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Trump repositions U.S. role in Africa with eye on trade and investment

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
May 17, 2025
in Business
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Trump repositions U.S. role in Africa with eye on trade and investment
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Announced in Abidjan on May 14, 2025, the strategy by the US- Africa Bureau is the most explicit shift yet in how the U.S. engages with African countries: by putting trade outcomes, private-sector investment, and bankable partnerships at the center of its foreign policy agenda.

While delivering his strategy speech, Ambassador Troy Fitrell, Senior Bureau Official, Bureau of African Affairs noted that the U.S.-Africa business partnerships remained a central priority for the Trump Administration in Africa.

“From Washington we see what everyone in this room sees – Africa’s extraordinary commercial potential. It’s the world’s largest untapped market and by 2050, will be home to a quarter of the world’s population – 2.5 billion people with a projected purchasing power of over $16 trillion. This will rival the economies of our three largest trading partners: Canada, China, and Mexico.” Fitrell noted

The move further explains Washington’s goal as it moves to redefine its influence on the continent in an era of growing Chinese and Russian economic presence.

Under the strategy, all U.S. embassies in Africa are now tasked with delivering measurable commercial results.

Senior diplomats are expected to go beyond high-level meetings and instead be judged by the number and quality of deals they help broker for American businesses on the ground.

Each mission will host a “Deal Team,” a designated group of commercial and economic officers responsible for actively identifying trade opportunities, matching U.S. firms with local projects, and accelerating transaction timelines.

Performance will be evaluated based on real investment outcomes.

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The US-Africa Bureau outlines strategy

The U.S. Africa Bureau outlined six concrete steps to execute this strategy.

Ambassador Troy Fitrell, Senior Bureau Official, Bureau of African Affairs explained that the U.S.-Africa business partnerships was top priority for the Trump Administration

These include: placing additional commercial officers in key African markets, offering blended finance tools tailored for African ventures, expanding public-private matchmaking efforts, and reforming internal reporting mechanisms to prioritize trade pipelines.

A major part of the rollout is a Commercial Diplomacy Academy, which will train U.S. officials to navigate complex business environments, support regulatory reforms, and identify scalable investment opportunities in sectors like infrastructure, clean energy, and agribusiness.

U.S. ambassadors and embassy staff will also undergo mentorship and monitoring programs to ensure a uniform approach to commercial engagement across the continent.

Though branded as a U.S.-led effort, officials insist that the strategy is grounded in local partnership. Embassies will work closely with African business chambers, diaspora investors, and regional governments to co-develop trade missions and promote transparent, sustainable deal-making.

Rather than pushing American projects for political optics, the strategy emphasizes support for commercially viable ventures, especially those that help African governments meet domestic infrastructure and development targets.

The aim is to generate “mutually beneficial partnerships,” with the U.S. playing the role of enabler, not just donor.

Analysts say this marks a significant escalation in U.S. economic diplomacy, intended to counter China’s multi-billion-dollar infrastructure lending spree and the European Union’s regulatory-heavy trade deals.

“This isn’t just about competing with China, it’s about staying relevant in Africa’s economic future,” a senior advisor familiar with the rollout told reporters in Abidjan.

With African economies projected to grow at above global averages through 2030, the U.S. sees commercial diplomacy not just as a foreign policy tool but as a necessity.

By tying diplomatic success to business success, the Trump administration is gambling that American-style capitalism can still win hearts and contracts in the world’s fastest-growing continent.

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