South Africa President Thabo Mbeki hosts at Spier Wine Estate near Cape Town a retreat attended by a Palestinian delegation (headed by Saeb Erekat and Ziad Abu Zayyad) and an Israeli delegation (headed by Yossi Beilin and Avraham Burg). The declared objective of the retreat is to share the South African experience with the two sides in a way that helps progress in the peace process. It constitutes a first step in South Africa’s attempt at mediation. Other steps (especially the exchange of visits) will follow. The initiative will fail due to Israel’s rejection: the Israeli participants are former politicians with no influence on government, whereas the Palestinian participants are PLO officials.
From the formation of South Africa
’s first democratic government in 1994, both the government and the governing party, the African National Congress
(ANC), expressed support for the Palestinian people, Palestinian self-determination, and the
The first postapartheid South African government, headed by Nelson Mandela , inherited a set of international relations from apartheid South Africa that it mostly retained, believing that it served South Africa better to engage with different states than to isolate (or be isolated from) them. Among these inherited relations were strong ties with Israel, in sectors including military, intelligence, and nuclear weapons development.
The ANC-led government did not alter existing diplomatic, trade, or any other such relations between South Africa and Israel, but it did change some more contentious relationships. The apartheid government had dismantled its nuclear weapons program in 1989, thus ending that cooperation with Israel, and the democratic government ceased military cooperation. Officially, all weapons trading with Israel had ended by 1998, but questions have been raised about continuing arms sales to Israel by private South African companies.
In a major break with this past, the ANC, which had maintained decades-long ties with the PLO, balanced South Africa’s relations with Israel by establishing full diplomatic links with the State of Palestine in February 1995, ten months after Mandela became president.
Basis of South African Foreign Policy
Mandela had asserted: “Human rights will be the light that guides our foreign policy.” This, together with South Africa’s understanding of its national interest, drove foreign policy for three decades. The national interest was articulated in October 2022 in “Framework Document on South Africa’s National Interest and its Advancement in a Global Environment.” It defines the country’s national interest in these terms: “the protection and promotion of its national sovereignty and constitutional order, the well-being, safety and prosperity of its citizens, and a better Africa and world.” This normative posture is derived from the values spelled out in the South African Constitution: human dignity, equality, human rights, non-racialism, non-sexism, and democracy.
The framework document claims South Africa’s foreign policy “favours human rights, the peaceful settlement of disputes, transitional justice, respect for international law and norms and collective action through multilateral organs.” This approach guided South Africa’s policy on the Palestine question.
The Desire to Mediate
South Africa played central roles in several mediation initiatives in Africa, and in 2002 it launched the Presidential Peace Initiative (Spier Initiative ) to mediate between Palestinians and Israelis. Intended as a vehicle by which South Africans could help bring about a peaceful resolution to Israeli occupation and colonization, it tried to persuade relevant parties to engage in talks. The government believed it had credibility with Israelis and Palestinians who were committed to peace, especially since it almost dogmatically supported the Oslo Agreement and a two-state solution.
The initiative included a range of moves: visits to South Africa by members of Israel’s right-wing Likud Party , visits to Palestinian and Israeli officials by South Africans, meetings between Palestinian and Israeli political figures, meetings between former Israeli army generals in South Africa and former generals of the apartheid-era South African Defence Forces , support for Israeli conscientious objectors, communications with Palestinian resistance groups, and coordination with selected members of the Israeli intelligence and army.
Spier achieved little that could be considered a step toward ‘Palestinian-Israeli peace’. Israel used the terms of the initiative to extract benefits from South Africa (in which it partially succeeded) and to blunt South African support for the Palestinians (in which it failed). South Africa was repeatedly called upon by the pro-Israeli lobby and by Israel to demonstrate even-handedness and to end support for the Palestinian struggle.
In 2004, Israel’s Minister of Trade and Industry, Ehud Olmert
, and South Africa’s minister of trade and industry, Mandisi Mpahlwa
, signed a trade agreement between their two countries. It had a significant impact on bilateral relations: trade increased each year between 2005 and 2012 by almost 7 percent in each direction. But Israel rejected South Africa’s attempts to facilitate any agreement with the Palestinians. Even in meetings South Africa hosted, Israeli delegates were former politicians with little or no influence on their government, while Palestinian delegations included officials from the
In its broad objective, then, the Spier Initiative failed. Nevertheless, some officials continue to occasionally punt the notion that South Africa can mediate between Israel and the Palestinians. And pro-Israeli elements still try to use Spier’s objectives to keep South Africa “neutral,” make it more sympathetic to Israel, and ensure the continuation of the 2004 trade agreement.
