United States–Ghana Defense Cooperation Under Ghana’s Fourth Republic: Its Implications on National Security.
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University of Ghana
Abstract
This thesis critically examines the defense cooperation relationship between the United States and
Ghana, with particular focus on the 2018 Ghana-U.S. Defense Cooperation Agreement (DCA) and
its implications for Ghana's national security and sovereignty within the Fourth Republic.
Employing Critical Security Studies complemented by realist perspectives, this research
interrogates the dynamics, motivations, and consequences of this bilateral security partnership. It
situates the agreement within broader debates about asymmetric power relations, state autonomy,
and contemporary security governance in West Africa, addressing a significant gap in scholarship
regarding how defense agreements between major powers and smaller states affect sovereignty,
security autonomy, and national interests.
The U.S.-Ghana relationship has grown significantly, encompassing arms sales, intelligence
sharing, joint military exercises, and training. Ghana's strategic importance in U.S. efforts to
counterbalance rising powers like Russia and China, combined with regional counter-terrorism
imperatives, has intensified these ties. However, the 2018 DCA has sparked considerable
controversy, raising critical questions about balancing security enhancement with sovereignty
preservation. The study adopts a qualitative methodology, drawing on in-depth interviews with
military personnel, defense analysts, policymakers, and academics, alongside critical analysis of
the DCA text and related policy documents. This approach enables comprehensive examination of
the agreement's impacts on sovereignty, strategic benefits in combating terrorism, and challenges
posed by information sensitivity and territorial access concerns. The findings reveal that the DCA embodies complex power asymmetries that challenge traditional
notions of state sovereignty and security autonomy. The agreement erodes Ghana's sovereignty
across multiple interconnected dimensions. The judicial incapacitation renders Ghanaian courts
powerless to address violations by U.S. military personnel, establishing a parallel legal system that
undermines Westphalian sovereignty. Diplomatic immunity granted to U.S. personnel blurs
boundaries between legitimate privileges and military operations, normalizing exceptional
treatment aligned with securitization concepts.
The DCA profoundly impacts territorial sovereignty. The requirement that Ghana's President seek
permission to enter U.S.-designated areas within national borders represents a striking reversal of
sovereignty principles. These areas function as "sovereignty enclaves" extraterritorial zones where
Ghanaian law and oversight are suspended, effectively ceding national territory to foreign control.
Deliberate ambiguities in clauses regarding entry procedures, operational scope, and jurisdictional
boundaries provide interpretive flexibility favoring the United States while limiting Ghana's
oversight capacity.
Information asymmetry created by the DCA grants the United States access to Ghana's defense
infrastructure, communications networks, radio spectrum, and strategic vulnerabilities, rendering
Ghana transparent to U.S. intelligence while limiting its understanding of U.S. activities
domestically. From a Critical Security Studies perspective, this constitutes epistemic violence,
systematically undermining Ghana's ability to know and secure itself. U.S. ability to utilize and
potentially monitor Ghana's communications infrastructure transforms the agreement into a
surveillance mechanism. Paradoxically, while designed to enhance Ghana's security through capacity building and
intelligence sharing, the DCA generates significant vulnerabilities. U.S. forces' presence may
transform Ghana into a target for anti-American actors, including terrorist organizations, shifting
its role from neutral regional player to potential battleground for conflicts in which it has no direct
stake. Ghana's inability to monitor armaments and materials brought by U.S. forces creates security
blind spots, representing fundamental abdication of border control. COVID-19 pandemic
exemptions allowing untested U.S. personnel entry further illustrate how permissive terms
introduce unforeseen risks.
These findings highlight profound power asymmetries embedded in the DCA through provisions
like legal immunities, unrestricted territorial access, and customs waivers. Such arrangements
reflect structural violence—systemic frameworks privileging powerful states while constraining
weaker ones. The DCA represents not merely a technical security arrangement but a
reconfiguration of sovereignty, authority, and autonomy fundamentally altering Ghana's position
as an independent state.
The study contributes to scholarly debates about contemporary sovereignty, demonstrating how it
operates as a continuum incrementally eroded through legal, spatial, epistemological, and
discursive mechanisms. Critical Security Studies provides essential tools for understanding how
defense cooperation can serve hegemonic interests while constraining partner state autonomy. For
Ghana and similar states, the research underscores the need to balance security benefits against
risks of dependency and vulnerability, offering pathways for Global South states to pursue
beneficial defense cooperation while preserving sovereignty, autonomy, and national dignity in an
increasingly complex international security environment.
Description
PhD. International Affairs
