks volumes about the administration鈥檚 priorities.
Having an Africa specialist who鈥檚 a Biden friend convey U.S. concerns over the Tigray crisis speaks volumes about the administration鈥檚 priorities.
When Chris Coons met with Ethiopia鈥檚 senior leaders in Addis Ababa over the weekend at the behest of the Biden administration, the Delaware senator wasn鈥檛 there just because he鈥檚 a close friend of the president鈥檚. In Africa discussing complex issues 鈥 from democratic governance and minority rights to regional powder kegs 鈥 Senator Coons was in his element.
His assignment in Ethiopia: to convey the administration鈥檚 deepening concerns about what it describes as 鈥渆thnic cleansing鈥 in the Horn of Africa country鈥檚 Tigray region.
As a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and former occupant of then President-elect Joe Biden鈥檚 A-list of secretary of state candidates, Senator Coons already had enough going for him right there to be tapped for the Ethiopia mission.
Those qualifications alone made him a good candidate for the broader task of signaling that a new team in Washington intends to raise attention to African issues from the low level they鈥檇 fallen to over the past decade, especially under the Trump administration.
Among the senator鈥檚 messages: The United States won鈥檛 simply ignore democratic backsliding and human rights abuses among African partners.
Moreover Ethiopia, with its particularly high level of Chinese investment, seems a natural focal point for President Biden鈥檚 and Senator Coons鈥 shared concerns over aspects of China鈥檚 aggressive and self-interested international development model.
Long interest in Africa
But what made Mr. Coons even more of a natural is a decadeslong interest in African issues broadly, and in matters of democratization and human rights particularly, in the rich but challenging context of the continent鈥檚 ethnic, tribal, and religious diversity 鈥 complex issues at play to varying degrees in the Tigray conflict.
As a college student in the 1980s, Mr. Coons spent a semester at the University of Nairobi in Kenya, immersing himself in Africans鈥 struggles for freedom and democracy. After graduation, he returned to Africa to work with Anglican Bishop Desmond Tutu and the South African Council of Churches in the anti-apartheid movement.
It was during that experience that Nelson Mandela became one of his heroes.
Back in Delaware in the 1990s, the lawyer and Yale Divinity School graduate gave sermons in Presbyterian churches on the evils of the apartheid system.
And then as a U.S. senator 鈥 elected in 2010 to fill the seat vacated by Mr. Biden when he became vice president 鈥 Mr. Coons made African issues one of his areas of focus.
鈥淪enator Coons has been very active in the Senate on Africa issues and Africa policy, perhaps the most active of all the senators,鈥 says Tom Sheehy, a former staff director for the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Signals at hearing
Recalling how the Delaware senator organized his questioning of Antony Blinken at his confirmation hearing for secretary of state聽in January, Mr. Sheehy says Mr. Coons revealed a lot about his priorities when he zeroed in on Ethiopia.
鈥淪enators are very aware that they need to make good use of their limited time at high-profile hearings like that,鈥 says Mr. Sheehy, now a distinguished fellow focusing on conflict resolution in Africa at the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) in Washington. 鈥淐oons could have asked him about a hundred other conflicts, but when he focused on Ethiopia, it was a clear indication of his interests.鈥
Ethiopia had emerged over recent years as a particular bright spot in an advancing Africa, with a booming economy and expanding middle class. The country鈥檚 leader since 2018, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for returning peace to a country on the brink of ethnic warfare and for committing to build a democracy through dialogue.
But that image of progress and reconciliation has been shattered by the conflict in the country鈥檚 Tigray region. Since November, government forces and affiliated militias have been battling forces of the regional ruling party, the Tigray People鈥檚 Liberation Front 鈥 the political power that ruled Ethiopia for three decades before Mr. Abiy rose to power.
In February, the U.S. concluded that the Ethiopian government was carrying out a campaign of ethnic cleansing in Tigray, destroying entire villages and displacing thousands of ethnic Tigrayans. Many of the displaced have fled into neighboring Eritrea, where hundreds have been massacred, according to human rights organizations; or to Sudan, sparking tensions with the Sudanese government.
Ground to make up
Many Africa specialists in the U.S. say they are heartened by the message the Coons mission to Ethiopia delivers about renewed U.S. attention to Africa. But a sense of relief is attenuated, some say, by the reality that the U.S. has a lot of ground to make up, particularly in Ethiopia.
鈥淏iden is doing the right thing being proactive on this issue so quickly, and I think the prestige Coons brings into it as someone who has the president鈥檚 ear can only be helpful, but we鈥檙e still late to the game,鈥 says Michael Rubin, a resident scholar specializing in the Middle East and the Horn of Africa at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) in Washington.
Noting the dangers the Ethiopian government鈥檚 Tigray campaign risks igniting in a country organized by ethnicity-based regions, Mr. Rubin adds, 鈥淚鈥檓 afraid the Pandora鈥檚 box has already been opened.鈥
Add to the mix the tensions Ethiopia has sown with its neighbors, including Sudan, with its enormous hydropower project, the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, and some experts see the makings of a broader regional conflict in the Horn of Africa.
Mr. Sheehy of USIP says that as encouraging as the Coons mission was in his eyes, 鈥渢he key to progress in Ethiopia is going to be the follow-up.鈥 Adding that the U.S. 鈥渘eeds to keep a dialogue going,鈥 he says he鈥檚 encouraged by rumblings suggesting Mr. Biden will soon appoint an envoy for the Horn of Africa.
Indeed, speculation is already centered on seasoned diplomat and recent senior U.N. political adviser Jeffrey Feltman for the new post.
A bipartisan Africa policy
Both Mr. Sheehy and AEI鈥檚 Mr. Rubin say another encouraging feature in the Coons mission is that it suggests President Biden鈥檚 interest in working with Congress and building a bipartisan foreign policy. Mr. Coons is known for his efforts to work across the aisle with Republican colleagues.
For Mr. Rubin, that means the U.S. could again have the makings of a bipartisan Africa policy akin to the one developed by President George W. Bush. With bipartisan backing, he says, President Bush helped resolve the Darfur conflict in Sudan with his naming of retired Sen. John Danforth as his Darfur envoy, and he launched the hugely successful President鈥檚 Emergency Program for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, which was instrumental in helping Africa manage the AIDS crisis.
But what worries Mr. Rubin is that the Biden team may be about to discover, in Ethiopia and elsewhere, that a reengaged America may no longer have the influence and dominance that U.S. diplomacy once did.
Indeed, local reporting following Senator Coons鈥 Addis Ababa meetings suggested government officials matched the American delegation鈥檚 firmness. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Dina Mufi said the conversation helped 鈥渢he friendly United States government ... better understand鈥 what the Ethiopian government considers a 鈥渓aw enforcement operation鈥 in Tigray.
鈥淒omestic matters are Ethiopian matters and sovereign matters,鈥 Mr. Dina said.
Mr. Rubin notes, for example, that China financed Addis Ababa鈥檚 new metro system and scores of other recent developments. He says Prime Minister Abiy 鈥渃ould say, 鈥榃e鈥檙e not going to pay attention to you because you鈥檙e not that important to us anymore.鈥欌
And that, he says, is 鈥渁 wake-up call Biden is going to get all over the world, waking up ... to the realization we don鈥檛 have the power and leverage we once did.鈥