China could fill the gap 3 ways as the West exits Africa region

With France fast losing its influence in west Africa’s Sahel region and an unpredictable US president in power, will China fill the vacuum?
The Sahel region includes Nigeria, one of the continent’s largest economies, and nine other countries: Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, The Gambia, Guinea, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Senegal.
Niger also ended an agreement to keep about 1,000 US troops involved in a counter-terrorism mission. Niger’s military government described the US as having a “condescending attitude.”
While it has been rightly argued that the presence of the Western powers did not resolve the security challenges of the region, their withdrawal creates a vacuum.
- expansion of investments in critical minerals;
- resolution of the ECOWAS crisis (triggered when Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali decided to exit the Economic Community of West African States); and
- increased arms sales.
This is especially so as China is not new to the Sahel region. For instance, China is constructing a US$32 million headquarters for ECOWAS in Abuja, Nigeria.
Let’s look at these one by one.
First, China could expand its influence – and the next four years hold enormous opportunities in this regard.
US president Donald Trump’s likely transactional and unpredictable approach to international relations may force African countries to look to China. For instance, they may need China to help fill the void created by the US decision to dismantle USAID and freeze international development aid.