I know enough to know that the return on investment in the US military is orders of magnitudes worse than throwing money randomly in Africa.
So in other words. No. You don't know anybody directly working with the issues personally, nor have you been exposed to it. I have. Close friends, organizations with whom my children have lived and worked . I recommend you do so. You might learn why the Peace Corp kids spent 8 hours a day holed up at the AIDs Orphanage and School that a US church group had established in cooperation with the village elders (and still got death threats for teaching village families to start bakeries and raise chickens).
It will change your life and your outlook.
ROI is an impossible term w.r.t. military expenditures, because you're trying to estimate costs of "the path not take" which are unknown and/or the costs of "black swan" events which are unpredictable, rare, and unknown, but potentially large. (better US military involvement might have prevented the Rwandan genocide... but that's the path not taken and a black swan to boot)
I'll give an example of the depth and breadth of the problem. There places in Africa where, when you have to bribe the police officers to avoid bogus arrest or traffic citation and don't have the correct denomination of cash.... they will make change. When the corruption is that normalized and dispersed, any addition of large scale cash infusion just gives chum to the sharks.
I am WEC (WilEy Coyote) as the core truths of engineering is "too clever is stupid" and "there are always unanticipated consequences".
At the same time, there is the "passion of pursuit" that overwhelms us all, fuels our optimism, and gets us to try just one-more-time (OMT).
"Time is money and money can't buy you love and I love your outfit" - T.H.U.N.D.E.R. #1