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Journal Article

Citation

Leshoele M. Afr. Asian Stud. 2021; 20(1-2): 77-99.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Brill Academic Publishers)

DOI

10.1163/15692108-12341484

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The United States of America invests heavily on their military capability and it is estimated that it spends, alone, approximately 40 per cent of what the whole world spends on military. Four of the other super powers that make up the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council (UN-SC) also spend a significant percentage of their national budgets on military. Chinweizu has for a long time argued that Africa needs a well-resourced African Standby Force (or the Black Africa League) that will protect the interests of the continent so as to prevent the history of Africans enslavement and colonialism repeating itself. This article seeks to analyse Africa's investment on its military defense capability vis-à-vis the five permanent members of the UN-SC and North Korea, by critiquing two case studies of two of the continent's economic giants - South Africa and Egypt. Realist and Sankofa perspectives are used as the prisms through which the article was researched.

In line with Chinweizu's observation, the article argues that without serious political will and dedication to building Africa's nuclear weapons capability and ensuring that Africa is economically self-reliant, diplomatic engagements with the rest of the world as (un)equal partners will remain a pipe dream and the looting of Africa's mineral wealth will continue unabated. It is clear that given the reality of the African Holocust if African countries fail to collectively defend themselves, Africa will continue to be a political football for the rest of the world.


Language: en

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