Contribution of Tom Mboya Airlift Africa to Kenya’s post-independence national security strategy
Keywords:
Tom Mboya Airlift Africa, national security strategyAbstract
The 1959-1963 East African Students Airlifts, initiated by the politician Thomas Joseph Mboya, was a significant independence strategy. Tom Mboya Airlift Africa (TMAA) targeted the human capital development of Kenya's leadership cadre at the dawn of independence. The strategic environment in Kenya, then, comprised uncertainties and complexities characterised by the Cold War era and the lack of adequate critical human capital to replace the outgoing British colonial expatriates amidst an intense desire for Africanisation. The impending depature of the imperialists, who had principally administered the colony, presented a major security threat to the nation’s political and socio-economic stability. Consequently, TMAA provided the Kenyan nation with scholarship opportunities that enabled its students to pursue advanced education in the United States of America (USA). While evaluating TMAA in the context of safeguarding Kenya's economic security interests, this paper construes national security within the 1994 Human Development Report which broadens its definition from state-centred to people-centred, hence human security. The study, therefore, aimed at evaluating the benefits that accrued from TMAA in relation to mitigating the economic and political threats to Kenya's national security on the eve of independence. The research integrated historical analysis with a case study of TMAA. Primary data was collected through interviews with TMAA beneficiaries, historians and national security experts and complemented with a review of literature. The paper argues that TMAA transcended its educational mission to become an integral element of Kenya's national security strategy, highlighting the strategic role of human capital investment in safeguarding national security interests through the development of a new generation of leaders. The findings, therefore, illuminate TMAA's role in national security strategy development, and emphasise its vital contribution to establishing a robust government infrastructure and enriching the discourse on statecraft during Kenya’s transition to independence.
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