Russian President Vladimir Putin South African President Cyril Ramaphosa
Summary
·
The US
envoy to South Africa has accused the country of having covertly provided arms
to Russia
What South Africa allegedly supplied to Russia, sparking an extraordinary diplomatic row and jeopardising billions in US-South African trade and investment, is being treated as a top secret by President Cyril Ramaphosa's government.
The National Conventional Arms
Control Committee, which monitors and certifies all arms trade in and out of
South Africa, says no arms or ammunition have been sold to Russia from South
Africa.
Far from being contrite, the South
Africans are very angry, with a spokesman for the presidency saying on Friday
that Washington would not be allowed to dictate South Africa's relations with
other countries, and that US ambassador Reuben Brigety would receive a démarche
- a diplomatic reprimand of the highest order.
Analysts are concerned that the
South Africans are missing the point: one of its largest trading partners,
providing aid and assistance programmes as well as favourable and preferential
trade terms, is prepared to break off a long-standing 'friendship' and withdraw
billions of dollars in promised aid over allegations that South Africa is
supplying arms and ammunition to Russia.
With the US ambassador saying he
would 'stake my life on the accuracy of this information', the South Africans
have responded with an investigation, but also with great indignation at the US
diplomatic move in the full glare of the media spotlight.
With the story at the top of the
domestic news agenda, not least because no one has been able to publicly back
up the American allegations with actual evidence, political observers across
the spectrum are both puzzled by what lies behind the row and worried about
what it means for US-South African relations in the future.
Whatever prompted US Ambassador
Brigety's public outburst in front of the summoned media, it is important
enough for Washington to have made a very public point, with the ambassador
highlighting South Africa's - and by extension, the surrounding countries' -
vulnerability under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), which offers
preferential trade relations and tariff reductions to selected African states.
Breach of diplomatic etiquette
With the American diplomat summoned
to explain what the South Africans called a serious breach of diplomatic
etiquette, and the issue of the docking of the sanctioned Russian-flagged cargo
ship, the Lady R, at South Africa's Simonstown naval base last December having
already been formally raised behind closed doors, the row has blown up to the
point where S Africa's status under AGOA seems all but over, say economic
analysts here who are worried about the fallout from the incident.
With the vital AGOA preferential
trade arrangement only up for renewal in 2025, the more pressing question is
what the impact will be on S Africa's annual $22 billion trade with America,
plus billions more in promised aid and assistance programmes.
AgriSA, a civil society group
representing farmers, has said that the loss of AGOA eligibility is likely to
cost the country billions.
Economists also pointed out that the
US ambassador's emphasis on a lack of appreciation for American aid, support
and investment was, in effect, a thinly veiled threat to the existing
relationship between Washington and South Africa.
Amid the adamant denials and equally
adamant accusations, the mystery at the heart of the furore remains.
What the Russians could possibly
want from South Africa in the way of weapons is a key part of the puzzle.
Certainly, the behaviour of the Lady
R prior to her docking in early December, ostensibly to unload a long-standing
order for ammunition from the SA National Defence Force, was at least
suspicious.
According to African military
analyst and veteran military correspondent Helmoed-Römer Heitman, the ship
travelled west to east around the Cape, passing both Cape Town harbour and
Simonstown, before turning around and switching off its AIS, or automatic
identification system, used by all large ships at sea.
"The whole thing was supposed
to be super-secret. But they had to use huge lights to unload the cargo, and
there was a blackout at the time, so half of Simonstown was outside to witness
the only entertainment going on," Heitman told Nation.Africa.
"Many witnesses saw cargo being
unloaded, some being set aside and then taken out of the port in several trucks,
and some cargo that had been unloaded being reloaded on board.
"No one saw large equipment of
any kind being loaded onto the ship, and there was no noticeable traffic into
the naval base before the ship docked, so what exactly the S Africa was delivering,
if anything, must have been small, perhaps electronics such as circuit boards
or command and control systems that the Russians have had trouble getting by
other means (due to sanctions)," Heitman said.
The cargo ship, a container carrier
built in 2004, then anchored off Beira in northern Mozambique after offloading
some ammunition at Simonstown and allegedly loading more war materiel at the
South African naval port.
The official opposition has been
questioning whether the South African government has been supplying the Russian
military since the middle of last year, with repeated denials of any military
supplies.
But President Cyril Ramaphosa's
response to a parliamentary question on the matter on Thursday seemed to
indirectly confirm that there was some truth to the story, with the president
saying only that "in due course" all the information about what had
been unloaded and loaded would be revealed once the matter had been fully
"investigated", a process which was now underway.
