The Pak Banker

WH state dinner could help Biden’s election chances

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This week’s US-Kenya summit was about many things. It was about strengthen­ing a burgeoning trade relationsh­ip in multiple areas, including technology, energy and artificial intelligen­ce.

It also afforded the opportunit­y to highlight a new role for Nairobi as a military partner for Washington.

But high on the list, hardly a surprise in a presidenti­al election year, is that the visit also had much to do with US politics. President William Ruto and his wife, first lady Rachel Ruto, were treated with all the pomp and circumstan­ce befitting their stature on the global stage, as cameras rolled in the United States and the images were beamed around the world.

And as President Joe Biden seeks to strengthen ties with Black voters to shore up his re-election bid, it did not hurt one bit to welcome the African leader and his wife for an official state visit to the White House.

A glittering banquet late Thursday was lent a bit of extra shine by the presence of former

President Barack Obama, years out of office but still an immensely popular figure with Black voters, whose father was Kenyan.

Africa matters to many Black Americans, a continent most will never have visited, but to which they have ancestral and emotional ties. Scenes of Biden and Ruto shaking hands and smiling with their wives at their sides are bound to resonate with Black voters, a base Biden desperatel­y needs to turn out in force to support him at the ballot box in November.

There were formal greetings with national anthems and military salutes, as well as a press conference at the White House.

The elegant state dinner befitting a top global ally was the icing on the cake. All of that can only help Biden’s standing with people in the east African country and Africa as a whole, as well as bolstering his ratings with Black Americans. Ruto is only the sixth head of state to enjoy a state visit with Biden, and the high-profile visit sent a strong message about Kenya’s importance to the United States at home and abroad.

But there is even more at stake

Joyce. M. Davis for American interests than photoops to boost popularity polls.

America needs Kenya, and vice versa. First, the US-Kenya alliance is more than 60 years old. It has stood the test of time, including the violent election of 2007 when an estimated 1,200 Kenyans died.

At that time, Ruto and the United States were on opposite sides. The Internatio­nal Criminal Court charged Ruto with murder, forced deportatio­n and persecutio­n.

The United States supported the investigat­ion, standing with those charging Ruto. The case against the future Kenyan leader, and allegation­s against the sitting President Uhuru Kenyatta, collapsed after a 13-year investigat­ion. Both men, who at the time were political adversarie­s, settled their difference­s, and Ruto ran as Kenyatta’s deputy in the 2013 presidenti­al elections.

Kenyans elected Ruto as president in 2022. Today, at a time of turmoil and instabilit­y in various parts of the African continent, Kenya is an oasis of relative calm and stability. In fact, Ruto has aptly described Kenya as the “anchor” of East and Central Africa.

Kenya is now one of America’s strongest and most dependable allies on the African continent. And America needs stable African allies as China and Russia are both on the hunt for the continent’s vital minerals and other natural resources. Both nations have deepening ties with Africa.

China has been funding major infrastruc­ture projects across the continent, while Russia is also making fresh inroads by capitalizi­ng on growing anti-Western sentiment in some parts of the continent to profit from sales of weapons and natural resources.

Against that backdrop, Ruto’s state visit is a welcome event for both Nairobi and Washington. To give US relations with Africa the kind of boost that is really needed, however, Biden should have visited the continent, as he promised to do long ago. And he should have fulfilled his promise to prioritize relations with Africa far sooner than the final year of his first term as president.

It would have gone a long way to slowing the progress America’s adversarie­s are making politicall­y and economical­ly. It is one thing to send first lady Jill Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, both of whom traveled to Africa last year, to wave the flag for America. But it is another matter entirely for an American president to set foot onto African soil in person.

"To give US relations with Africa the kind of boost that is really needed, however, Biden should have visited the continent, as he promised to do long ago. And he should have fulfilled his promise to prioritize relations with Africa far sooner than the final year of his first term as president."

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