President Samia Suluhu Hassan (right) with the Minister of Foreign Affairs and East African Cooperation, Dr. Stergomena Tax. PHOTO | COURTESY
Summary
·
A
successful foreign policy must be reflective of the country’s domestic
priorities.
President Samia Suluhu Hassan announced last November that the country’s foreign policy is under review to make it more reflective of current realities.
The focus is still very much on
economic diplomacy, but with a sustainable view of attaining economic
prosperity.
Over the last two decades since the
country adopted an economic-oriented foreign policy, critics have argued that
it has become obstructionist, withdrawn, and overly cautious in venturing into
regional affairs.
In light of escalating tensions
between superpowers, the president recommended caution in order to keep the
nation out of any future confrontations.
Will a review help change this perception?
According to experts, foreign policy
is a projection of domestic policies on specific issues outside of the
country's political boundaries.
In other words, for a foreign policy
to succeed, it must be reflective of the country’s priorities on the domestic
front.
Tanzania’s ‘traditional’ foreign
policy under Mwalimu Nyerere was underpinned by a domestic policy of Ujamaa na
Kujitegemea, which was anchored on the principles of equality for all people,
unity, and a pan-Africanist view of regional and global politics.
For all the challenges Ujamaa na
Kujitegemea had as a governing policy on the domestic front, like attempting to
move beyond history’s pace, it seamlessly integrated with the interpretation of
the country’s foreign policy at a time of momentous regional and global
changes.
The liberation wars waged across the
continent and the Cold War between the then-global superpowers were auspicious
for the country.
Political stability at home gave
room for political leaders to pursue regional and global ambitions.
By the time Mwalimu retired in 1985,
Uganda had been through four presidents with none of them relinquishing power
voluntarily, and to make matters worse, its future president and his rebel
group were on their way to capture power in a year's time.
Kenya was down to its second
president; a man who paid more attention to domestic threats and his own
political survival after a failed coup attempt that changed him for the worse.
There was no appetite for lofty
ideals such as Pan-Africanism.
Burundi was down to its second
president and headed for another coup in two years’ time. With continued
instability at home, there was no time for any marked footprint of its foreign
policy on the regional or global stage.
Rwanda, too, was down to its second
president, who had come to power in a military coup. The country was too
consumed by its own crises to have energy and time to spare for regional and
global politics, barring security issues, which consumed the entire Great Lakes
region.
D.R. Congo (then Zaire) was under
the reactionary regime of Mobutu Sese Seko, whose priorities in foreign policy
were intended to guarantee the survival of his very corrupt regime.
He, too, had civil wars to contend
with and secession attempts. His regime was a pariah to Pan-Africanists.
South Sudan was still 26 years away
from becoming the newest nation in the world. Its future leaders were waging a
bloody war to either secede or gain more autonomy from the rest of Sudan.
As such, through this mixture of
successful foreign policy and political stability at home, Tanzanians came to
pride themselves on being 'different' from their neighbours. This led to a
sense of 'exceptionalism', with a high moral ground compared to their neighbours.
Mwalimu Nyerere’s magic was tying
the many struggles of the era and the country’s involvement in them beyond any
economic benefits; there was no tangible price tag. The country was giddy with
its own achievements on the regional and global stage.
All the causes were noble, from
hosting all sorts of liberation movements to providing moral and material
support to them and hosting many refugees from the different conflicts in the
Great Lakes region.
This is what made it possible for
people to wholeheartedly support the country's foreign engagements. It was all
too grand, too noble, and too precious to them.
All that changed with the 'new'
foreign policy and its focus on economic gains.
The heirs of that great political
shaman who captivated his country, the region, and the global powers with his
spells have struggled ever since in their delicate dances of balancing between
the domestic and the foreign.
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