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Mobutu's Zaire: A Crucial U.S. Ally
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12626 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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6 / 1987 |
1,940 Words |
| Author
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William Pascoe III William Pascoe III is a policy analyst of Third World affairs
at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C. |
Now that liberal forces have succeeded in forcing U.S. economic sanctions on South Africa, they have shifted their focus to other areas of current Reagan administration policy toward Africa. In a move reminiscent of Jimmy Carter's days as president, they have raised the banner of "human rights" in a new campaign to destabilize U.S. allies in Africa. Early this year, they took the opportunities afforded by Mobutu Sese Seko's visit to Washington to focus attention on a critical U.S. ally in Africa - Zaire.
Mobutu, who took power in Zaire in a bloodless coup in November 1965, has been a faithful U.S. ally for virtually all of his uninterrupted 21 years in power. He supported U.S.-backed democratic resistance forces in Angola during the 1975-1976 civil war, reestablished diplomatic relations with Israel at a time when few other African nations would do so, and was the only African leader to send combat forces to support the governments of Chad and Togo against Libyan-backed insurgents. Currently, he plays a major diplomatic role in regional affairs, and he has been very responsive to U.S. geostrategic concerns in southern and central Africa.
Mobutu's record is not spotless, however. He has been guilty of human rights violations - as have many other Third World leaders - and reputedly has also enriched himself off international loans, to the detriment of the Zairian people. In this sense, Mobutu represents the classic problem for U.S. foreign policy in the Third World: what to do about the friendly but corrupt strongman?
History of instability
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