A response to Peter Bruce: Misremembering Mbeki, lazily engaging Zuma 
Eusebius Mckaiser 

One of the first things I do every Monday morning is to read Business Day 
editor Peter Bruce. I am one of his biggest fans, because his 
“I’m-stumbling-to-the-bathroom-but-thinking-aloud” style of writing is 
genuinely entertaining, and unique. And often, even when I disagree, I find his 
interventions worth engaging. This morning, however, I was shocked by the 
absolute bizarre, retrospective and sycophantic praise of Thabo Mbeki, and 
un-argued for assault on Zuma. The column is worth unpacking because it is an 
example of the dangers of amnesia, willful blindness and revisionism, and the 
importance of reminding ourselves of the intellectual poverty of making 
assertions without substantiation. 

The party list system 
It is odd to argue that the ANC’s removal of Thabo Mbeki was a process headed 
towards a constitutional crisis and that the crisis was averted, most 
fortuitously, by the amazingly clever and self-sacrificing Mbeki who provided 
selfless guidance on how he should be constitutionally rather than illegally 
removed. 
First, this is all false as a matter of electoral fact. We have, for better or 
worse, a party list system in South Africa. Many of us rightly hate the system, 
but that does not mean we can reinvent the legal facts about the system. 
Political parties draw up, at their behest, lists of who should go to 
Parliament or not and then the president is chosen from there. Related, this 
means that the party can remove someone from their party list and the result 
would be that they would be immediately recalled from government. This is all 
the ANC was doing: nothing more, nothing less. It was pedestrian constitutional 
processes being followed, so the constitutional crisis that was being imagined, 
is a lie, or in the best case scenario the result of Frank Chikane/Peter Bruce 
not getting elementary facts about our electoral system. 
Second, Bruce never explains the “illegal” process that Mbeki was saving the 
ANC from embarking on? It is quite a massive claim to suggest the governing 
party was designing an illegal mechanism or process to unseat one if its own. 
Surely this claim demands clearer and legally fact based elaboration? I for one 
would love to hear more on this fascinatingly contentious point. (Well, I lie: 
given that the process that was followed was actually constitutionally 
permissible there is no case for illegality that can be formulated.) 

The idea that Mbeki was a champion of constitutionalism is also, of course, an 
exercise in forgetting. It is under the Mbeki administration that the increased 
use of state machinery for extra-political purposes became intense. Mbeki of 
course was not found guilty of any such abuse himself, but more subtle 
examples, like his usurping of the JIT probe into the arms deal, and his poorly 
spirited attempt at another ANC presidency (no doubt with the desire to be 
president of the country remotely) are hardly the hallmarks of constitutional 
excellence and role modeling. (Other examples abound: The ANC’s so called 
attack on constitutionalism – if one buys this claim which I do not wholly do – 
all pre-dates Zuma, such as the 2005 headlines about the imminent clipping of 
judges’ wings off the back of Mbeki’s January 8th speech in Mthatha. And, of 
course, in the run up to Polokwane itself several Mbeki mandarins argued that a 
constitutional change for a third term would be acceptable, a claim that Mbeki 
ignored – and I happily speak under correction - rather than publicly 
denouncing that idea outright. The overall point, at any rate, remains: Mbeki 
at best has a chequered relationship with constitutionalism.) 
So, not only was the ANC behaving constitutionally but, in addition, to set 
Mbeki’s leadership up as the gold standard of good leadership on 
constitutionalism, is absurd. 

