The Herald (Harare)
Published by the government of Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe: Obama's Approach to Zim Shameful

Stephen Gowans

22 July 2009


opinion

Ottawa — Q: Is Obama better than Bush? A: It depends how you like your imperialism -- with a white face or a black one.

US president Barack Obama's speech in Accra, Ghana on July 11, 2009 was equal parts jaw dropping hypocrisy, outright fiction, sound advice for Africans if taken literally, and advocacy for institutions ideally suited to capital accumulation in Africa by Western investors.

Africans should heed the US president's call to embrace the idea that Africa's future is up to Africans (and Africans alone) and to build their own nations, but the path Obama proposes, if followed, would condemn Africa to continued underdevelopment and perpetual dependence on the West.

It should come as a surprise to no one but the weakly naïve and politically untutored that the role of the US president in Africa is to promote and defend the interests of the United States, not Africans.

This is so, even if the US president shares the skin colour of Africa's majority.

What may not be so apparent, but which is true nevertheless, is that Obama represents the interests of his country's hereditary capitalist families, banks, corporations and wealthy investors whose resources and backing have brought him to power, and in whose interests the logic of imperialism compels him to act.

It is Obama's goal as representative of US capital to open, and keep open, Africa's vast resources to exploitation by Western, and particularly US, capital without impediments of corruption, war and pan-African, nationalist or socialist projects of independent development getting in the way.

His colour and African heritage give Obama a leg up on a white president, allowing him to immediately connect with an African audience.

But his message is no less racist, imperialist and informed by the interests of Wall Street than that of his white predecessors.

Obama used his speech to sell two fictions: (1) that Africa's underdevelopment has nothing to do with colonialism and neo-colonialism, but is rooted in corruption, tribalism and Africans' blaming others for their poverty; and (2) that Africa's development depends on adopting institutions that allow foreign capital unfettered access to African markets and resources.

There are two other egregious misconceptions that Obama articulated in his Accra speech: (1) That "the West is not responsible for the destruction of the Zimbabwean economy over the last decade..." and (2) that "African-Americans . . . have thrived in every sector of (US) society."

The decline in Zimbabwe's economy since 2000 is attributed by US officials to Robert Mugabe's mismanagement, an explanation amplified by the Western media and treated by both the media and Western publics as indisputable.

The year 2000 marked the beginning of Zimbabwe's fast track land redistribution programme. The goal of the programme was to reclaim prized agricultural land stolen by force by European settlers.

The land was to be redistributed to indigenous farmers. And it has been.

Zimbabwe has democratised land ownership patterns, distributing land previously owned by 4 000 farmers, mostly of British origin, to 300 000 previously landless families, of African origin.

In more sophisticated analyses, the root cause of Zimbabwe's economic difficulties is understood to lie in the disruption of agriculture caused by land reform.

According to this analysis, had the Mugabe government not pressed ahead with its aggressive land reform programme and settled for the sedate, glacial affair that characterised land redistribution prior to 2000 -- and which has marked agrarian reform elsewhere on the continent -- Zimbabwe would not be in the straitened circumstances it finds itself today.

Until 2000, land reform moved at a snail's pace.

As part of a negotiated settlement with Britain, the independence movement agreed to a willing buyer-willing seller arrangement, whereby land could only be acquired for redistribution if the owner wanted to sell.

This restriction was to remain in effect for the first 10 years of independence.

Since most farmers of European origin were unwilling to sell, little land was available to redistribute.

Eventually, Harare was free to expropriate land from farmers who didn't want to sell. Britain had agreed to help compensate expropriated farmers but renounced the agreement, denying it was ever under any obligation to fund land reform.

Since Harare didn't have the funds to pay for the land it needed for redistribution, it had two choices: Carry on as is, with land redistribution proceeding at a glacial pace, or expropriate the land and demand that expropriated farmers seek compensation from London, which after all, was ultimately responsible for the theft of the land and had promised to underwrite the land reform programme.

The Mugabe government chose the later course, setting off alarm bells in Western capitals. Mugabe couldn't be allowed to get away with uncompensated expropriation of productive property.

Analyses that attributed Zimbabwe's economic disaster to mismanagement overlooked the reaction of Washington to the Mugabe government's lese majesty against private property.

For not only did the turn of the century mark the beginning of fast-track land reform, it also marked the passage of the US Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act.

ZDERA is not a regime of targeted sanctions against individuals, as many believe. Sanctions against individuals do exist, but ZDERA is something altogether different.

ZDERA has two aspects. First, it authorises the US president to "support an independent and free Press and electronic media in Zimbabwe" and "provide for democracy and governance programmes in Zimbabwe". This is code for doing openly what the CIA used to do covertly: destabilise foreign governments.

