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With Mugabe, adjusting your diplomatic volume has no effect
Tim Cohen,
Business Day (SA)
July
27, 2005
http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/article.aspx?ID=BD4A74545
WHAT should
SA do about Zimbabwe? It is pretty well obvious that this is the
most intractable issue of regional politics today.
The first thing
to acknowledge is that the issue is not for SA to "deal"
with, and never was.
However much
we are appalled at the bulldozing of churches and mosques in the
name of urban rectification, there are obvious limits to the role
that the South African government can play.
Having a tactical
nature, and perhaps with an eye to local politics, President Thabo
Mbeki has played a calculated game, trying to simply ride out the
issue. Taking a critical stance on mass land reform would have played
badly locally, even if everybody knew the issue was just a political
ploy for a constitutionally unsanctioned power grab. Zimbabwe was
typically characterised as a "blind spot" in Mbeki’s outlook
for reasons of historical comradeship. But I doubt this. Rather
it was probably just a sense of powerlessness. When asked about
Zimbabwe, government ministers make their frustration plain. "What
do you think?", they ask. And of course there is no answer.
Mbeki’s policy
has been called "quiet diplomacy" but this is a diplomatic
nicety. What it means is a policy of noninterference, and a reliance
on the untenable nature of the political situation to force itself,
eventually, in more or less the right direction. Mbeki was gambling
that a ship so obviously listing would naturally tend to right itself.
He gambled wrong.
In a sense,
it was the same tactic used by the west against apartheid SA. The
similarities don’t end there, but there are differences. The first
was that SA was of some international economic consequence. There
were also diplomatic issues, like the situation in Angola and Namibia,
which complicated the west’s response.
But Zimbabwe
is different. The hard economic fact is that Zimbabwe is at most
a marginal issue in terms of trade and economic significance. The
political fallout for SA is marginal and easily eclipsed by larger
issues. Zimbabwe is a nonentity on the world stage, and becoming
more so, no matter what the Chinese might think.
But, of course,
Zimbabwe constitutes a huge moral disaster. I wonder what people
who called Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe their "hero"
think now? He is the embodiment of all the worst stereotypes of
African leadership; he reinforces the notion of the African Potemkin
style of democracy in which citizens vote, but their votes are not
charged with the power to change governments; he strengthens the
view that if it comes down to a straight choice between economic
destruction and power change, African leaders will choose the former,
and that they are quite prepared to exploit ethnic and racial differences.
None of these
charges hold true across Africa, but there have been enough examples
on the continent over the past 40 years to lend them some credibility.
More importantly, they are becoming less true as the second wave
of profreedom, pro-democracy and procapitalist leaders are coming
to power. But against this broad trend, one of the old thugs of
Africa’s first wave of leadership remains stubbornly entrenched.
The question
is whether SA’s bankrolling of Zimbabwe changes the situation, or
makes it worse. Government seems to feel that the consequences of
intervening financially are worse than the consequences of doing
nothing. It is also important to be clear on what taking over the
financing of Zimbabwe means: that SA’s taxpayers are being forced
to take over financial responsibility for Zimbabwe, where the global
community, embodied by the International Monetary Fund, has decided
the risk is too high.
In short, from
taxpayers’ point of view it is money down the drain, because it
will never be repaid. Whatever government says about "strict
conditions", such a loan cannot be anything other than a partial,
tacit endorsement of the Zimbabwean government’s political thuggery.
In the informal networks that constitute the most important level
of international communication, this will count against us.
It is also exactly
the opposite of what is required. Mbeki needs to gain allies in
his efforts to force political change in Zimbabwe. Taking over financial
support for Zimbabwe means the world has washed its hands of the
problem, and will make international organisations less inclined
to deal with the situation collectively. They want to forget about
Zimbabwe, just as they have forgotten about countries like Burma.
The situation
also makes a mockery of regional efforts to improve Africa’s image.
Mugabe skillfully judged that African leaders were not united enough
or emphatic enough to enforce their views. How right he was.
Are there alternatives?
Of course. The first would be to gather international support for
the R6bn loan rather than blithely funding it (or a part of it)
ourselves. Too often the debate has been framed as a question of
"megaphone" or "quiet" diplomacy, but this is
a digression. The question is: how do you deal with someone impossible
to deal with? And the answer is that you don’t.
*Cohen is
editor at large.
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