Keypoints:
- Botswana says no US military base exists on its soil
- Ramaphosa backs Botswana’s sovereignty assurances
- Debate reflects wider African tensions over foreign military presence
BOTSWANA has forcefully rejected claims that it hosts a United States military base, with President Duma Boko and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa using a joint appearance during Ramaphosa’s official visit to Gaborone last week to publicly dismiss the allegations and reaffirm bilateral trust.
The remarks come amid growing scrutiny of foreign military partnerships across Africa, where governments are increasingly balancing security cooperation with concerns over sovereignty, stability and renewed geopolitical competition in Africa. The debate has intensified following a series of military realignments across the Sahel and renewed discussions over western security involvement on the continent.
The issue centres on online speculation surrounding Botswana’s Thebephatshwa Air Base, a Botswana Defence Force facility that has repeatedly been referenced in unverified claims about alleged American military operations. Botswana’s government has consistently denied those allegations, insisting the installation remains fully under national control.
Speaking during the visit, Boko rejected what he described as rumours and misinformation, arguing that no official communication had ever alleged the existence of a US military base in the country. Botswana authorities have repeatedly denied the allegations in public statements. Boko said claims about a US base were rooted either in ‘honest but mistaken beliefs’ or ‘downright malice’, adding: ‘There is no such military base of the United States in Botswana. There has never been and there won’t be.’
He also said Botswana’s foreign policy was rooted in how the country ‘relates with its neighbours, no less the Republic of South Africa’.
Ramaphosa moves to calm tensions
Ramaphosa also sought to defuse the issue, stressing that Botswana would never permit its territory to be used against neighbouring states, particularly South Africa.
The South African leader framed relations between the two countries as historically deep and strategically important, emphasising mutual respect for sovereignty and cooperation.
His intervention mattered politically because allegations surrounding foreign military presence in southern Africa have increasingly become entangled with broader debates about external influence, security partnerships and African autonomy.
Botswana’s government has warned that misinformation surrounding military matters risks damaging trust between neighbouring countries. Boko warned against rumours ‘maliciously peddled by people who want to stir up confusion and hostility between the two countries’.
The issue also touches on wider conversations around integration within southern Africa. Recent SADC efforts have focused not only on security coordination but also economic connectivity, including moves to ease cross-border movement and trade barriers. Africa Briefing recently reported on how six southern African states slashed roaming charges by 98 percent as part of broader integration efforts.
Foreign military presence remains sensitive issue
The controversy reflects a wider continental debate over foreign military footprints in Africa.
Across the Sahel, governments in countries such as Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have expelled or reduced western military deployments in recent years, presenting those decisions as efforts to reclaim sovereignty and reduce dependence on foreign powers. Africa Briefing previously examined how Burkina Faso’s Ibrahim Traore criticised France’s military posture in Africa amid growing tensions over foreign deployments.
At the same time, other African states continue to maintain close military partnerships with the United States and European allies through training programmes, intelligence cooperation and logistical agreements aimed at counterterrorism and security operations. In East Africa, countries such as Kenya have strengthened defence cooperation with Washington, while West African governments including Nigeria have also pursued security partnerships involving American surveillance and drone operations. Africa Briefing recently reported that Nigeria approved US drone deployment for security operations as part of efforts to tackle insecurity.
Botswana has traditionally pursued a more cautious and balanced foreign policy approach, combining defence cooperation with western partners while maintaining a strong emphasis on sovereignty and diplomacy.
The controversy highlights how politically sensitive questions of foreign military access have become across Africa, particularly as governments seek to balance immediate security needs with long-term concerns about dependency and external influence.
Sovereignty and trust at the centre
What distinguished Boko’s intervention was not only the denial itself, but the broader message underpinning it.
Rather than framing Botswana’s position as anti-American, the president presented it as consistent with the country’s longstanding foreign policy principles of solidarity, non-aggression and sovereign decision-making.
That stance appears designed to reassure neighbours within the Southern African Development Community (SADC) while also protecting Botswana from becoming drawn into geopolitical rivalries amid renewed global competition for influence in Africa.
For now, Gaborone’s position remains unambiguous: there is no US military base in Botswana, and the government wants the conversation to move away from speculation and back towards cooperation, trade integration and shared development priorities.
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