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The rumour of
the U. S. Military base in Ghana
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Ghanadot
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong argues that the rumour of
Washington setting up military base in Ghana is part of
the broader bases Washington is building in Africa for
its energy security in a heated scramble for Africa’s
growing oil finds
Despite Ghanaian Defence Ministry officials debunking
the claim that Washington is not building military base
in Ghana, some Ghanaians, with their high conspiracy
theory syndrome, belief that there is a US military base
and that the US has built a secret tunnel from the new
US Embassy complex to the Kotoka International Airport
in Accra. Much of the credence of the rumour is based on
the increasing US military activities in Africa
following the September 11, 2001 terrorists’ attacks
against the US to contain international terrorism. But
the increasing US military activities in Africa go
beyond narrow military concerns; it has a broader
geopolitics agenda, which is its energy security.
From newly oil rich Mauritania down to the Gambia to Sao
Tome and Principe to Equatorial Guinea to South Africa,
that’s effectively the entire Gulf of Guinea to the
south West African coast to some of the equatorial
African states such as Uganda, oil is being discovered
day in and day out. Liberia’s ex-president Charles
Taylor spoke of his country’s oil potential before
vacating his presidency in 2003. This is against the
background of oil dwindling world-wide.
While Ghanaians may not have
physical proof of their country having a US military
base, their rumour is fed by the ongoing climate in
Africa, where the US is building military bases in some
African states to secure its energy supplies. According
to the BBC, the US is currently building a naval base in
Sao Tome and Principe to protect its oil interests. Sao
Tome and Principe also holds a strategic position in the
oil rich Gulf of Guinea from which Washington could
monitor the movement of oil tankers and guard oil
platforms.
The growing US military
bases in Africa come against the background of the fact
that since the 1940s, according to Michael Renner,
director Washington-based Global Security Project at the
Worldwatch Institute, the US has “gone to great length
to maintain its dominance over world oil.” Effectively,
pretty much of US military bases in the world are
strategically aimed at protecting oil and gas supplies
or as Renner explains, aimed at “influencing the routing
of oil export pipelines, and patrolling the sea-lanes
through which much of the world’s oil is shipped.”
Ghanaians wild-eyed believe of a US military in their
country may not be far-fetched. According to the
Nigerian Prof. Toyin Falola, Professor of history at the
University of Texas in Austin, USA, today, the United
States has over 175 military bases in Africa, and it
imports more oil from Africa than from Saudi Arabia.
Whether the US has secret military base in Ghana or not,
advancing technology, the increasing volatility of the
Middle East region, and the rising price of Middle
Eastern crude oil, increased attention has been given to
expanding oil exploration and production in equatorial
African states.
Oil was discovered in the
mid-1950s in Nigeria and Gabon, and today, multinational
oil firms are investing more than a US$1 billion dollars
annually in sub-Saharan Africa’s oil industry. Emerging
economies—China and India—are also scrambling to gain
access to Africa’s crude oil to fuel their growing
economies. This has made sub-Sahara the scene of a
rivalry between major powers, especially the two major
global oil consumers – the United States and China.
Despite China, too, increasingly looking to sub-Sahara
Africa for its energy security, the United States
remains the most voracious user of oil in the world.
Yet so far, this scramble for Africa’s oil has done
little to promote development for the majority of
Africans in the regions where oil is produced. Perhaps
nowhere is the gap between oil wealth and development
more evident than in Equatorial Guinea, where, despite a
booming oil business producing growing revenues, this
new wealth has generally not been used for the larger
well-being of citizens. Equatorial Guinea ranks at the
bottom of the United Nations Human Development Index (UNHDI,
2005) rankings world-wide. In Canada, the Alberta oil
industry has contributed enormously to the province’s
overall development. Yet why do African states
consistently fail to use oil for development. Bases or
no bases, Ghanaians should project how they will exploit
Africa’s emerging new geopolitics of energy for their
development process.
Kofi
Akosah-Sarpong,
April 27, 2007
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