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Why the U.S. Secretly Hates Burkina Faso // Lee Camp
Lee Camp | Trusted Newsmaker
Africas Gold, Anti-Imperialism, and the Traoré Revolution
We all know the U.S. Empire coos more than a horny dove. Every waking moment, theyre either cooing, preparing to coo, or thinking about cooing dozens of countries. The list is so long that even people who care tend to ignore half of them. But lets talk about an important one that gets even less coverageBurkina Faso.
Theres a young revolutionary leader named Ibrahim Traoré. And someonemaybe a lot of someonesclearly has it out for him. He barely survived a foreign-orchestrated coup just two months ago. The plotters, Traoré said, were based in Ivory Coast, where Americas military presence just so happens to be expanding.
Traoré took power in a military coup in September 2022. Since then, the U.S. establishment has been quietly laying the groundwork for his removal. Recently, General Michael Langley, commander of AFRICOM, testified before the Senate. Despite the name, AFRICOM doesnt bring calm to Africa. It brings imperial muscle dressed in a press release.
Langley accused Traoré of corruption while throwing in scare words like Russia and China. Classic. Its like Americas greatest hits: slap the authoritarian label on someone trying to nationalize their countrys resources and throw in some Cold War vibes for seasoning.
Heres the real kickerTraoré has started to nationalize Burkina Fasos mining industry. Thats a major problem for the West because Burkina Fasos economy revolves around gold, which accounts for more than 80% of its exports. The country is the worlds 13th largest producer of gold.
Western elites hate this. Why? Because Traoré wants to use the gold for Burkina Faso, not to line the pockets of multinationals and the corrupt political puppets who dance for them. Even if Traoré were keeping all that gold for his country, who is the U.S. to complain? The same U.S. thats been exploiting Africa for centuries?
Senator Roger Wicker was practically weeping on the Senate floor, asking why Africas mineral wealth hasnt benefited its people. It’s as if he forgot to read a single history book. Spoiler alert: The West stole everything. For hundreds of years.
Traoré isnt playing along. He expelled the French ambassador and booted French troops from the country. Hes limiting Western influence and calling it what it isneocolonialism. Hes not wrong. In response, President Macron accused Burkina Faso of ingratitude. Imagine that: the abuser demanding thanks from the abused.
Fourteen African nations still use the CFA franc, a currency set at a fixed rate by France. That alone is a choke chain around the economies of former colonies. Currency is control. It’s no different than the petrodollarit forces compliance, often at the expense of national interest.
Now Traoré says he wants out of the CFA franc and is planning a new national currency. Historically, thats when Western bombs start falling. Libya, Iraq, Syrialeaders who ditch Western currency dont usually last long.
Hes also pushing for regional unity. Along with Mali and Niger, Traoré established the Alliance of Sahel States. Its a bold step toward a pan-African anti-imperialist union. And that scares the hell out of Western powers.
Whats next? Weve seen this playbook before. Soon well probably hear that Traoré used chemical weapons on his own people. Or that hes committing mass atrocities. The goal? Demonize, destabilize, and destroy.
Traoré has asked a simple but powerful question: Why is resource-rich Africa the poorest region in the world? His answer? Because African leaders act like puppets of imperialists. And hes refusing to be one.
Of course, many African leaders have made similar promisesonly to be couped, assassinated, or blackmailed by the very powers they defied. But times are changing. Social media, independent media, and a growing awareness among the youth make coups harder to hide and harder to sell.
As U.S. power wanes, its getting sloppier. But the empire still knows how to play dirty. One day youre nationalizing gold, the next day you’re suicided with a paper T-shirt. The message is clear: dont mess with Western money.
Still, Traoré is inspiring others. And if more African leaders follow suit, there may finally be a chance for the continent to chart its own course, free from foreign manipulation.
The Bottom Line? Traorés defiance threatens centuries of Western theft. Thats why the U.S. hates Burkina Fasoand why its more important than ever to pay attention to what comes next.
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