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Zimbabwe Pursues Economic Justice Despite U.S. Fickle Friendship Folly
Mark P. Fancher
04 Sep 2013
🖨️ Print Article

by Mark P. Fancher

Newly re-elected Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe has again defied the imperial wrath of the U.S. and Great Britain, with his announcement “that the government will seize foreign banks and mines and redistribute them to local investors.” Such actions can get one killed, but Mugabe is no easy target for the West’s secret services. He has a popular base, and a loyal armed forces.

 

Zimbabwe Pursues Economic Justice Despite U.S. Fickle Friendship Folly

by Mark P. Fancher

“Given U.S. objectives, the indigenization plans cannot be welcome news.”

Only a few short months ago, the U.S. government expressed remorse for its longstanding campaign to isolate Zimbabwe. For years, the U.S. has played a pivotal role in maintaining crippling sanctions against Zimbabwe as a response to alleged human rights violations.

Yet, a few months ago former UN Ambassador Andrew Young paid a fence-mending visit to Zimbabwe where he said: “The decision for me to come here was made by the Secretary of State and approved by the President of the United States.” Young met with Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, and afterwards said: “[President Mugabe] received the message that we are prepared to remove the sanctions. He was quite understanding and he warmly welcomed us. We told him about how the U.S. deeply values building closer partnerships with Zimbabwe and how we attach great importance to the restoration of positive relations between the two countries.”

Mr. Young’s visit was actually just the beginning. A small parade of other notable visitors followed, and the U.S. removed two Zimbabwean banks from the sanctions list. Not to be outdone, Europe sent a delegation from the European Parliament’s Development Committee to Zimbabwe to have high level discussions about prospects for western re-engagement.

Fast forward five months. President Mugabe emerged victorious from an election and a U.S. State Department spokeswoman said the election had “serious flaws.” She added: “We have made clear to the government of Zimbabwe and the region that a change in U.S. sanctions policy will occur only in a context of credible, transparent, peaceful reforms that reflect the will of the Zimbabwean people. If those changes are made, then we’ll certainly conduct a review.”

What happened to all of the flowery statements about “partnerships,” re-engagement and the lifting of sanctions? Apparently President Mugabe’s plans to pursue economic justice for his country are what happened. In the wake of the electoral victory, Mugabe’s party, ZANU-PF announced that the government will seize foreign banks and mines and redistribute them to local investors. A party spokesman said the election was a “clear mandate to transform the economy through indigenization and economic empowerment.”

“President Mugabe emerged victorious from an election and a U.S. State Department spokeswoman said the election had ‘serious flaws.’”

The U.S. has cited the election rather than planned seizures as the reason for its chilly posture. But given U.S. objectives, the indigenization plans cannot be welcome news, and President Mugabe charged that the decision to maintain sanctions is “harassment.” He said: “They should not continue to harass us, the British and Americans. We have not done anything to their companies here – the British have several companies in this country – and we have not imposed any controls, any sanctions against them, but time will come when we will say well, tit-for-tat, you hit me I hit you.”

Historically, leaders of underdeveloped countries who dare to assume such an aggressive posture in the face of U.S. bullying tend to meet with untimely demise. In his book, “Confessions of an Economic Hit Man,” author and former NSA operative John Perkins noted: “… [Progressive Ecuadorian President Jaime] Roldos warned all foreign interests, including but not limited to oil companies, that unless they implemented plans that would help Ecuador’s people, they would be forced to leave his country. He delivered a major speech at the Atahualpa Olympic Stadium in Quito and then headed off to a small community in southern Ecuador. He died there in a fiery airplane crash, on May 24, 1981.”

Perkins went on to comment: “I had no doubt that Roldos’s death had not been an accident. It had all the markings of a CIA-orchestrated assassination. I understood that it had been executed so blatantly in order to send a message…The [Reagan administration] jackals were back and they wanted [Panama’s] Omar Torrijos and everyone else who might consider joining an anti-corporatocracy crusade to know it. But Torrijos was not buckling. Like Roldos, he refused to be intimidated. ...he adamantly refused to give in to the Reagan administration’s demands to renegotiate the Canal Treaty. Two months after Roldos’s death, Omar Torrijos’s nightmare came true; he died in a plane crash. It was July 31, 1981.”

Mysterious plane crash deaths were not limited to progressive Central American leaders. Africa shared in the experience when Mozambique’s President Samora Machel died in a plane crash on October 19, 1986.

“Mugabe’s election and repeated reelection since Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980 demonstrate rather convincingly that he enjoys mass support among the people.”

If defiant conduct comparable to that of Roldos, Torrijos and Machel guarantees assassination, Robert Mugabe should have been dead long ago. He mocked and insulted Tony Blair, and he said of Condoleezza Rice that “the white man is the slave master to her.” And now he has announced plans to seize foreign banks and mines. When the National Conference of Black Lawyers drafted and published a model law [see pdf] for such seizures several years ago, there was little expectation that African governments would be willing in the then-foreseeable future to withstand the imperialist ire that the adoption of such a law would draw. But Mugabe apparently dares to tread in this dangerous territory.

President Mugabe’s survival may be due to several factors. First, Mugabe’s election and repeated reelection since Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980 demonstrate rather convincingly that he enjoys mass support among the people, and his assassination would almost guarantee his martyrdom and an even higher level of resistance to the imperialist program.

Second, as Black Agenda Report’s Glen Ford has noted, Zimbabwe is one of only two African countries that have avoided entanglement with U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM). Loyal armed forces can be a significant deterrent to assassination attempts and other violent destabilization efforts.

Third, President Mugabe is not a lone, isolated, vulnerable political figure. The protection he enjoys from ZANU-PF validates the All-African People’s Revolutionary Party’s mantra about the value of belonging to an organization.

Finally, Mugabe enjoys exceptional respect throughout Africa because of his profound contributions to the African liberation struggle. There are likely few with access to President Mugabe who are willing to participate in an assassination. Even many of Mugabe’s political rivals regard him as a patriot.

While there may be a growing awareness of the importance of united African resistance to the isolation and demonization of independent leaders, there must also be a frank acknowledgment that foreign corporate domination of Africa’s resources and a U.S. military presence in Africa to protect that hegemony are absolutely incompatible with genuine African self-determination and the success of leaders who seriously pursue it. President Mugabe apparently understands this very well, and as he begins his walk down the path to the indigenization of Zimbabwe’s wealth, we must hope that the African world will have his back.

Mark P. Fancher is an attorney who writes frequently about the U.S. military presence in Africa. He can be contacted at mfancher@comcast.net.

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