Editor 's note: This is part of a series of articles on Chinese involvement in Africa.
Since late June, senior military officials from Mali, Sierra Leone, South Sudan and dozens of other African countries are meeting. to discuss defense strategies and security threats.
The meeting did not take place in a large African city, but thousands of kilometers away, in Beijing, China
. , a highly publicized showcase of expanding military partnerships hosted by the Chinese Ministry of National Defense.
The Forum, concluded on July 11, consolidates China's position as a key security partner in Africa and coincides with
Ideology, Economics, Politics
Paul Nantulya, associate researcher at Africa Center who is interested in Sino-African relations Security, told VOA that China's military involvement in Africa mixes ideology, economics and politics.
China's presence on the continent dates back to the liberation struggles of the 1960s, when it supported anti-colonial and anti-apartheid movements in South Africa, Algeria, Sudan and in other countries based on what Nantulya called "ideological concerns".
When former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping came to power in the late 1970s, unprecedented reforms paved the way for China's rise as an economic powerhouse. "The military engagement that China has on the continent has become much more complex than just an extension of its ideologies. "Increasingly, we are also beginning to see military exchanges between African countries and China, and these exchanges cover a range of issues, from peacekeeping to disaster response, to military construction. construction of the military, professional military education, "he added."
Clear Objectives
African military officials at the defense forum told CGTV, a Chinese state broadcaster, that they had well-defined expectations as to their goals. partnerships with China.
"What we demand from China, which is very clear, is that they provide us with the partnership, the support, the expertise, the technical capacity, the capacity building, infrastructure, for us to be able to do the work ourselves, "said Lieutenant General Masanneh Nyuku Kinteh of the Armed Forces of The Gambia
But if African nations see China as a strategic partner, China sees, at least partially, potential customers. Nantulya said that China is a major player in the global arms supply chain and that it is looking for markets.
Chinese manufacturers have used their growing presence in Africa and generous government subsidies to produce cheaper and cheaper military equipment. While Western countries are focusing on heavy equipment – jets, tanks, rockets – China's source of revenue has long been small arms, including AK-47 pistols and assault rifles, said Nantulya
. sell them, as well as ammunition, bullet-proof armor and unmanned aerial vehicles, not only to the African military but also to the police and intelligence forces
, a country whose military industry has helped China to develop. Algeria, Mozambique and Zimbabwe also import many Chinese weapons. And this portfolio is becoming more diverse, including tank agreements and technical coaching training with South Sudan and Uganda, Nantulya said. partners such as Angola, Libya and Tanzania, to more recent relations with Kenya, Ethiopia and Djibouti.
In each case, China seeks to strengthen its military ties with party-to-party relations, Nantulya said. "China invites the leaders of these parties to power in these different countries in Beijing, a program run by the party school [Central]," he added, referring to the institution that forms Communist Party officials.
Through this year-round program, China promotes its ideologies and large-scale initiatives combining political propaganda and defense strategy and tactics.
Robert Mugabe, who led Zimbabwe for 37 years. Many analysts suspected that China was playing a role in what some saw as a military coup