Second, it instructs the United States executive director to each international financial institution (the World Bank and IMF, for example) to oppose and vote against:

(1) any extension by the respective institution of any loan, credit, or guarantee to the government of Zimbabwe; or

(2) any cancellation or reduction of indebtedness owed by the government of Zimbabwe to the United States or any international financial institution.

Since ZDERA was passed in 2001, Washington has blocked all lines of credit, development assistance and balance of payment support from international lending institutions to Zimbabwe.

When the act was passed, then US president George W. Bush declared his hope that "the provisions of this important legislation will support the people of Zimbabwe in their struggle to effect peaceful democratic change, achieve economic growth, and restore the rule of law".

Since effecting peaceful democratic change meant ousting the Zanu-PF Government and restoring the rule of law meant forbidding the uncompensated expropriation of white farm land, what Bush was really saying was that he hoped the legislation would help overthrow the government and put an end to fast-track land reform.

ZDERA was co-drafted by one of the opposition MDC's white parliamentarians, and introduced as a bill in the US Congress in March of 2001 by the Republican senator, William Frist.

The legislation was co-sponsored by the Republican rightwing senator, Jesse Helms, and the Democratic senators Hilary Clinton (now Secretary of State), Joseph Biden (now Vice-President) and Russell Feingold.

Helms died in early July, 2008. He denounced the 1964 Civil Rights Act, was a spokesperson for the tobacco industry and was a slum landlord. He opposed school bussing, compensation for Japanese Americans and Communists.

He complained that public schools were being used "to teach our children that cannibalism, wife-swapping, and the murder of infants and the elderly are acceptable behaviour."

Helms was also fond of sanctions. He co-authored the Helms-Burton Act of 1996, which tightened the blockade on Cuba.

The MDC had always been reluctant to admit that sanctions had crippled Zimbabwe's economy, and more reluctant still to call for their removal. This is to be expected.

In opposition, the MDC's goal was to blame the government for the country's economic difficulties. If it could do so convincingly, and at the same time persuade voters it could do a better job, its chances of prevailing at the polls would increase accordingly.

Likewise, if it refused to add to the pressure on Western governments to lift sanctions, and even encouraged Western governments to maintain or escalate them, the government would remain burdened with the political liability of an ailing economy. But times have changed.

The MDC has formed a coalition government with Zanu-PF, and the MDC controls the finance ministry. Sanctions are no longer in the party's interest, and the MDC has, as a consequence, changed its tune. Not only does it now acknowledge ZDERA, Finance Minister, Tendai Biti, complains about it bitterly.

"The World Bank has right now billions and billions of dollars that we have access to but we can't access those dollars unless we have dealt with and normalised our relations with the IMF.

"We cannot normalise our relations with the IMF because of the voting power, it's a blocking voting power of America and people who represent America on that board cannot vote differently because of ZDERA."

As bad as ZDERA is, it's not the only sanctions regime the United States has used to sabotage Zimbabwe's economy.

Addressing the Senate Foreign Relations African Affairs Subcommittee, Jendayi Frazer, who was George W. Bush's top diplomat in Africa, noted that the United States had imposed financial and travel restrictions on 135 individuals and 30 businesses. US citizens and corporations who violate the sanctions face penalties ranging from $250 000 to $500 000.

"We are looking to expand the category of Zimbabweans who are covered. We are also looking at sanctions on government entities as well, not just individuals."

She added that the US Treasury Department was looking into ways to target sectors of Zimbabwe's critical mining industry.

On July 25, 2008 Bush announced that sanctions on Zimbabwe would be stepped up. He outlawed US financial transactions with a number of key Zimbabwe companies and froze their US assets.

The enterprises included: the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation (which controls all mineral exports); the Zimbabwe Iron and Steel Company; Minerals Marketing Corporation of Zimbabwe; Osleg, or Operation Sovereign Legitimacy, the commercial arm of Zimbabwe's army; Industrial Development Corporation; the Infrastructure Development Bank of Zimbabwe; ZB Financial Holdings; and the Agriculture Development Bank of Zimbabwe.

In early March 2009, Obama extended sanctions for another year, announcing that,

"The crisis constituted by the actions and policies of certain members of the government of Zimbabwe and other persons to undermine Zimbabwe's democratic processes or institutions has not been resolved. These actions and policies pose a continuing unusual and extraordinary threat to the foreign policy of the United States."

It would be more accurate to say that US sanctions pose a continuing unusual and extraordinary threat to the economy of Zimbabwe.

