Report: US plans military base in Zambia

On April 26, 2022, the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) announced that they had set up an office in the US Embassy in Lusaka, Zambia amid concerns that the US plans to establish a military base in this mineral rich Southern Africa country.
According to AFRICOM Brigadier General Peter Bailey, Deputy
Director for Strategy, Engagement and Programs, the Office of Security
Cooperation would be based in the U.S. Embassy building.
Social media in Zambia buzzed with rumors about the creation
of a US military base in the country. Defense Minister Ambrose Lufuma released
a statement to say that “Zambia has no intention whatsoever of establishing or
hosting any military bases on Zambian soil.”
“Over our dead bodies” will the United States have a military
base in Zambia, said Dr. Fred M’membe, the president of the Socialist Party of
Zambia.
Brigadier General Bailey of AFRICOM had met with Zambia’s
President Hakainde Hichilema during his visit to Lusaka. Hichilema’s government
faces serious economic challenges despite the fact that Zambia has one of the
richest resources of raw materials in the world. When Zambia’s total public
debt grew to nearly $27 billion (with an external debt of approximately $14.5
billion), it returned to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in December 2021
for financial assistance, resulting in an IMF-induced spiral of debt.
Two months after Hichilema met with the AFRICOM team, he hosted
IMF Deputy Managing Director Antoinette M. Sayeh in June, who thanked President
Hichilema for his commitment to the IMF “reform plans.” These plans include a
general austerity package that will not only cause the Zambian population to be
in the grip of poverty but will also prevent the Zambian government from
exercising its sovereignty.
Puppet Regime
Dr. M’membe, president of the Socialist Party, has emerged as
a major voice against the United States military presence in his country. Defense
Minister Lufuma’s claim that the United States is not building a base in Zambia
elicits a chuckle from M’membe. “I think there is an element of ignorance on
his part,” M’membe said. “This is sheer naivety. He [Lufuma] does not
understand that practically there is no difference between a U.S. military base
and an AFRICOM office. It’s just a matter of semantics to conceal their real
intentions.”
The real intentions, M’membe said, are for the United States
to use Zambia’s location “to monitor, to control, and to quickly reach the
other countries in the region.” Zambia and its neighbor, the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, he said, “possess not less than 70 percent of the
world’s cobalt reserves. There are huge copper reserves and other minerals
needed for modern technologies [in both these countries].” Partly, M’membe
said, “this is what has heightened interest in Zambia.”
Zambia is operating as a “puppet regime,” M’membe said, a
government that is de jure independent but de facto “completely dependent on an
outside power and subject to its orders,” M’membe added, while referring to the
US interference in the functioning of the Zambian government. Despite his
campaign promises in 2021, President Hichilema has followed the same
IMF-dependent policies as his unpopular predecessor Edgar Lungu. However, in
terms of a US base, even Lungu had resisted the U.S. pressure to allow this
kind of office to come up on Zambian soil.
After news broke out about the establishment of the office,
former Zambian Permanent Representative to the African Union, Emmanuel Mwamba,
rushed to see Hichilema and caution him not to make this deal. Ambassador
Mwamba said that other former presidents of Zambia—Lungu (2015-2021), Michael
Sata (2011-2014), Rupiah Banda (2008-2011) and Levy Mwanawasa (2002-2008)—had
also refused to allow AFRICOM to enter the country since its creation in 2007.
Is This a Base or an Office?
Zambia’s Defence Minister Lufuma argues that the “office” set
up in Lusaka is to assist the Zambian forces in the United Nations
Multidimensional Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic
(MINUSCA). Since 2014, the United States has provided around 136 million kwacha
($8 million) to assist the Zambian military. Lufuma said that this office will
merely continue that work. In fact, Zambia is not even one of the top five
troop contributing countries to MINUSCA (these include Bangladesh, Cameroon, Egypt,
Pakistan and Rwanda). Lufuma’s reason, therefore, seems like a fig leaf.
Neither Zambia nor the United States military has made public
the agreement signed in April. The failure to release the text has led to a
great deal of speculation, which is natural. Meanwhile, in Ghana, where a
defence cooperation agreement was signed between the two countries in May 2018,
the United States had initially said that it was merely creating a warehouse
and an office for its military, which then turned out to mean that the United
States military was taking charge of one of the three airport terminals at
Accra airport and has since used it as its base of operations in West Africa.
“From the experience of Ghana, we know what it is,” M’membe said, while
speaking about the American plan to make an office in the US Embassy in Zambia.
“It is not [very] different from a base. It will slowly but surely grow into a
full-scale base.”
From the first whiff that the United States might create an
AFRICOM base on the continent, opposition grew swiftly. It was led by former
South African President Thabo Mbeki and his Defence Minister at that time,
Mosiuoa Lekota, both of whom lobbied the African Union and the Southern African
Development Community to reject any US base on the continent. Over the past
five years, however, the appetite for full-scale rejection of bases has
withered despite an African Union resolution against allowing the establishment
of such bases in 2016. The US military has 29 known military bases in 15 of the
African countries.
Not only have 15 African countries ignored their own regional
body’s advice when it comes to allowing foreign countries to establish military
bases there, but the African Union (AU) has itself allowed the United States to
create a military attaché’s office inside the AU building in Addis Ababa. “The
AU that resisted AFRICOM in 2007,” M’membe told me, “is not the AU of today.”
By Vijay Prashad
This article was produced by Globetrotter