Focus on the Palestinians
Israel’s benefits from the trade agreement increased until the Israel-South Africa relationship changed course around 2012.
South Africans were angered by Israel’s two major onslaughts against
The changed South African mood was not sudden; it followed at least half a decade of engagement with a range of Palestinians, including through the Spier process. By the late 2000s, many in the ANC realized that recognizing the State of Palestine and the PA as its government were inadequate. They had begun to question the notion of the PLO and PA being the “sole representatives” of the Palestinian people – especially after
Within days of Hamas leader
The approach to the various Palestinian factions was initiated by South Africa’s ambassador to
In 2011, Ebrahim – now a deputy foreign minister – met
The South African government has encouraged non-governmental efforts at fostering reconciliation between Palestinian factions and discussing the revival of an inclusive PLO. These efforts included Palestinians from within Israel, the
Slow Downgrade
Not unexpectedly, as the South African government focused on intra-Palestinian matters, its appetite for mediation between Israelis and Palestinian waned.
In 2010, one South African participated in the Freedom Flotilla (2010) that attempted to break Israel’s siege of Gaza. After Israel’s attack on the flotilla on 30 May 2010, South Africa withdrew its ambassador to Tel Aviv , Ismail Coovadia ; he returned two months later.
Two years later, the Palestine solidarity movement mobilized in response to numerous reports of a stream of South African groups hosted in Israel by the Israeli government, including delegations from the ANC Youth League , police going for training, and businesses sending staff for training. Deputy Minister Ebrahim Ebrahim announced a policy prohibiting state officials from visiting Israel unless it was for their diplomatic duties or to “further the peace process.” By 2013, the stream of delegations became a trickle, and trade also began to decrease.
The ANC’s December 2017 Conference called on government to downgrade the South African embassy in Tel Aviv to a liaison office. In May 2018, after Israel killed 234 Palestinians participating in the
The Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Lindiwe Sisulu
, later said the recall was the first step in the downgrade process. The ambassador was never returned and the embassy has operated without an ambassador and with junior staff ever since. In November 2023, the government withdrew all South African diplomats from Israel, in protest against Israel’s genocide in Gaza. By then, the government – especially President
South Africa’s stance toward Israel was also reflected in the African Union
(AU). In July 2021,
South Africa’s Response to al-Aqsa Flood and Israel’s Genocide
Since 7 October 2023, when Palestinian resistance forces in Gaza broke through the fence surrounding the territory and attacked targets in southern Israel, the South African government focused attention on relations with Israel and the deteriorating conditions of the Palestinian people. Within hours of the 7 October operation, South Africa expressed concern at the escalation, blaming the illegal occupation of Palestinian land, settlement expansion, desecration of Muslim and Christian holy sites in
The South African cabinet subsequently slammed the 7 October attack, but the focus remained on Israel’s onslaught. As the death toll and destruction in Gaza increased, Ramaphosa and Pandor issued strong condemnations. The latter and Hamas leader Haniyeh discussed the situation during a phone call. The frenetic government activity peaked on 6 November 2023 with the announcement that South Africa withdraw diplomats from Tel Aviv.
A week later, the South African Parliament passed a resolution calling on the government to expel the Israeli ambassador and shut down the Israeli embassy, neither of which occurred. On the same day, Ramaphosa hosted a special meeting of BRICS nations (Brazil , Russia , India , China , and South Africa) to discuss the Israeli genocide. Tensions intensified when Ramaphosa announced that South Africa was one of six countries that had referred Israel to the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes and that Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli politicians should be tried by the ICC.
South Africa vs. Israel in the International Court of Justice
South Africa was one of fifty-two states that participated in the International Court of Justice (ICJ) hearing regarding the legality of Israel’s occupation at the end of February 2023, arguing that the occupation was illegal. The hearing had followed a request from the UN General Assembly for an ICJ advisory opinion.
On 29 December 2023, the ICJ announced that South Africa had instituted proceedings against Israel, accusing it of violating its obligations under the
South Africa’s application evoked several different responses. First, Israel, the United States , and other Israeli allies attacked South Africa, accusing it and, especially Pandor, of being on Iran ’s payroll. Relations between South Africa and Israel worsened. But there was also an outpouring of support for South Africa from the public in the Global North and the Global South and from various Global South governments.
Despite these strong positions and actions, the Palestine solidarity movement continues to criticize the South African government for allowing the export of coal and other important products to Israel, for not prosecuting South Africans who served in the Israeli army, and for not officially severing diplomatic relations with Israel.