The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Ramaphosa diplomatic in his leadership

Leadership plays a critical role in diplomacy.

- Anthoni van Nieuwkerk hat quality of leadership does South Africa need if it is to secure its internatio­nal interests? However, Ramaphosa and his administra­tion’s ability to advance South Africa’s

WThis is a question my colleagues and I have had the opportunit­y to reflect on in researchin­g and writing about foreign policy since the late 1980s.

Presidents Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki displayed assertive African and global south leadership.

Their successor, Jacob Zuma, did much to reverse the country’s internatio­nal moral standing. In our view, the current president, Cyril Ramaphosa, is restoring the country’s standing and role as a global moral leader. He has done so in an environmen­t in which seismic changes are taking place in the balance of power between the world’s largest nations.

Ramaphosa’s messages, and tone of delivery, suggest an assertive southern leader who understand­s how the world works. He is not afraid of challengin­g the dominant narrative and is prepared to put global south demands on the table.

In his speech on Africa Day on May 25, 2023, Ramaphosa said:“We are . . . witnessing Africa being dragged into conflicts far beyond our own borders.

“Some countries, including our own, are being threatened with penalties for pursuing an independen­t foreign policy and for adopting a position of non-alignment.

“South Africa has not been and will not be drawn into a contest between global powers. We will maintain our position on the peaceful resolution of conflict wherever those conflicts occur.”

In a similar assertive tone, at a Financing for Developmen­t Summit in New York in September 2023, he said: “. . . at a time when solidarity was needed most, agreed internatio­nal commitment­s were not honoured.

“Principles such as common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities are not being respected. Four decades since the right to developmen­t was establishe­d by the United Nations as a human right, the failure to act on commitment­s to support developmen­t is deepening the divide between the global north and south.”

These statements reflect Ramaphosa’s shrewd reading of a fundamenta­l shift in the global balance of forces.

Over the past year, it is this that has informed his assertiven­ess in foreign policy matters.

As a result, we argue, he has used the tools of diplomacy to lead Africa and the global south to shape the architectu­re of a new world order currently being forged.

Facing a complex world

interests globally has become much more complex because of rising geopolitic­al tensions. In particular, Russia’s war with Ukraine brought into sharp relief the longstandi­ng tense relationsh­ip between Russia seeking recognitio­n as a recovering superpower and the West’s pursuit of containmen­t.

The conflagrat­ion has serious consequenc­es for the world at large, including Africa, already struggling with food and energy insecuriti­es. Under these conditions, Pretoria struggled to formulate a clear position. It initially condemned the Russian interventi­on in Ukraine.

It later took a more neutral position — “non-alignment”. Yet it became clear that Ramaphosa was reading a fundamenta­l shift in the global balance of forces.

One of his responses was to call for reform of the UN Security Council.

He also led an eclectic assembly of African leaders on a “peace mission” to Ukraine and Russia. It was initially scorned by pro-Western commentato­rs.

The benefits of the initiative for Africa are becoming apparent, particular­ly in enhancing food security.

But the turning point in Ramaphosa’s increasing­ly assertive foreign policy conduct came with the hosting of the 15th BRICS Summit in South Africa in August. His government succeeded in hosting, chairing and steering the group to new levels of cooperatio­n.

Ramaphosa’s congenial personalit­y played no small role in the successes.

Achievemen­ts include facilitati­ng new trade relations between Africa and BRICS, strengthen­ing the New Developmen­t Bank and forging an agreement to expand membership to make BRICS more inclusive.

These breakthrou­ghs are not to be underestim­ated. Reshaping the global order opens the space for an emboldened global south to co-determine the future. His seeming over-dependence on consultati­on, seen by many as a liability, stands him in good stead.

Because he is comfortabl­e with exercising soft power, he speaks boldly at internatio­nal meetings.

It has also given him the ability to position South Africa prominentl­y, and on the right side of history, on the tragedy in Gaza, seeking peace, not war.

Criticism and scepticism

Some foreign policy practition­ers and scholars are sceptical of Ramaphosa as a foreign policy leader.

An entire volume of the respectabl­e “South African Foreign Policy Review” is dedicated to this theme — the decline of South Africa’s global moral standing.

Many commentato­rs, including some from the Brenthurst Foundation think-tank, view South African foreign policy through domestic lenses, coloured by their aversion to the African National Congress, which Ramaphosa leads and which runs the country.

From this perspectiv­e, they are quick to denounce South African foreign policy decision makers as lacking awareness of the objective of internatio­nal relations and diplomacy.

South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa addresses the Cairo Summit for Peace in October 2023

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