On Ramaphosa, Sexwale et.al. 
Bruce seems unaware of the fact that both Ramaphosa and Sexwale played critical 
roles in getting Mbeki unseated. The assumption is that they have selfless 
goals and flawless skill-sets that could be used in the service of the country. 
This is lazy. First, both characters were part of the leadership structures 
that debated Mbeki’s removal and reportedly were some of the more vociferous 
voices in favour of his removal. Sexwale’s presidential ambitions are as clear 
as Julius Malema’s insincere commitment to economic freedom! They can hardly 
accurately be imagined to be ‘Mbeki-ites’ or ‘Anti-Zuma-ites’: they are career 
politician-businessmen, and should be as carefully and skeptically engaged as 
political figures as anyone else. It is odd that once politicians get anointed 
by the press, critical faculties relax in their presence. Second, the strengths 
and weaknesses of these leaders, as potential presidential candidates, are not 
discussed – it is simply asserted that they would do a wonderful job. Yet, if 
we take someone like Zweli Mkhize, for example, his record in the province of 
KwaZulu-Natal would come out a mixed bag at the most. (There is a sad possible 
reason for this: a “anything-but-Zuma-please!” attitude which results in a less 
than full assessment of each of the alternative candidates. This is most 
unfortunate.) 

Willful Journalistic blindness 
Bruce casually says that we were “all cross with Mbeki, for AIDS, for 
aloofness…” This is a weak acknowledgment of Mbeki’s weaknesses. In the context 
of the column it almost amounts to exculpating Mbeki, diminishing the extent of 
his personal and political shortcomings. More than 300 000 South Africans died 
from AIDS related illnesses as a result of Mbeki-led denialism. That cannot be 
waspishly noted in passing as if you are excusing a kid for spilling coffee on 
the couch. There is a toxic combination of journalistic willful blindness and 
callousness hasty writing going on in such a light, in-passing comment about 
Mbeki’s governance shortcomings. This is irresponsible, both from the point of 
view of a fearless commitment to truth – as one expects of ideal standards of 
journalism – and simply in fairness to other characters whose strengths and 
weaknesses you are more comfortable giving a thorough exposition of. 
Mbeki’s Aids policies are a textbook example of a political leader having a 
personal existential crisis – “The West thinks we can’t control our penises, 
and stuff!” – at the expense of his country. His paranoia about such negative 
outsider sentiment extended to an on-and-off attitude towards crime – 
acknowledging it the one day, only to use it the next day as a blunt instrument 
to berated whites. His finest moment was helping to craft decent centrist 
macroeconomic policies in the mid-1990s. But once he became President, it was 
steadily downhill from there, and any on balance assessment of his place in 
political history must be harsh. He is now doing a decent job, again, on the 
continent, but this is a red herring in the context of an audit of how he did 
as president of the country. 

Final thought 
Two closing thoughts: 

a) It is tiring to read lazy assertions about Zuma as dumb, disinterested, not 
reading anything other than about himself, etc. Not one shred of evidence is 
given for this characterisation by Bruce. All we have is some single anecdote 
from a “colleague”. Since when can a serious political sketch be based on a 
corridor related anecdote between colleagues? This is not just lazy – up there 
with some columnists who review books they have not read – but, frankly, unfair 
on Zuma. Zuma is not ideal as our president in my viewpoint. I would not defend 
him at all as a good president. (That’s a discussion for another day.) But I do 
defend his entitlement to be assessed based on the things he says and does 
rather than being reduced to vacuity. 
Now we have more to engage: a Zuma-led massive expansionary fiscus aimed at 
embedding a Big Idea – manufacturing as a catalyst for development – and there 
is much to chew on here, and elsewhere. Here is the point: there are so many 
good arguments against Zuma, and against Zuma’s governance record, and 
political skill and character, why settle for lazy assertion? 

b.) Very finally, a warning: we should be wary of reinforcing the pre-2009 view 
of Zuma, so nicely articulated by Xolela Mangcu, of a kind of cultural and 
aesthetic disapproval of someone who looks and sound differently to ourselves. 
Of course the media never did so with Mbeki – the ‘philosopher King’-identity 
could not be lampooned for fear of being accused of being racist or 
Afro-pessimistic. Ironically, there is more space during the Zuma presidency 
for Bruce to write this column – it’s analogous version, circa 2003, say, would 
probably not have been written. This kind of column should be replaced by 
evidence based, and sincere, engagement. If anything, folks, you make it too 
easy for the Presidency! By using prejudice as a substitute for hard-hitting 
factual analysis, excellent criticism can be conveniently set aside by the 
President because it can point to the more ad hominem rants in pieces of 
journalism. As my mom would have said, “Don’t put jam in their mouths, Peter!” 