The American embassy in South Africa
was contacted by the Nation for further comment on what evidence it had to back
up the ambassador's claims, but there was no immediate response.
South African military sources said
there was no clarity on what exactly South Africa could have supplied to
Russia, as most of the equipment and calibres used by the two countries are
different.
Both security sources and Democratic
Alliance leader John Steenhuisen suggested that the main offloads from the Lady
R were boxes of AK-47 ammunition.
Also included, according to Heitman,
were 107mm multiple rocket launchers of the type used by South African special
forces, as well as 23mm cannon ammunition and 14.5mm heavy machine gun
ammunition.
The vessel, a medium-sized cargo
carrier, then left South African waters and anchored in Beira, a key port and
city in northern Mozambique where ISIS-linked elements have been involved in a
long-running insurgency, regional military observers said.
It remains unclear exactly what arms
and ammunition South Africa may have offered Russia, but possibilities include
G5 and G6 artillery guns, the latter of which is self-propelled and the longest
range and most accurate of its kind in the world.
Developed during the era of racial
minority rule known as apartheid, the G5/G6 howitzer system is hyper-accurate
and can be set up and deployed in less than two minutes, with a range of up to
67kms (42 miles) using special long-range ammunition, striking within 5-10
metres of the target and at a high rate of fire of 8 rounds per minute.
The weapons system was used by both
sides in the Iran-Iraq conflict in the 1980s, and has been used in Yemen since
2015.
Military sources in South Africa
said that while it would make sense for the Russians to acquire a long-range,
hyper-accurate artillery system such as that produced by national arms
manufacturer Denel, the company, which is now 51 percent German-owned, would
"never sell G6s to Russia".
But the South African National
Defence Force (SANDF) is a plausible possible supplier of such a system,
capable of effectively countering US and NATO-supplied systems such as M777
artillery and HIMARS.
However, Heitman said there was no
evidence of such equipment being supplied by South Africa.
"While there are some 40+ G6s
in the SANDF arsenal, of which only two are in service, and over 70 G5s, the
same weapon but not self-propelled, of which only about 5 or 6 are in service,
the problem is that there is very little ammunition for them," Heitman
added.
"A Russian purchase of such
systems somehow makes sense, although they already have rough equivalents - but
the lack of ammunition for them is the real indicator that these weapons could
not have been involved; they are very large and heavy, and their movement into
the naval yard is almost certain to be noticed."
With large and small arms ruled out,
the question of what exactly the US ambassador was referring to remained
unanswered.
A well-placed security source told
NMG that "the only thing that made sense was maybe some electronic
equipment", perhaps hi-tech equipment that, though relatively small, was
vital for supplying the beleaguered Russian war machine.
Even without a clear public cause
for the dispute, it has only escalated since the allegations were made on
Thursday.
Ukraine's ambassador to South
Africa, Liubov Abravitova, urgently sought talks with her counterparts in
Pretoria on the issue.
President Ramaphosa said the US
ambassador's claims had undermined relations between the two countries.
Diplomatic sources in South Africa
said there was "no way" the US ambassador would have made his
comments without the go-ahead from the White House, and that mounting pressure
on the Ramaphosa administration over its perceived pro-Russian stance was now
rapidly mounting.
Recently, Ramaphosa personally
invited Russian leader Vladimir Putin to attend the upcoming summit of the
Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) grouping in South Africa
in August, and Putin accepted.
But Putin's attendance has been
thrown into doubt by the Interpol Red Notice arrest warrant issued against him
by the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes.
Last week, it was suggested through
diplomatic channels that Putin and South Africa could avoid an international
problem by having the Russian leader "virtually" attend, despite the
ruling African National Congress (ANC) vowing to "never arrest" the
Russian leader if he came to this country.
The suggestion came after a state
visit by Finnish President Sauli Niinistö, who told his South African host in
private that South Africa, as the newest member of Nato, needed its Finnish
"historic friends" to understand that it could not be
"friends" with Russia under Putin while the Kremlin was waging war in
Ukraine and also with Western countries like Finland and the other members of
Nato.
South Africa, Ramaphosa was told in
the bluntest terms, had to choose who it was going to be friends with - and the
stakes were high.
The ruling ANC is riven by
ideological divisions, with some left-wing elements still harbouring fond
memories of Russia's support in the struggle to overthrow the hated racist
apartheid system, and harsh views of alleged "Western imperialism",
with Washington portrayed in these quarters as the main "culprit".
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