Wednesday, April 13, 2011 - 3:07 PM

Even after his arrest and forced removal from power, former Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo still has one strong ally in Washington, Senator James M. Inhofe (R-OK).
Inhofe, who has been calling for the State Department to investigate what he asserts was massive fraud in the election that eventually brought Alassane Ouattara to power, took to the Senate floor on Tuesday to decry the treatment of Gbagbo and his wife, Simone. He called on the Obama administration to reverse its support for Ouattara and he showed several gruesome photos of the violence in the commercial capital of Abidjan as evidence that U.N. and French troops fighting on Ouattara's side were "killing untold hundreds or thousands of people."
"These forces have caused countless deaths in the densely populated city of Abidjan, a city of 4 million people. I hope every President of sub-Sahara Africa is watching right now. What happened there could happen to any country in sub-Sahara Africa," Inhofe said on the floor.
Inhofe's role as the defender of Gbagbo and several other African regimes has been a long time in the making. He has known Laurent for over 10 years, he told The Cable, and he has known Simone for over 15 years, dating back to when she was a parliamentarian, before she married the future president.
"Through my years of knowing him, I know him to be a good person who's been abused and has withstood all kinds of attacks in the past," Inhofe told The Cable in a Tuesday interview.
But Gbagbo is only one of many African leaders that Inhofe has spent over a decade building relationships with. Since 1998, he's traveled to Africa almost two dozen times, almost always as part of an official U.S. delegation funded with taxpayer money.
"I know a lot of the presidents in Africa, I'm kind of the official Senate point man for Africa," Inhofe said. Inhofe has come under criticism for occasionally admitting that his trips to Africa sometimes mix official business with missionary work on behalf of his evangelical Christian faith. "I have had a mission there for many years. It is more of a Jesus thing, but I have spent a lot of time in Africa," he said at a congressional hearing in 2005. Gbagbo and his wife are both evangelical Christians. Ouattara is Muslim.
Inhofe also has longstanding ties to Douglas Coe, the founder and leader of the "Fellowship Foundation," sometimes also known as the "Fellowship" or the "Family." That group, which hosts the annual national prayer breakfast in Washington and has 33 members of Congress as members, is known for cultivating personal relationships between its members and influential world leaders who share its spiritual compass. Coe sponsored Infofe's first trip to Africa in 1998.
Inhofe said that the Fellowship has been demonized by Coe's enemies.
"When you start using the words ‘The Fellowship' or ‘The Family,' that's used by a bunch of people who hate one person who's probably the most moral person I've ever met in my life, and I find that very offensive," he said, referring to Coe.
But Inhofe admitted that Coe and the Fellowship Foundation have been instrumental in his ability to make connections with leaders in Africa. He said he doesn't see any conflict between his role as senior senator on official business and his efforts to forge spiritual bonds with world leaders.
"I've gotten to know a lot of the African presidents that way, but the same thing is true all over the world," he said. "I pray with them, I do this wherever I go."
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Gbagbo not good example for Christians
I don't understand Senator Inhofe. Mr. Gbagbo is not exactly a poster child for Christianity. If the Senator was friends with his first wife Simone, then he shouldn't have taken kindly to Mr. Gbagbo taking on a second wife who is Mulsim. Since when is polygamy acceptable to Mr. Inhofe? More on the polygamy story here: http://africanentrepreneur.blogspot.com/2011/04/senator-inhofe-glenn-beck-and-christian.html
As a Christian, I support Senator Inhofe on many social issues but I won't follow his support of a polygamist.
Umm ...
Since Gbagbo and his wife are currently under arrest and subject to prosecution in Ivory Coast, I would guess the prayers that Sen. Inhofe said with him were not that helpful. Better he should pray for the people of that nation than its former president.
If he wants to pray any more for Gbagbo, it might be best to ask that he be spared the executioner's blade.
Gbagbo may have been a ruthless, but he was a "Christian"
It is unfortunately clear why Sen. Inhofe still supports Gbagbo even though Gbagbo was a ruthless, war-crime-committing dictator...it was because Gbagbo a "Christian"...or more accurately a Christian who is evangelical, conservative and anti-Muslim. Tellingly, the candidate Gbagbo lost the election to was a Muslim...
Inhofe has a long history of pushing his theocratic, Christian-supremacy ideology at the expense of religious freedom, the rights of gays and women at home and especially abroad...Inhofe has every right to open a Church, but he doesn't belong as one of only 100 U.S. Senators who make our laws.
Of course you should be happy, I would be happy too if I had the english people paying my bills in form of equalization payments,? because you know Quebec would starve without the english paying your bills, french is so good even your beloved celion diion had to come here to make her money lol... Best thing for CDN is to separate from Quebec , end of equalization payments end of official bilingualism and jobs being tendered out to? the best person, not the one can speak french website hosting
Josh Rogin reports on national security and foreign policy from the Pentagon to Foggy Bottom, the White House to Embassy Row, for The Cable.
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