But there is never a dull moment in Mzansi, is there? I wonder what Mbeki 
thinks of being called a “civilized patriot” – the drama will continue long 
after Mangaung. Fun times ahead, nervous journalism ahead too…. 

Eusebius McKaiser is a political analyst at Wits Centre for Ethics. 
Sent via my BlackBerry from Vodacom - let your email find you!

-----Original Message-----
From: Dominic Tweedie <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2012 17:41:45 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Letting the facts speak for themselves about the
 SA Navy


Business Day


*Letting facts speak for themselves*


*Rear-Admiral Bernhard H Teuteberg, Letters, Business Day, 2 March 2012 *

I write this as a personal response to Terry Crawford-Browne 
(Department's demand indefensible, Letters, February 29). I strongly 
object to the lack of factual data contained in his correspondence. I 
therefore wish to place some facts at the disposal of your readers in 
order that they might form their own opinion of Mr Crawford-Browne's 
continuous diatribe towards the South African National Defence Force 
(SANDF) and SA Navy, over a number of years, in particular relating to 
the acquisition of ships, submarines and aircraft as foreseen by the 
approved and supported White Paper on Defence (1996) and Defence Review 
(1998).

My list of admirals in the SA Navy indicates that we presently have one 
vice-admiral, four rear-admirals and 14 rear-admirals (junior grade) 
serving. I would suggest that Mr Crawford-Browne refrain from basing his 
research on the utterances of a defunct and deregistered military trade 
union.

The statement that one of our three submarines "is already permanently 
disabled" is incorrect. I have personally reported to the parliamentary 
committee on defence on the matter and shown journalists the state of 
this submarine. The SA Navy is furthermore using this period to develop 
an in-house submarine refit capability, using the SAS Manthatisi as the 
first in class for this process.

The two fully operational submarines have produced more successful 
operational sea-hours than was originally envisaged by the Project Wills 
Logistics Support Analysis; certainly proof of the success and 
sustainability of the submarine system. The statement that it would 
require R1bn to repair the SAS Manthatisi is totally incorrect.

The SA Navy has had a frigate permanently on station within the northern 
Mozambique channel as part of the approved Southern African Development 
Community (SADC) maritime security strategy, for at least the last year. 
In addition we have met all our operational and exercise commitments. In 
this regard the SA Navy has also exceeded the envisaged sea-days as 
expressed in the log support analysis for Project Sitron (frigates).

Our ships and submarines, including the men and women who serve in them, 
deserve more; including some recognition for the sacrifices they make to 
serve our country.

Our submarines were never bought to "protect fish", but to serve as part 
of our "defensive posture", by being a capable, successful and credible 
deterrence.

The department is underfunded in terms of the constitutional mandate of 
the SANDF, including the Defence White Paper (1996) and Defence Review 
(1998), and has been acknowledged by all political parties within our 
democratically elected Parliament. As a naval officer of about 38 years, 
I think the Somalia disaster cannot be resolved by military means alone. 
The military can, however, contain the resultant insecurity symptoms 
(piracy being one) while more lasting political, social and economic 
solutions are found.

Maritime security on the African continent is being addressed by means 
of the AU 2050-African Integrated Maritime Security Strategy, which 
calls for regional responses to regional maritime security issues. This 
calls for a SADC response to maritime security in our region, including 
the movement of piracy in a southerly direction. As part of SADC we try 
our best to ensure that our shipping lanes remain free from interference 
to support the ideals of a "developmental state".

We need to ensure that our men and women who serve our country are 
provided with the appropriate tools and with the resources to maintain 
and sustain operations, to uphold our constitutional imperative.

Our minister is therefore exercising her responsibility to our country 
in requesting that the government commits further financial resources to 
the defence objectives.


*R-Adm Bernhard H Teuteberg*
**
*Chief Director Maritime Strategy, SA Navy*
**
**
*From: http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/Content.aspx?id=166431*
**
**
**

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