Sarkozy's Africa Policy Transitional, not Transformational

By Judah Grunstein, on , Trend Lines

The visit to Paris this week of Rwandan President Paul Kagame coincided with coverage in the French press of allegations accusing former French President Jacques Chirac of accepting suitcases full of cash as kickbacks from African heads of state. Combined, the two stories highlight the ways in which France under President Nicolas Sarkozy is turning a page in its relations with Africa, but also the ways in which the legacy of the past has proven hard to escape. In this, Sarkozy's presidency, like that of U.S. President Barack Obama in its own way, is likely to be a transitional one, rather than the transformational one that was promised.

But if this is a case of "the more things change, the more they stay the same," it's worth noting the way things have changed. To begin with, the Kagame visit is notable not just for the way in which it cemented the two sides' decision to focus on the future, while letting the unresolved conflicts of the past remain just that -- unresolved, but in the past -- it is also symbolic of Sarkozy's promise of a new beginning in relations between France and Africa. The change was first hinted at in his widely derided speech at Dakar in 2007 and later promised in the 2008 Defense White Paper, which committed the French military to reducing its forward base structure on the continent. Sarkozy went on to announce that France would renegotiate its shadowy security agreements with African countries to bring the accords, which dated back to the post-colonial era, into the 21st century. ...

To read the rest, subscribe to World Politics Review

Individual
Subscription Plans


  • $49 One year
  • $85 Two years
  • $5 Monthly
subscribe

Institutional
Subscriptions

Request a free trial for your office or school. Everyone at a given site can get access through our institutional subscriptions.

request trial

Login

Already a member? Click the button below to login.

login