By Takura Zhangazha*
The United Nations 75th General Assembly (UNGA75) has come to an end. Held in what is an historical first virtual/online setup, it didn’t have the glamour, glitz or chutzpah of old. As a direct result of the Covid 19 global pandemic.
No heads of delegations could walk out on each other speeches, though the discomfort of the Chinese ambassador to the UN when the USA president, Donald Trump, spoke was apparent for all to virtually see.
But despite that
slight drama, it was clear that a majority of the members of the UNGA75 support a
multilateral approach to resolving global problems going forward. Inclusive of
ensuring that whatever vaccines and new approaches are found for dealing with
the Covid 19 pandemic should be within the reach of all human beings and not
just those that are developed countries or the very real 1%.
From a Zimbabwean perspective there was a key political moment in our current placement in the world.
This despite the fact that despite a
previous accusation by a US government National Security Advisor that our country
was part of a group of “foreign adversaries” over and about the Black Lives Matter
protests that escalated in June 2020, our country was not mentioned in Trump's
UNGA75 address. This meant that in this particular
instance we were not viewed in the same interventionist manner as Venezuela or
Bolivia. Or alternatively, we would at
least at the presidential level escape any direct or immediate wrath of American foreign
policy aggression.
Of course this does not mean that we are in any way better
off than the two aforementioned South American countries.
Instead, and this is a key point, we sort of temporarily escaped, being designated further pariah status. For now.
So the happiest minister in Zimbabwe’s cabinet is obviously Sibusiso
Moyo our current minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade. I have
deliberately mentioned the full ministerial title due to the fact that Mnangagwa’s
government is a neoliberal one that panders to the dictates of global private
capital in it's foreign relations.
And it’s all a little bit contradictory. While the Trump government is calling us out
on human rights violations, it is simultaneously and as reported in the mainstream media asking our national army to help with stabilizing Cabo Delgado
in Mozambique. Even though SADC appears
to be fully appraised of the matter given the recent resolutions of the SADC
summit held virtually via Mozambique in August 2020. Or while the Chinese are involved
in massive infrastructural developments (coal mining, the airport and the
national Parliament building.) Or the Russians investing in an already
unprecedented singular investment in
platinum mining.
What all of this potentially indicates is a Machiavellian
understanding of international relations by Mnangagwa’s team. Almost akin to the adage given to international
relations studies students about how there are ‘no permanent friends but just
permanent interests.’
Understanding the evident hostilities of the American government
to the current one in Zimbabwe with the latter government touting a neoliberal and even populist Pan
Africanism is not an easy task. All this while Mnangagwa is at
the same time managing what are evidently frosty relations with economic regional
hegemon South Africa, via its ruling African National Congress (ANC) party is
as academically interesting as it would be curious.
This also means that if one were to crosscheck with any
counter-hegemonic intentions on Zimbabwe, there would be a key question as to
the meaning and import of the recent UNGA75 meeting. What we know for a fact is that at least four presidents called for the lifting of sanctions on
Zimbabwe. Including the current
chairperson of the African Union, Ramaphosa of South Africa. And the president of another regional
hegemon,Kenyatta of Kenya. I may have missed it but Cuba, Venezueala, China and Russia did not mention us. An important point that points back to 'permanent interests'.
But all of this with a common denominator being the fact that Zimbabwe
needs to return to the global neoliberal economic mode which had been disrupted
by former president, Robert Mugabe.
While Mnangagwa’s official speech to the UNGA75
was in no way motivational about any new world order, it was designed to show
some sort of ‘strongman’ leadership in that neoliberal ideological direction. On
behalf of global private capital and in his preferred words/ways, the 'ease of doing business.'
This also means, if we read between the lines, that there is an emerging pro-global capital consensus
on Zimbabwe. Which is that if it ticks a
number of boxes, despite a vociferous mainstream but splintered political opposition,
it can be tolerated in the global political-economy scheme of things. Or as far as the country’s ruling establishment
is concerned, it can be directly assisted. Ditto John Deere tractors being
presented as part of a newer agricultural revolution despite United States economic
sanctions on Zimbabwe.
So for Zimbabwe and those with an interest in it, there is
no rule of thumb ‘carrot or stick’ method to what happens next in terms of our
international relations. And this is regrettably true for assumptions of how the
international community will react to issues of human rights abuses in the
contemporary. And our ruling
establishment knows this. They are
probably trading off permanent interests and not looking for permanent
friendships. Even if it potentially
means creating new private capital oligarchies.
So long they have the approval of those powers that have the same said
permanent interests in the country.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)