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====Foreign policy==== [[File:Roy Innis, Jomo Kenyatta, Doris Funnye Innis in Kenya Circa 1970.jpg|thumb|right|Kenyatta meets an American delegation from the [[Congress of Racial Equality]], including [[Roy Innis]].]] In part due to his advanced years, Kenyatta rarely traveled outside of Eastern Africa.{{sfn|Arnold|1974|p=167}} Under Kenyatta, Kenya was largely uninvolved in the affairs of other states, including those in the [[East African Community]].{{sfn|Murray-Brown|1974|p=320}} Despite his reservations about any immediate East African Federation, in June 1967 Kenyatta signed the Treaty for East African Co-operation.{{sfn|Arnold|1974|p=175}} In December he attended a meeting with Tanzanian and Ugandan representatives to form the East African Economic Community, reflecting Kenyatta's cautious approach toward regional integration.{{sfn|Arnold|1974|p=175}} He also took on a mediating role during the [[Congo Crisis]], heading the [[Organisation of African Unity]]'s Conciliation Commission on the Congo.{{sfn|Arnold|1974|p=178}} Facing the pressures of the [[Cold War]],{{sfn|Arnold|1974|p=188}} Kenyatta officially pursued a policy of "positive non-alignment".{{sfn|Cullen|2016|p=515}} In reality, his foreign policy was pro-Western and in particular pro-British.{{sfnm|1a1=Cullen|1y=2016|1p=515|2a1=Maloba|2y=2017|2p=96}} Kenya became a member of the [[Commonwealth of Nations]],{{sfn|Murray-Brown|1974|p=313}} using this as a vehicle to put pressure on the white-minority [[apartheid]] regimes in South Africa and Rhodesia.{{sfn|Arnold|1974|pp=167–168}} Britain remained one of Kenya's foremost sources of foreign trade; British aid to Kenya was among the highest in Africa.{{sfn|Cullen|2016|p=515}} In 1964, Kenya and the UK signed a Memorandum of Understanding, one of only two military alliances Kenyatta's government made;{{sfn|Cullen|2016|p=515}} the British [[Special Air Service]] trained Kenyatta's own bodyguards.{{sfn|Maloba|2017|p=54}} Commentators argued that Britain's relationship with Kenyatta's Kenya was a [[Neo-colonialism|neo-colonial]] one, with the British having exchanged their position of political power for one of influence.{{sfn|Cullen|2016|p=514}} The historian Poppy Cullen nevertheless noted that there was no "dictatorial neo-colonial control" in Kenyatta's Kenya.{{sfn|Cullen|2016|p=515}} [[File:Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F021917-0014, Kenia, Staatsbesuch Bundespräsident Lübke.jpg|thumb|left|Jomo Kenyatta and his son meet the [[President of Germany|President of West Germany]] [[Heinrich Lübke]] in 1966.]] Although many white Kenyans accepted Kenyatta's rule, he remained opposed by white [[far right politics|far-right]] activists; while in London at the [[1964 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference|July 1964 Commonwealth Conference]], he was assaulted by [[Martin Webster]], a British [[Neo-Nazism|neo-Nazi]], at the [[London Hilton Hotel]].{{sfn|Arnold|1974|p=296}} Kenyatta's relationship with the United States was also warm; the [[United States Agency for International Development]] played a key role in helping respond to a maize shortage in [[Kamba people|Kambaland]] in 1965.{{sfn|Maloba|2017|pp=63–65}} Kenyatta also maintained a warm relationship with Israel, including when other East African nations endorsed Arab hostility to the state;{{sfn|Naim|2005|pp=79–80}} he for instance permitted Israeli jets to refuel in Kenya on their way back from the [[Entebbe raid]].{{sfnm|1a1=Naim|1y=2005|1pp=79–80|2a1=Maloba|2y=2017|2pp=190–193}} In turn, in 1976 the Israelis warned of a plot by the [[Palestinian Liberation Army]] to assassinate him, a threat he took seriously.{{sfn|Maloba|2017|pp=172–173}} Kenyatta and his government were anti-communist,{{sfnm|1a1=Arnold|1y=1974|1p=167|2a1=Assensoh|2y=1998|2p=147}} and in June 1965 he warned that "it is naive to think that there is no danger of imperialism from the East. In world power politics the East has as much designs upon us as the West and would like to serve their own interests. That is why we reject Communism."{{sfnm|1a1=Savage|1y=1970|1p=527|2a1=Maloba|2y=2017|2p=76}} His governance was often criticised by communists and other leftists, some of whom accused him of being a fascist.{{sfn|Arnold|1974|p=177}} When Chinese Communist official [[Zhou Enlai]] visited Dar es Salaam, his statement that "Africa is ripe for revolution" was clearly aimed largely at Kenya.{{sfn|Arnold|1974|p=177}} In 1964, Kenyatta impounded a secret shipment of Chinese armaments that passed through Kenyan territory on its way to Uganda. Obote personally visited Kenyatta to apologise.{{sfnm|1a1=Arnold|1y=1974|1p=177|2a1=Maloba|2y=2017|2pp=59–60}} In June 1967, Kenyatta declared the Chinese Chargé d'Affairs ''persona non grata'' in Kenya and recalled the Kenyan ambassador from [[Peking]].{{sfn|Arnold|1974|p=177}} Relations with the Soviet Union were also strained; Kenyatta shut down the Lumumba Institute—an educational organisation named after the Congolese independence leader [[Patrice Lumumba]]—on the basis that it was a front for Soviet influence in Kenya.{{sfnm|1a1=Arnold|1y=1974|1p=160|2a1=Maloba|2y=2017|2pp=93–94}}
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