Under the leadership of Zanu-PF, Zimbabweans have tried to build their own country according to their own needs, expropriating land confiscated by European settlers when the former colonial master, Britain, reneged on its promise to fund land reform.

Zanu-PF has also led efforts to bring Zimbabwe's resources and economy under the control of indigenous Zimbabweans, following methods reminiscent of the ones South Korea used to industrialise.

But while South Korea's subsidies, tariff protections and foreign ownership restrictions were tolerated by Washington as a necessary evil of the Cold War -- South Korea needed to be given space to develop into a capitalist showpiece on the Cold War's frontlines -- Washington has been unwilling to tolerate Zimbabwe's efforts to follow the same path.

Kwame Nkrumah, who led Ghana, the first African country to achieve independence, argued that the less developed world would not become developed through the goodwill and generosity of the developed world.

Instead, it would only become developed by struggle against the external forces -- foreign corporations, banks and investors -- that had a vested interest in keeping it underdeveloped.

Nkrumah would have agreed with Obama that "Africa's future is up to Africans." He would surely have disagreed with Obama's prescription for how Africa ought to arrive at its future.

l Stephen Gowans is a Canadian writer and political activist based in Ottawa. This is an excerpt from an article titled "Obama's Africa Speech: Lies, Hypocrisy, and a Prescription for Continued African Dependence," that appeared on gowans.wordpress.com

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AllAfrica - All the Time
Author: chachacha
Wed Jul 22 12:55:55 2009

This is a classic example of a confused opinion which has nothing to do with Obama. Madii kusiya vana vevamwe? The article should focus on Zimbabwe and why Zimbabwe was a failed state. This business of justifying wrong things for wrong reasons and by wrong people has condemned Zimbabweans to perpetual destitution.

Author: Rexk
Wed Jul 22 23:14:41 2009

My brothers in once great Zim surely you can not allow yours elves to be intellectually assaulted by a state mouth piece that sees no shame in protecting wrongs committed by mortals whose only redemption is to apologize to the people of Zimbabwe and they will be forgiven and the country will move on . learn from the wrongs your neighbors committed and see how fast investor confidence has set in and lives of its ordinary citizenry dramatically changed for the better. You allow those Herald Mugabe praise singers to ridicule a US president all in the name of his masters voice to the greater detriment of the wise majority. Stop this irresponsibility and respect the people who are busy helping you through various humanitarian programs. You are beggars as it is right now so you cant have your cake and eat it, just shut up!

Author: prem
Thu Jul 23 08:06:01 2009

Should shameless Herald be reminded that its criminal Mugabe who has brought shame to the country!

The Herald will fail in its attempt to rewrite history!

Author: juhlman
Thu Jul 23 07:14:47 2009

Oh Hell.......

I began by preparing a long (boring) refutation of the Herald on a point by point basis...... it was ridiculously long............ I gave up...........

Yes, surprisingly, Barak Obama actually DOES represent the United States and not the AU or the UN! However, his speech was correct, notice that he stopped in Ghana, where a disputed elections was recently resolved and the peaceful transfer of power seems to have taken root..........

The Herald was correct about ZiDera, although their biography of Jesse Helms (admittedly a racist) had nothing to do with ZiDera except to "suggest" that ZiDera is somehow a racist law - did the Herald bother to check how many members ot the Congressional Black Caucus voted on ZiDera? Are they all racists too? Have all Americans of African descent sold their soul to the "white" Masters?

The tone and logic of this opinion piece should be offensive to ALL people of African descent! Compare the living standards of people of African descent (decendents of slavery or not) living in America to those living in Africa or even Zimbabwe! One of my friends here (who HAPPENS TO BE BLACK!) said "I know my ancestors paid a terrible price, but Thank God they were kidnapped and shipped here!". That's not from me, but from an American of African descent...........

I think THAT sums up what a disappointment Zimbabwe has become for Africa if not the entire world!

To whom much is given, much is expected, what has Africa, or even Zimbabwe done?

Even if you support land-redistribution, why are people starving? Ask yourself, was land re-distributed equitably or did one party profit at the other's expense? That is precisely why Zimbabwe is in the state that it is in! Even if "land-redistribution" disproportionately effected "white" farmers, then why did it have to wreak havoc on the production of foodstuffs in Zimbabwe? A proper re-distribution of land, including expropriation, would not have so favored the "ruling class" of ZANU-PF at the expense of the nation's ability to feed itself!

Barak Obama is the President of the United States, thus he is obliged to represent the interests of the U.S., but it does NOT make him an "Uncle Tom" nor does it make him somewhat less effective as a speaker against what the "rest of the world" sees as criminal negligence on the part of African leaders seeking to fabricate their standing on the world stage espousing "African solutions for African problems"............ The first truly "African" solution for a problem on such a scale as current-day Zimbabwe will be it's FIRST!

