Sunday Times

ANC must stop its tactic of perpetual confusion

- Peter Bruce is away.

African liberation movements of the Left, such as the ANC, Algeria’s National Liberation Front and Zimbabwe’s Zanu-PF, which have been intellectu­ally influenced by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, all appear to have imbibed the Soviet strategy of maskirovka, a doctrine that makes deliberate deception, dishonesty and doing the opposite of what one says a policy in itself.

This is one way to explain what often appear as ANC policy somersault­s, where the governing party and its leaders publicly say one thing but either do not implement what they say or do the opposite.

This is one reason for the government’s indecision, implementa­tion paralysis and state incapacity. In fact, it is at the heart of public service delivery failures. It leaves the private sector, civil society and ordinary citizens in perpetual confusion about the real intentions of the government. It also leaves SA’s trading partners, allies and foreign investors continuall­y perplexed over our real policy positions, stances and actions.

This means almost every ANC policy or statement has to be deciphered almost like ancient hieroglyph­ics to find its real meaning.

Political parties such as the EFF, which are spin-offs from left-leaning ANC liberation movements that were influenced by the Soviet communist party, often also incorporat­e maskirovka, making public policy statements but deliberate­ly doing the opposite.

Maskirovka was devised by political, intelligen­ce and military leaders in the former USSR as a way to win military victories during World War 2.

The 1944 Soviet Military Encyclopae­dia defines it as the manipulati­on of facts to alter local and global perception­s, and calls it an acceptable way to secure political, diplomatic and strategic objectives.

There are many examples in current ANC government policies that illustrate what can almost be described as deliberate maskirovka-like deception.

The ANC has made big pronouncem­ents about its new policy of renewal, its intention to get rid of corrupt leaders and model new ethical behaviour. The party has even announced the establishm­ent of a renewal commission composed of 10 party elders to draft a

“programme of unity and renewal”. Of course, this is an oxymoron: renewal involves shedding the corrupt, not keeping the corrupt within the party, unifying with the corrupt.

Despite the ANC leadership’s pledges to elect honest leaders, the party recently elected Mandla Msibi, who was accused of murder, to its provincial executive committee in Mpumalanga; elected Zandile Gumede, who faces corruption charges, as its chair in eThekwini; and retained former social developmen­t minister Bathabile Dlamini, the ANC Women’s League president who was found guilty of perjury related to the Sassa grant payments corruption scandal in 2017.

Given the acceptance of the tainted Msibi, Gumede and Dlamini in the leadership ranks, despite the ANC “policy” not to tolerate unethical leaders, it is very likely that suspended secretary-general Ace Magashule might try at the ANC’s national elective conference in December to be reinstated as a party member and elected to a senior position.

Similarly, the ANC government has claimed to be

“neutral” in the Russia-Ukraine war, saying it is “non-aligned”, while in reality it supports Russia.

The ANC government’s wordplay around its stance in the war is a deliberate strategy of deception, maskirovka style.

And its pledges to introduce the critical structural reforms necessary to lift growth and create jobs and new businesses, such as improving the efficiency of the state and prioritisi­ng catalytic growth sectors — including renewable energy and telecommun­ications — are not the full truth either. The truth is, these crucial growth-enhancing sectors will be prioritise­d only when ANC and government leaders can benefit from their developmen­t.

SA will see the inclusive economic growth, job creation and societal peace we so desperatel­y need only if the government is honest, authentic and transparen­t about policies, decisions and actions, and does not engage in

maskirovka-like deliberate deception.

The ANC government has claimed to be ‘neutral’ in the RussiaUkra­ine war, saying it is non-aligned, while in reality it supports Russia

 ?? WILLIAM GUMEDE ??
WILLIAM GUMEDE

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