An Appetite For Power: Buthelezi's Inkatha And South Africa
Often viewed in the West as the leading candidate for head of state of a black-ruled South Africa, Chief Buthelezi emerges here more as a supporter than an opponent of government policy toward blacks. The authors detail the attitudes and actions which have set Buthelezi at odds with virtually all other black political leaders in the republic today, including: the Zulu tribal identification of his political movement, Inkatha; his reliance on the government for direct financial support and patronage; and his de facto alliance with the government in suppressing black trade union organizers, student activists and consumer boycott activists. Impressively dense or well-nigh impenetrable, depending on the reader's taste, the book has an important message for outside observers of South Africa: what may seem to Westerners as appealing "modernization" is, in the context of mainstream South African black politics, beyond the pale.
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Examines the nature and extent of Botha's reforms, and their failure culminating in the 1986 state of emergency. Despite his policies to defeat or co-opt all opposition groups both black and white, the confrontation between government and anti-government forces is deepening. Traces how and why South Africa reached the top of the US and Western political agenda, which led to the end of Reagan's policy of constructive engagement and the failure of the Commonwealth's EPG, and the beginning of disengagement. The effects of sanctions and South Africa's policies towards the front-line states are polarizing the country and worsening the crisis throughout Southern Africa.
Southern Africa these days is like a Chinese puzzle. Rhodesia is the first box, exposed on all sides, its lacquer chipped and lusterless. Lift the lid and there is Namibia, waiting its turn. Open up Namibia and South Africa comes into view. Prise the top off South Africa and, a non-Chinese surprise, two boxes lie side by side, one black and the other white. The black box is sealed tight but its shape has been distorted by a series of internal explosions and it no longer rests passively beside its neighbor. The white box also fails to open but that's because it's solid. On it there is an inscription: Afrikaner Nationalism. Therein the muscle and sinew, the visions and the nightmares of Africa's only white tribe are compounded.
The Reagan Administration, though surefooted domestically, is now absorbing the awkward truth about international relations which continues to surprise many youthful governments--that criticizing foreign policy is easier than making it, that making it is easier than carrying it out, and that political honeymoons are of short and not always blissful duration. Nowhere has this syndrome been more pronounced than in the Administration's attempt to construct a new relationship with South Africa.
