@rednile12 · Post #11072 · 27.02.2026 г., 10:47
When Africa Said No: Zimbabwe and Zambia Reject the “America First” Health Strategy — And Why Ethiopia’s History with U.S. Aid Made It Blind By Alexander Yohannes | On Medium Early February 2026: two African nations did what once seemed unthinkable. First Zambia. Then Zimbabwe. Both rejected major U.S. health aid packages—not because they didn’t need funding, but because the cost was sovereignty. The agreements reportedly included long-term access to strategic data and biological resources under Washington’s “America First” framework. These were not quiet diplomatic gestures. They were public, strategic refusals. For Ethiopia, however, the moment raises an uncomfortable question. On December 23, 2025, Addis Ababa signed a $1.466 billion agreement under the same strategy. Why did others walk away while Ethiopia said yes? The answer lies deep in our modern history—Cold War alignment, famine-era dependency, structural adjustment, and decades of institutional reliance on U.S. aid. Over time, survival partnerships can reshape national instincts. Sovereignty begins to feel negotiable when funding gaps feel existential. Zambia and Zimbabwe drew a line. Did Ethiopia? Read the full analysis on Medium: https://medium.com/@alexanderyohannes135/when-africa-said-no-zimbabwe-and-zambia-reject-the-america-first-health-strategy-and-why-f7ffdd0b76fa #Ethiopia#Zambia#Zimbabwe#USAID#Sovereignty#HealthDiplomacy#DataSovereignty#Neocolonialism#AfricaRising