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Kenya: Good Friends Are Hard to Find
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13700 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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8 / 1988 |
2,628 Words |
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William Pascoe William Pascoe, a former consultant to the U.S. Department of
State, currently serves as the Third World affairs policy
analyst for the Heritage Foundation, a Washington, D.C.-based
public policy research organization. |
To look at U.S. policy toward Africa today, one might think that Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis had already won the November presidential election and had emplaced his own people and policies. In some measure, this is due to the relatively low priority accorded to Africa in any administration and to the natural continuity in policies that therefore flows from administration to administration; but it is also a direct result of the stepped-up offensive against longtime U.S. friends and allies in Africa, led by congressional and media liberals. Emboldened by their successes in mandating wide-ranging economic and diplomatic sanctions against South Africa over the president's veto two years ago, they have moved in for the kill, using the banner of "human rights abuses" to seek a cutoff of U.S. assistance to key U.S. allies in Africa.
One such ally under attack is Kenya, the former British colony on the east coast of Africa. Kenya's 25-year commitment to a free market economy (and the relative prosperity that has come to Kenya with it, in the midst of economic turmoil all throughout Africa) and geopolitical alliance with the West have made it a target of the international Left for decades.
Most recently, the attacks on Kenya have been threefold: External military aggression by the Libyan-backed Ugandan regime; internal subversion by a dissident group known as Mwakenya; and political attacks by self-styled human rights monitors such as Amnesty International.
Simultaneously, Kenya faces clouds on its economic horizon. The Kenyan economy, which has performed sluggishly over the past few years, will be hard pressed to grow enough to provide
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