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US, Ivory Coast Sign $480M Health Cooperation Deal

Do U.S.-Africa health deals empower nations through accountability, or exploit them by stripping sovereignty and data rights?
US, Ivory Coast Sign $480M Health Cooperation Deal
Above: A nurse tends to a premature baby at the University Hospital Center in Treichville, Ivory Coast, on June 19, 2023. Image credit: Issouf Sanogo//AFP/Getty Images

The Spin

Pro-Trump narrative

The "America First" health agreements initiated by President Trump signify a decisive shift from wasteful traditional aid toward accountability and national ownership, requiring African governments to co-invest substantial domestic resources while receiving predictable U.S. support. These partnerships strengthen disease surveillance, expand treatment access for HIV/AIDS and malaria, and build sustainable health systems that reduce long-term dependence on foreign assistance. Clear benchmarks and strict timelines ensure taxpayer dollars deliver measurable results.

Anti-Trump narrative

Trump's bilateral health deals erode African sovereignty by locking countries into long-term commitments that grant the U.S. broad access to pathogen data and medical records, often without clear guarantees of equitable benefit sharing. The frameworks weaken Africa's collective leverage in global forums and risk repeating the COVID-19 pattern, where the continent was last in line for treatments derived from its own data. As U.S. companies secure lucrative contracts, African states quietly lose control over health priorities and digital infrastructure.

Metaculus Prediction


Public Figures


Establishment split

CRITICAL

PRO



© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 6.18.0

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 6.18.0