Africa
Documents & Texts from America.gov
27 October 2009
U.S. Mission to African Union Shows Commitment
to Africa
Interview with U.S. Ambassador Michael Battle
By Charles W. Corey
Staff Writer
Washington — The United States was the first major non-African country
to appoint a full-time ambassador to the African Union (AU), and that shows
the importance the people of the United States attach to their partnership
with the people of Africa, says the U.S. ambassador to the African Union, Michael
Battle.
In an October 26 interview with America.gov, Battle said the United
States Mission to the African Union is “very significant” for two
reasons. First, it demonstrates that the U.S. government sees the African Union
as being critically important to the development of its policy toward the African
continent.
Second, Battle said, President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton see Africa “as having the capacity to function with a single
voice on continentwide issues, like the European Union acts as a single voice
on issues that affect Europe.”
Once the AU gets beyond dealing with the immediate peace and security concerns
of Somalia and Sudan, Battle said, it will be free to focus on economic integration,
health and the social issues that affect the continent.
“So much of the AU’s time is spent on peace and security because
of crises the continent is facing. I am looking forward to the day when the
continent would not be catastrophe- and crisis-oriented but would be able to
focus long-term on its development, role and interaction with the world community,” he
said.
Battle said the African Union and the U.S. mission there are focused on promoting
regional peace and security throughout the continent, especially in hot spots
such as Guinea, where Presidential Guard troops are reported to have opened
fire and killed more than 150 pro-democracy demonstrators and injured more
than 1,200. The military also stands accused of carrying out brutal rapes and
sexual assaults on women demonstrators and bystanders. (See “Guinea
Violence a ‘Vile Violation’ of Human Rights, Clinton Says.”)
[The United States has urged Captain Dadis Camara and the ruling junta to
recognize that they cannot remain in power and must allow the people of Guinea
to choose their own rulers. It has also urged the junta to stand by its promise
to hold free, fair, timely and transparent elections that will ensure a return
to stability, economic progress and democratic rule.]
Battle said he has coordinated closely with the U.S. ambassador in Guinea
to make the U.S. voice known at the AU. He added, however, that the United
States was pleased that the African Union and the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) both had “very strongly” called for free,
fair and democratic elections to be held in Guinea.
On October 26 at the United Nations, the U.S. permanent representative to
the United Nations, Ambassador Susan Rice, commended the African Union and
efforts of African nations for their peacekeeping roles throughout the continent.
(See “Ambassador
Rice on U.S. Support for African Union Peacekeeping.”)
The African Union is also important to the United States, Battle said, because
the continent of Africa is confronting so many of the major issues that the
world will be facing in the future. One such issue, he said, is food security.
That issue is more important in Africa than any other place on the globe because
there has been a record of food deprivation in Africa and also because there
is an abundance of land that can and should be cultivated.
“We have to strengthen the African Union’s capacity through agricultural
technology to cultivate land, like other parts of the world,” he said. “Our
objective is to try to encourage the kind of agricultural technology that will
cultivate lands on the continent that will empower Africa not only to feed
itself but to be able to export food to other parts of the world.”
The U.S. Mission to the African Union, Battle said, is “working collaboratively” to
help Africa deal with that problem. Other issues of major concern to Africa
and the world include: energy and oil; climate change; and the integration
of sound economic policies throughout the African continent, he added.
“At this point there are five different regions on the continent and
each one has its own policies. What the African Union is strongly encouraging
is to develop a set of economic policies that can be used across the continent
to facilitate greater trade and commodity exchange throughout the continent.”
That is important, Battle said, “because you can go from one African
nation to the next and end up paying three or four different levels of tariffs … simply
to trade commodities. A streamlined, integrated economic approach will work
much better.”
The African Union and the U.S. mission there are also focusing on health issues
such as HIV/AIDS, malaria and other health issues that often result from poverty
and deprivation, he said.
Battle, who was appointed by President Obama, said he is now the third U.S.
ambassador to the African Union and heads a diverse mission concerned with
a broad array of issues including development, conflict resolution, democracy
and electoral assistance, the U.S. Africa Command (Africom) and the African
Union Mission to Somalia (Amisom).
Before becoming ambassador, Battle was the president of a consortium of six
theological seminaries in Atlanta and a former vice chairman of the American
Committee on Africa, also known as African Action.
A longtime admirer of President Obama and Secretary Clinton, Battle said, “Being
the U.S. ambassador to the African Union gives me an opportunity to work with
and for persons who have demonstrated absolute excellence and an absolute commitment
to the people of Africa.”
|