While global attention was fixed on the fallout from U.S. intervention in Venezuela and rising tensions between Washington and Tehran, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi quietly toured three African countries in a notably low-profile visit.
Eric, Cobus, and Géraud unpack why this understated trip mattered despite attracting little media attention, and examine its timing alongside a controversial BRICS naval exercise held off the coast of South Africa.
📌 Topics covered in this episode:
- Why Africa remains China's first diplomatic stop of the year
- Wang Yi's low-key tour: Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Lesotho
- Somalia–Somaliland tensions and China's security calculus
- Ethiopia diplomacy, development messaging, and AU signaling
- Tanzania's political reassurance and legacy infrastructure ties
- Lesotho market access, tariffs, and geopolitical symbolism
- BRICS naval drills off South Africa and U.S. backlash (AGOA/G20)
- China's zero-tariff push vs. Africa's limited export gains
- Bandung 1955: why Asia–Africa solidarity faded, and what could revive it
- Indonesia parallels: Chinese-built infrastructure and nickel-sector controversies
- Public opinion shifts: pragmatic views on China and declining U.S. appeal
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