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SOUTH AFRICA | Diplomatic Fracture: Rubio Expels South African Ambassador Amid Rising Tensions

Admin by Admin
March 17, 2025
in Global
South African Ambassador Ebrahim Rasool given 72 hours to pack his bags and leave Washington DC

South African Ambassador Ebrahim Rasool given 72 hours to pack his bags and leave Washington DC

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WASHINGTON DC,  –  In an extraordinary diplomatic rupture, Secretary of State Marco Rubio declared South Africa’s ambassador to the United States “persona non grata” on Friday, escalating the Trump administration’s increasingly contentious relationship with the African nation.

“South African Ambassador Ebrahim Rasool is no longer welcome in the United States,” Rubio announced bluntly via social media while returning from a G7 foreign ministers meeting in Canada. The Secretary denounced Rasool as a “race-baiting politician” with animosity toward President Donald Trump, offering no immediate explanation for the rare diplomatic expulsion.

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The sudden ouster appears linked to remarks Rasool made earlier Friday during a South African think tank webinar. According to an ultraconservative Breitbart article Rubio referenced in his announcement, the ambassador discussed Trump administration policies within the context of America’s changing demographics, where white citizens will soon no longer constitute a majority.

This dramatic ejection marks yet another fault line in deteriorating U.S.-South African relations, which have rapidly soured since Trump took office in January. Both Trump and his close ally Elon Musk—who spent his formative years in South Africa—have repeatedly criticized the country’s Black-led government over a controversial new land law they claim discriminates against white citizens.

The expulsion of an ambassador represents a severe diplomatic measure rarely employed between nations maintaining formal relations. Even during the most tense periods of U.S.-Russia relations—including the Cold War’s darkest hours, Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, and allegations of election interference—neither country resorted to expelling the other’s ambassador.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa’s office responded with measured restraint, noting the “regrettable expulsion” while urging its diplomatic corps “to maintain the established diplomatic decorum.” The statement emphasized South Africa’s continued commitment to “building a mutually beneficial relationship with the United States.”

For Rasool, the expulsion marks a dramatic turn in a life defined by the struggle against apartheid. As a child, he and his family were forcibly removed from their Cape Town neighborhood after it was designated for whites only. His anti-apartheid activism later landed him in prison, where he became a comrade of Nelson Mandela before entering politics with Mandela’s African National Congress.

During Friday’s webinar, Rasool analyzed the Trump administration’s restrictions on diversity and equity programs within an academic framework. He characterized the MAGA movement as responding to “very clear data that shows great demographic shifts in the U.S.A. in which the voting electorate is projected to become 48% white.”

The ambassador also critiqued Musk’s outreach to far-right European figures, describing it as a “dog whistle” to those who consider themselves part of an “embattled white community.” Yet far from launching a direct attack on Trump, Rasool counseled pragmatic engagement, advising against antagonizing the United States or actions that might “cock a snoot” at the administration.

Rasool’s removal follows Trump’s recent executive order slashing aid to South Africa’s government. The order claimed the country’s new land law specifically targets Afrikaners—descendants of primarily Dutch colonial settlers—by allowing government expropriation of private property.

South African officials have repeatedly denied racial motivation behind the legislation, contending that Trump’s characterizations contain significant misinformation. They emphasize that the law permits land redistribution only in specific circumstances where property lies unused or where public interest would be served—measures intended to address historical injustices from the apartheid era when Black South Africans were systematically dispossessed.

Despite these clarifications, Trump has moved to offer refugee status to Afrikaners, though they represent just one segment of South Africa’s white minority population. Meanwhile, Musk has amplified concerns about the land law through social media, framing it as threatening South Africa’s white citizens. Earlier this month, the tech billionaire alleged that South Africa refused to do business with his Starlink venture “because I’m not black.”

As diplomatic relations continue to fray between the two nations, this unprecedented expulsion signals a troubling new chapter in a relationship already strained by historical complexities and contemporary political tensions. WiedJA

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