South Africa fails on Zimbabwe, for now
posted at 9:35 am on April 15, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
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The Washington Post goes after an unfamiliar target in its lead editorial today — the democratic government of South Africa. Calling President Thabo Mbeki’s policies “perverse and immoral”, it scolds South Africa for using its democracy to protect a destructive dictator:
FOR THOSE who argue that democracies are natural allies in international affairs, South Africa poses a vexing challenge. Since that country began serving a term on the U.N. Security Council last year, the government of President Thabo Mbeki has consistently allied itself with the world’s rogue states and against the Western democracies. It has defended Iran’s nuclear program and resisted sanctions against it; shielded Sudan and Burma from the sort of pressure the United Nations once directed at the apartheid regime; and enthusiastically supported one-sided condemnations of Israel by the U.N. Human Rights Council.
Now Mr. Mbeki’s perverse and immoral policy is reaching its nadir — in South Africa’s neighbor Zimbabwe. The government of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe is inarguably one of the world’s worst: It has wrecked the economy, triggering food shortages that have driven millions of refugees into neighboring states, and used brute force to stem what would otherwise be overwhelming opposition. On March 29, the regime staged presidential and parliamentary elections and lost both by a wide margin. Rather than concede, Mr. Mugabe has refused to release the presidential vote count, called for a recount in parliamentary districts won by the opposition and launched another violent campaign to intimidate those who voted against him.
In fact, Mugabe’s courts have blocked the release of the presidential election results in a court decision yesterday. The opposition MDC has called a general strike in protest, but that appears to have failed. The failure of the strike has prompted South Africa’s ANC to repudiate Mbeki’s strange collusion with Mugabe and call the situation “dire”:
But calls to announce the outcome won powerful backing from South Africa’s ruling African National Congress which said it must be released “without any further delay.”
Confirming an increasing breach over Zimbabwe between the ANC and South African President Thabo Mbeki, a statement by the party’s executive National Working Committee said the situation was “dire, with negative consequences” for all of southern Africa.
The Post editorial held out hope that democracy in South Africa could solve the problem of Mbeki, and that may yet happen. The president and successor to Nelson Mandela finds himself isolated even within his own party due to his support of Mugabe. He has lost a party leadership vote, and his successor has pointedly refused to endorse Mbeki’s position on Zimbabwe. The ANC committee publicly rebuked Mbeki for not taking a “neutral position” at the SADC in the crisis.
Of all nations in Africa, Mbeki’s should be the first to stand up to dictators and oppression. Its activists demanded and received worldwide support for an end to the apartheid regime that preceded South Africa’s liberation. Mbeki has squandered the moral standing of his nation to support a decaying dictator who has brought nothing but starvation and misery on his people, and who now blocks the very democracy Mandela rightly demanded and eventually won in South Africa.
Fortunately, it looks like Mbeki is mostly alone in his Mugabe worship. Maybe when he leaves, the new South African president can look at a wide range of Mbeki policies, starting but not ending with Zimbabwe.
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Thabo Mbeki’s been perverse and immoral for at least 5 years. It’s nice that the WaPost finally noticed.
funky chicken on April 15, 2008 at 9:47 AM
And what the U.S. has to do with Zimbabwe?
We’re too stretched out. We can’t send the Marines.
Already Hussein Banana O’Samba in a major speech on Foreign Policy yesterday said that when he’s president, he’ll “pull out the troops from Siberia and send the Special Forces to Switzerland to destroy a nuclear reactor suspected of being used to build a nuclear bomb by that rogue nation.”
Indy Conservative on April 15, 2008 at 9:47 AM
BLT with a little Marxist totalitarianism thrown in is always good for a country.
a capella on April 15, 2008 at 9:48 AM
Lefties usually stick together – guess the WaPo didn’t get the memo…
Think_b4_speaking on April 15, 2008 at 9:49 AM
Just how much of a democrat is Mbeki? The ANC was allied with the Soviet Union and holds a lot of power in SA. Mbeki’s probably jealous of all the power that Mugabe has and would like to have it himself. Fortunately SA has a somewhat democratic tradition and competing interest groups, so he can’t seize total power.
rbj on April 15, 2008 at 10:00 AM
Q: If the old “New Left” were to run a government what would it look like?
A: South Africa led by the African National Congress.
Supporting the Apartheid government in South Africa is still hurting the United States today. You have to triangulate against the old “New Left” student activists that are now the elected officials in these countries. If you don’t do it early you end up with the more South Africas in the future.
gabriel sutherland on April 15, 2008 at 10:18 AM
When you’re good, you’re good, and since the left was honest enough about politics to unashamedly honor Karl Rove as a political genius and Enemy #1, I think we can finally step up and applaud the left on this one.
This was genius: they have made a Marxist with terrorist leanings — Nelson Mandela — into an international hero and patron saint of leftism, such that even his Marxist successor Mbeki, a corrupt bag of scum, gets an almost completely free ride from the international press.
There really isn’t a parallel on the right, since we don’t like corrupt, murderous scum, Marxist or otherwise, and tend to eventually seek their ouster even when they are politically or financially convenient (too many examples to name).
Jaibones on April 15, 2008 at 10:30 AM
Hey, how about an African Divestment campaign? Instead of some sniveling left wing group seeking divestment in favor of a Marxist insurgency, we could seek divestment from every African government which votes against Israel in the UN, and supports or trades with the governments who do.
Jaibones on April 15, 2008 at 10:33 AM
South Africa’s dominant political class (the ANC) are aiming along the same lines as Mugabe in terms of their jobs and economic policy. They are not proceeding too quickly but Marxist thought oozes from them.
They don’t want to hassle Mugabe too much (”Crisis? What crisis?”) as someone might see the parallels and blow the whistle. It’s about screwing the peons and lifetime employment.
Harry Schell on April 15, 2008 at 10:42 AM
Absolutely nothing but that doesn’t stop me from recognizing corruption of the worse kind when I see it.
I’m not advocating interference by the United States since we have too much to lose and too little to gain. Maybe it’s time for the United States to act only when we stand to make a material gain; acting for humanitarian reasons doesn’t seem to be working that well.
TooTall on April 15, 2008 at 10:54 AM
Mugabe is Shone tribe…
Mbeki is Xhosa…
Anyone know the tribal politics between those two tribes?
My guess is theres also a cultural context we are missing here.
Romeo13 on April 15, 2008 at 11:37 AM
How long will it be before South Africa’s only export is white golfers?
Natalie on April 15, 2008 at 12:18 PM
I know. I was being partly sarcastic.
Worth reporting.
And who knows, we might intervene some day if our national security is at risk for some reason.
Indy Conservative on April 15, 2008 at 1:19 PM
I knew that – just chalk it up to my poor writing skills and a bad habit of answering rhetorical questions.
TooTall on April 15, 2008 at 1:59 PM
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