The Call Renewed
When Captain Ibrahim Traoré defied Western powers, he did more than protect Burkina Faso’s sovereignty. He reignited an age-old question burning in African hearts—from Accra to Algiers to Atlanta:
Is the United States of Africa finally possible?
Across social media, the idea roared like a bushfire. Hashtags trended. Commentators and youth leaders echoed the call. Yet between dreaming and building lies a road longer than the Nile.
Now we must ask: Is this aspiration still our North Star—or has it become a dangerous mirage?
Why the Dream Endures
Africa’s longing for unity is not mere romantic nostalgia. It is grounded in complex history and practical logic.
The scars of colonialism remain fresh. The Berlin Conference of 1884–85 drew arbitrary borders that split families, ethnic groups, and ancient trade routes. African unity offers a path to heal these fractures.
Economically, Africa’s combined GDP now stands at $2.8 trillion—a modest figure by global standards, but one that reveals vast potential if fragmented economies could consolidate.
Politically, Africa’s divided voices have too often equalled global silence. Imagine, instead, the power of a single African seat at the UN Security Council, representing 1.4 billion people and vast natural resources.
Fragmented defences have left Africa vulnerable, from Al-Shabaab in the east to Sahel militants in the west. A unified security strategy could close the gaps that enemies have long exploited.
The dream of unity is not naïve. It is necessary. But necessity does not guarantee inevitability.
The Hard Truths
Our unity’s most significant obstacles are not European or American. They are like weeds that grow at home.
Political diversity—and greed—splinters us. On one end, democracies struggle to thrive. On the other hand, monarchies, military regimes, and strongman states dominate.
Leaders like Teodoro Obiang Nguema (44 years in power) and Paul Biya (41 years) cling to their thrones like flesh-eating ticks. The Bongo family’s 56-year dynasty in Gabon has only recently been shaken. Power, once seized, rarely releases itself voluntarily.
So, who would lead a united Africa? Under what political system? These are not academic questions. They are potential battlegrounds.
The continent’s economic inequality is equally stark. South Africa’s GDP ($373 billion) towers over Chad’s ($13 billion). Per capita income varies from $6,000 to under $600. Merging such divergent economies would risk resentment and new inequalities, not the equality and unity promises.
Military strength remains a paper tiger, often cited as the solution to security challenges. The African Standby Force has been “operational” since 2015, yet Africa still relies on ad-hoc coalitions. Even ECOWAS has fractured under pressure, as seen in the divergence of the Sahel nations.
Then there are the cultural and regional divides. Have you ever wondered if North Africa is part of the continent?
These Nations often look northward to Europe and the Arab League. Language blocs—Francophone versus Anglophone—and national rivalries, particularly between Nigeria and South Africa, fracture trust like a ceramic bowl dropped on stone.
And perhaps the most dangerous fault line: the battle between authoritarianism and democracy.
Political unity under current conditions would be a marriage built on distrust
The European Union rose from the ashes of two world wars, beginning humbly with six nations trading coal and steel. Today, 27 nations share trade, movement, and economic policy while keeping their political sovereignty.
The United States formed from colonies that already shared language, culture, and a common enemy. Even then, it fought a brutal civil war to unite.
The Arab League, despite common language and religion, remains more a forum than a force—crippled by regional rivalries and power struggles.
And Africa?
From the Organization of African Unity to the African Union, we have mastered the art of issuing declarations without enforcing them.
We plant frameworks. But we forget to water them.
Where Africa Stands Now
Fifty-four countries have signed, and forty-seven have ratified. If fully implemented, the AfCFTA could boost intra-African trade and reduce foreign dependency.
But early implementation has exposed challenges: shipping delays, bureaucracy, infrastructure gaps, and the ever-present plague of border corruption.
Cultural unity is growing—but slowly.
Afrobeat, Nollywood, and the Africa Cup of Nations build bridges across our divides.
But culture alone cannot overcome the economic and political fractures that widen by the year.
Political unity may belong to another generation. But Africa can—and must—achieve what Europe has accomplished: practical unity built on trade, treaties, and shared rights.
Here is the realistic path forward:
First, regional blocs like ECOWAS, the East African Community, and SADC should be strengthened. This would deepen trade, movement, and governance standards where trust exists.
Second, economic treaties should be prioritized over political unions.
Complete the AfCFTA, remove tariffs, and harmonize trade rules. Let treaties—not centralized political power—bind us together.
Third, guarantee human rights and free movement.
Free transport, labour rights, and basic human rights conventions must prioritize prosperity for people, not power for politicians.
Fourth, confront and resist greed.
Citizens must demand term limits, accountability, and the end of dynastic politics. Unity requires leaders willing to share power, not hoard it like water in a drought.
Finally, invest in a shared identity.
Pan-African education, student exchanges, and youth programs must foster deep connections beyond borders.
Tiger’s Roar: Defiance Is Not a Strategy
Captain Traoré’s boldness has inspired millions. But defiance alone is not a strategy, and the United States of Africa is not a delusion. But it will not arrive tomorrow.
Our future lies in building:
- Treaties that bind economies.
- Free movement of people and goods.
- Shared governance standards.
- Prosperity earned through cooperation.
Flags and anthems will not unite us. Agreements and results will.
Our mission is clear:
- Build trust regionally.
- Trade continentally.
- Negotiate globally.
- Reform governance—at home and abroad.
Emotion without execution is noise. Defiance without power is suicide.Unity without strategy remains a dream deferred.
One audacious, practical step at a time.
#AfricaRising #PanAfricanism #EconomicIntegration #Geopolitics
Tiger Rifkin is the creator of The Witty Observer, a Pan-African media platform focused on geopolitics, leadership, and bold commentary on Africa’s global future.