PRETORIA’S foreign policy is in complete disarray following the demarche of the Pro-Jihad Ambassador Ebrahim Rasool from Washington on Friday. The expelling of the Islamist South African ambassador to the United States signals an unprecedented escalation of tensions between the two countries.
Not only is Rasool supportive of the Islamic movement to create a clerical dictatorship in the Middle East to replace Israel, (known as Hamas), he seems to have ignored the fact Trump gained office primarily due to the Latino vote. Labeling any opposition to Arab expansionism as ‘racist’ or ‘supremacist’ or worse, ‘Islamophobic’, has become a routine slur against non-members of a faith practiced by 25% of the planet.
Be that as it may, neither nations nor religions are races. Rasool should know better than to label American citizens (and their leader) who want a closed Southern border to avoid drug cartels from Central America pursuing them, along with the associated decline in living standards as ‘racist’, and to rail against the Jeffersonian values of non-compulsion in religion.
While Rasool’s race-baiting of Donald Trump was being taken to task by US secretary of State Marco Rubio, none of this has come as much of a surprise to those bothering to gain the perspective of both sides, and especially considering last month’s controversial co-authoring by our President of an article by the so-called Hague Group in a Foreign Policy journal.
Ramaphosa doubles-down on strange claims made in an October 2024 address in which he seems to believe Israel was the one which attacked an outdoor peace festival in Gaza, taking hostages in the process. (You can read my response here), since we all suffer from the UN-sponsored fiction that Gaza was occupied by Israel at the time, and thus Israel was somehow attacking Israel?
As a candidate US ambassador to South Africa Joel Pollak suggests, the article “never once mentioned Hamas” — as if the protagonists here are merely the Hague Group versus Israel? South Africa has had to increase VAT to pay for the millions being spent on ICJ litigation, while ANC officials face the prospect of US sanctions in addition to tariffs.
Pollak’s analysis of what has gone wrong with South Africa’s bizarre foreign policy should be required reading by our diplomatic corps — but of course this would mean foregoing an ostrich mentality associated with previous regimes — and a cancel culture which immediately labels any opinion not sanctioned by the Mullahs in Tehran as “Zionist Witchcraft” read “Haraam”.
Interviewed on local Jewish-focused radio, ChaiFm, Pollack who is a former South African, having married an anti-apartheid activist here, says: “If you take a look at the big picture, South Africa has basically cast its lot with these terrorists and the regimes which support them. You have to ask why? Because in the heyday of the Rainbow Nation under Mandela, there was an idea that South Africa could play a positive peacemaking role, export some of the lessons of compromise and reconciliation from the transition to democracy, and these could be applicable whether in Northern Ireland or the Middle East.
This has shifted over time to a SA which wants to be on the side of the “Axis of Resistance” as the Iranians call it. The people who are trying to undermine American leadership, and to destroy Israel, and to suppress Western Europe, and that is where SA sees itself. To get there you have to misread the history of the South African transition as if it were a military victory by the ANC where it crushed all before it, and basically decided in its magnanimity to tolerate the presence of other people in the country, when actually it was a hard-won compromise . The lessons of that reconciliation have been lost.”
SEE: South Africa could lose its United States consulate in Johannesburg if the city changes the name of Sandton Drive to Leila Khaled Drive.” Note: Khalid is the terrorist behind a Black September 1970 plane hijacking which occurred during the attempted Black September coup in Jordan, to overthrow the monarchy and establish a Palestinian state. Jordan is historical Palestine on many pre-British maps, but plans for King Abdullah to become ‘King of Palestine’ were scrapped at the Jericho conference.