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DefendTheTruth
Senior Member
Posts: 12882
Joined: 08 Mar 2014, 16:32

Africa's side note!

Post by DefendTheTruth » Yesterday, 17:52

In a document of about 30 pages (A4) Africa was rendered a side- or footnote of just the following text (less than a page), outlining major strategic declaration of a super power of the planet:

Africans are still in a deep sleep, fighting each other, toppling one another's governments, staging coups etc., Africa is doomed, erased from the world map by the most powerful nation of the globe. Does the old continent deserve all these?

The Africans are themselves to blame for the state of their affairs.
If you keep clapping your hands for the likes of Eskinder Nega or Jawar Mohammed, then what else should you expect?
"E. Africa
For far too long, American policy in Africa has focused on providing, and later on
spreading, liberal ideology. The United States should instead look to partner with
select countries to ameliorate conflict, foster mutually beneficial trade
relationships, and transition from a foreign aid paradigm to an investment and
growth paradigm capable of harnessing Africa’s abundant natural resources and
latent economic potential.
Opportunities for engagement could include negotiating settlements to ongoing
conflicts (e.g., DRC-Rwanda, Sudan), and preventing new ones (e.g., EthiopiaEritrea-Somalia), as well as action to amend our approach to aid and investment
(e.g., the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act). And we must remain wary of
resurgent Islamist terrorist activity in parts of Africa while avoiding any long-term
American presence or commitments.
The United States should transition from an aid-focused relationship with Africa to
a trade- and investment-focused relationship, favoring partnerships with capable,
reliable states committed to opening their markets to U.S. goods and services. An
immediate area for U.S. investment in Africa, with prospects for a good return on
investment, include the energy sector and critical mineral development.
Development of U.S.-backed nuclear energy, liquid petroleum gas, and liquified
natural gas technologies can generate profits for U.S. businesses and help us in the
competition for critical minerals and other resources

sarcasm
Senior Member
Posts: 11380
Joined: 23 Feb 2013, 20:08

Re: Africa's side note!

Post by sarcasm » Yesterday, 18:53

DefendTheTruth wrote:
Yesterday, 17:52

If you keep clapping your hands for the likes of Eskinder Nega or Jawar Mohammed, then what else should you expect?
It would be sensible if you have said, "If you keep clapping your hands for the likes of Abiy Ahmed, then what else should you expect?". The Ethiopia that PM Halilemariam handed over to Abiy had no civil war, and people could peacefully travel from Zalambesa to Moyale. One US dollar was 28 Birr in Black market, now it is 180 Birr! Petrol was 18 Birr per liter, now it is 200 Birr.

Abiy was welcomed by everyone and accepted from Tigray in the North to Moyale in South. No Ethiopian leader was accepted from day one like Abiy. They all had to work hard to be accepted in every region, they had to earn it. Meles was not welcomed by everyone. Menge was not welcomed by everyone. But Abiy has squander all the positive energy in the country and turned Ethiopia into blood bath.

Leadership is about fundamentally about farsightedness, not brute force. Abiy has failed. You cannot blame Eskinder Nega or Jawar Mohammed.

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DefendTheTruth
Senior Member
Posts: 12882
Joined: 08 Mar 2014, 16:32

Re: Africa's side note!

Post by DefendTheTruth » Today, 15:30

Can you also show us any comparative scenes of the two periods you are referring to in your scribble?

How did the Corridor development look like under your masters in the name of Woyane in comparison to that of under PM Abiy?
How much wheat was imported under your woyane in comparison to that is imported under PM Abiy?

How much was the volume of total export under your Woyane in comparison to that of under PM Abiy?

How much of the total agriculture was cultivated in terms of cluster farming during your woyane in comparison to those under PM Abiy?

The list is way too long, I am just tired of lecturing those who can never learn.

The likes of Tsedale Lemma, who wants to know about internal government issues more than those who were in the government themselves.

The problem is that you don't have a sense of shame!

DefendTheTruth
Senior Member
Posts: 12882
Joined: 08 Mar 2014, 16:32

Re: Africa's side note!

Post by DefendTheTruth » Today, 15:53

Here is an example of the implementation of the just released strategic plan on the ground: it is practical already.



The older lady (from the US) said her country has been helping historically, I don't doubt that claim is true. But my question is why the help was needed for that long?

If you keep helping others for ever, when are those helped are going to help themselves? Else they remain dependent on others, which is not helping rather keeping the people dependent, which is unfortunate!

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