The expelled envoy at the heart of the latest US-South Africa row

As a veteran of the anti-apartheid struggle and himself a victim of the inequities of that racist system of government, Ebrahim Rasool was always unlikely to mince his words when it came to assessing the new US administration.
But in a message to family and friends, South Africaâs top envoy in Washington sounded almost relaxed about the diplomatic ructions that he had caused.
Soon after it was announced at the weekend that he was going to be expelled from the US, Ambassador Rasool wrote that he and his family were âall packed up and looking forward to returning to South Africaâ and said he was leaving the US with âno regretsâ.
On Friday, his prepared remarks on the new government in the US were delivered in a thoughtful, measured manner â with no hint of the trouble that they would trigger.
In a webinar organised by a South African think-tank, the 62-year-old veteran of the struggle against apartheid was speaking about the policies of President Donald Trump and the implications for Africa.
The talk was coming after weeks of pressure on South Africa from Washington over a controversial land law that resulted in the US cutting off funding to the country.
The US government alleged that South Africaâs white minority was being unfairly targeted. An allegation robustly refuted by the government in Pretoria.
In Rasoolâs view he thought that President Trump was âmobilising a supremacismâ and trying to âproject white victimhood as a dog whistleâ as the white population faced becoming a minority in the US.
The comments resulted in sharply divided opinions locally and internationally over whether he was walking a âfine lineâ as a diplomat in giving an âhonest assessmentâ or âcrossed a lineâ that no ambassador should cross.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio was unequivocal in his response, saying that Rasool was âno longer welcomeâ in the US because he was a ârace-baiting politician who hates Americaâ and Trump.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosaâs office said the US decision to expel Rasool was âregrettableâ as the president himself defended the âgreat deal of progressâ the ambassador had been making prior to his expulsion.
âSo this is actually a hiccup⊠that we are working on straightening out,â Ramaphosa told reporters on Monday repeating a stance aimed at cooling temperatures.
Officials in his government however, were more scathing in their assessment of the diplomatâs actions, telling South Africaâs Sunday Times newspaper, in an anonymous briefing, that Rasoolâs actions were an âisolated incident of somebody who crossed a line that diplomats know they shouldnât crossâ.
In the US, the chairperson of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Jim Risch, lauded Rubio for calling out Rasoolâs âdisgracefulâ remarks.
But to those in South Africa who know Rasool, his views on the White Houseâs policies and the way he expressed them came as no surprise.
Growing up in Cape Town and classified as âcolouredâ by the apartheid system, Rasool, as a young boy, along with his family, was forced to leave his home in the centre of the city.
The racial zoning imposed by the government meant that people who were not classified as âwhiteâ had to live in poorly provisioned areas a long way from the heart of Cape Town.
Rasoolâs activism began in the 1970s during his school years.
âI really had no idea where I was going until after I tasted my first tear gas, saw my first rubber bullet and fled my first whop from the police when I entered high school in 1976,â Georgetown University quoted him as saying for a profile piece in 2015.
âThat experience was life-altering. It gave me a crash course in politics.â
This activism would later result in his imprisonment near Cape Town, where he crossed paths with Nelson Mandela, who would go on to be South Africaâs first democratically elected president.
Rasool served in various leadership positions within the governing African National Congress and South Africa before being appointed to his first stint as US ambassador from 2010 to 2015, when Barack Obama was president.
He was named as ambassador again in 2024, because of his previous experience and extensive network of Washington contacts.
Faiez Jacobs, who has known Rasool for over 30 years, first as fellow activists fighting against apartheid and then within the ANC, came to his defence over his recent comments.
He was one of the attendees at the virtual event.
According to Mr Jacobs, Rasool was asked to provide an analysis on the current situation in the US and did so in a âvery objective, academicâ way. He added that though the envoy was explaining his honestly held views and was not trying to stir up trouble, he detected another motive for the reaction.
âThe fact that he [is] a Muslim, the fact that he represented our countryâs views on Palestine⊠Those are all the real reasons why heâs been heâs been targeted,â Mr Jacobs told the BBC.
Last year, South Africa took Israel to the International Court of Justice alleging that Israel was engaging in âgenocidal actsâ in Gaza, which it denied.
University of Johannesburg international relations expert Oscar van Heerden said that on his appointment Rasool was âdealt a bad handâ and âknew and understoodâ what he was getting himself into this time around.
âKnives were already out for Rasool before he even arrived in Washington⊠[and] by the time he arrived it was a mere formality to find a reason to be able to get rid of him,â Dr Van Heerden said.
The academic first crossed paths with Rasool in 1985 while he was a student and the diplomat was a high school teacher who was âguiding youngstersâ like himself and giving them the ânecessary political educationâ.
He described Rasool as a âdevout Muslimâ who âstands for the Palestinian cause of self-determinationâ.
On Rasoolâs view of the Trump government, Dr Van Heerden said the diplomat was caught in a âdifficult positionâ because he had to deal with an âopenly antagonisticâ host nation that in his opinion had weaponised diplomacy and foreign policy.
And while plans are reportedly under way to find a replacement for Rasool, Dr Van Heerden argued that no amount of experience or seniority would be enough to appease the Trump administration and that only someone they âcompletely agree withâ may succeed.

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