United States Vice President JD Vance has cancelled his planned visit to Kenya, marking an unexpected diplomatic shift barely weeks before his scheduled arrival in Nairobi.
Through a statement released by the Office of the Prime Cabinet Secretary and Ministry of Foreign and Diaspora Affairs on Monday afternoon, the US government informed Kenya that the Vice President’s visit, which was to take place later this month, would no longer happen.
The cancellation, the statement explained, comes after US President Donald Trump’s directive barring American officials from attending the forthcoming G20 Summit in Johannesburg, South Africa, where Mr Vance had been scheduled to lead the US delegation before travelling to Nairobi.
“The Government of the Republic of Kenya, through the office of Musalia Mudavadi, the Prime Cabinet Secretary and Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs, has been informed by the Government of the United States of America of the cancellation of the planned visit to Kenya by the Vice President, His Excellency JD Vance, which was scheduled to take place later this month,” the statement read in part.
The directive by President Trump has drawn global attention, highlighting the administration’s shifting approach to multilateral diplomacy.
Despite the twist coming with the high-profile cancellation, Nairobi struck a calm and measured tone, reaffirming the strength of its longstanding partnership with Washington, DC.
Mr Vance’s visit was expected to reaffirm Washington’s growing engagement with East Africa, coming at a time when Kenya has positioned itself as a regional anchor for stability, innovation, and trade.
The Vice President was to meet President William Ruto and senior government officials for high-level talks on investment, security, and trade, particularly under the US- Kenya Strategic Trade and Investment Partnership, a framework designed to deepen commercial ties beyond the African Growth and Opportunity Act.
He was also expected to discuss cooperation in counter-terrorism, clean energy, education, and digital transformation, sectors where the two countries have long collaborated.
Mr Mudavadi, who also heads Kenya’s foreign affairs docket, reaffirmed Kenya’s confidence in its enduring partnership with the United States despite the diplomatic reshuffle.
“Kenya and the United States enjoy a deep and historic relationship anchored on mutual respect, shared democratic values, and common interests,” PCS Mudavadi said before adding, “While scheduling changes sometimes occur in diplomacy, our cooperation with the United States continues robustly across all sectors, from trade and security to education and technology.”
He further said that Kenya remains focused on advancing strategic engagements that benefit both nations and the broader region.
“Our commitment to constructive dialogue and international collaboration is unwavering. Kenya will continue to be a reliable partner in promoting peace, prosperity, and shared growth,” he stated.
Mr Mudavadi’s remarks came as part of a broader effort to underscore Kenya’s steady foreign policy approach amid shifting global alignments. His ministry emphasised that the cancellation would not disrupt ongoing bilateral initiatives and that both governments were exploring new dates for high-level engagements.
The Johannesburg summit was expected to centre discussions on global economic resilience, sustainable development, and Africa’s growing role in shaping world markets.
The absence of a US delegation, to many, underscores the Trump administration’s scepticism toward multilateral institutions and its preference for bilateral diplomacy aligned with its “America First” doctrine.
Still, both Nairobi and Washington have reiterated that working-level engagements will continue uninterrupted. Kenya and the United States have enjoyed over six decades of cooperation spanning security, health, education, and governance.
US remains one of Kenya’s largest trading partners and a key supporter of its counter-terrorism operations in the Horn of Africa, while thousands of Kenyans live and work in the United States, contributing to strong diaspora linkages.