ZANU-PF and their mouthpieces at the Herald seem content to rhetorically "bite the hand that is feeding them (their people)" to the nth degree.........

If they somehow disagree with the President of the U.S., they should "put up or shut up" - feed your people, provide for their education and healthcare and THEN we can talk about the injustices of imperialism......... until then, STFU!

"Total Empowerment!" Oh yes! ZANU-PF/Mugabe PROMISED Total Empowerment only 12 months ago! How could we forget their promises? How empowered are you? Has ZANU-PF/Mugabe fulfilled their promises?

Let me ask you this: Were you and your family better off (materially) under the racist regime of Ian Smith than you are now? What does your answer to this question say about your view towards ZANU-PF's "stewardship" of Zimbabwe?

What has ZANU-PF and it's failed ideology done for you? It's not really about what the rest of us outside Zimbabwe think, ask yourself if the current regime in Zimbabwe has improved the lives of their people.......

Unless you are a member of ZANU-PF, I would think they haven't........

Author: kjrs120
Thu Jul 23 20:59:53 2009

Juhlman well said. It will be very interesting to see if any Mugabe twit will try to twist around this great posting.

Author: mehlozizo
Fri Jul 24 10:17:13 2009

THINK - what else could he say. Just because he said it does not mean be believes it.

Author: kjrs120
Sat Jul 25 02:59:55 2009

Mehlozizo, your attempt to tweak failed. It hurts doesn't it - the truth I mean. As treatment for your ailment, keep re-reading Juhlman's post until that truth stops hurting, and that applies to all the other Mugabe twits.

Author: juhlman
Sat Jul 25 05:13:28 2009

Melholozizo:

I had to read my post again because I check a lot of threads...... sometimes I write, sometimes not.......... sort of like "Richarson88".

As an aside - by the way......where did the "imposter" go? He was kinda funny - VERY WRONG TO STEAL SOMEONE ELSE"S MONIKER - but still kinda funny once I figured it out..........)

I digress, I would hope this forum is a place for active discussion (like sometimes w/ Phiri, abstractly w/ Richarson88/J-Hollow) and solutions (but not like "uplift's" cut-&-paste posts.....). Answer my concluding questions first and we can talk about any of my points you would like to dispute/discuss. That will indicate to the rest of us your perspective and the sort of mindset we are responding to.

1) If you ARE Zimbabwean, were you and your family better off (materially) under the racist regime of Ian Smith than you are now? What does your answer to this question say about your view towards ZANU-PF's "stewardship" of Zimbabwe?

2) What has ZANU-PF and it's failed ideology done for you? It's not really about what the rest of us outside Zimbabwe think, ask yourself if the current regime in Zimbabwe has improved the lives of their people.......

If the answer to either question is Yes, then that helps understand the deluded perspective you bring here, if your answers are No, then explain to me how you would do things differently or if you would do the same thing ZANU-PF/Mugabe has done (and with similar results - which is considered the definition of insanity).

Answer these two questions for me, and we'll discuss the merits of the subject, spout the usual ZANU-PF invective, and we'll all know you as a troll.......... either way, I'm here all the time, I argue with everyone (except Mabiza/Takunya because his posts are just racist rantings, J-Hollow is interesting but in my opinion just posts here "for the fun of it", Phiri is at least honest.......).

Answer these two questions and it will tell us a lot about who you are and how we should couch our responses.

As for me, I believe in historical reality, rule of law, and justice despite some of the horrible wrongs that have occurred in this world. But THIS board is about Zimbabwe, it is NOT about Iraq or about the Jews in Palestine or even whether or not "Hitler was nice to SOME Jews" (as was an animated discussion some months ago.........).

I'm here because I read an article about Zimbabwe on Yahoo about 2 years ago. It reminded me of something I had read several years earlier about the defeat of a Constitutional Amendment in Zimbabwe and what followed it. I read the articles on AllAfrica and other sites, as well as these boards, before I finally felt compelled to say something about it.

I see a country in Africa that had so much going for it post-liberation and turned it into a nightmare. No, not as bad as the Congo or Uganda under Amin or even Apartheid South Africa, but a Marxist revival of the Third Reich.

Tell me who you are, why you care and how you answer my two questions, I'm sure we'll have an interesting discussion here...........

Tell me, no tell us all, what do you believe about Zimbabwe?

And besides, does it really matter whether or not I believe it? Did I say anything untrue or is there a subjective judgment you differ with?

See all comments (12).


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