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Race for sanctions: African Americans against apartheid, 1946-1994. By Francis Njubi Nesbitt. 2004. (The book was published by the prestigious Blacks in the Diaspora Series edited by Darlene Clark Hine,Bloomington: Indiana University Press) This study traces the role of African American activists in the international anti-apartheid movement from its inception in the late 1940s to the attainment of majority rule in South Africa in the elections 1994. It begins with the forgotten years of the movement between 1946 and 1955 when the Council on African Affairs organized famine relief campaigns, legal defense funds, sit-ins and demonstrations at South African embassies and petitioned the United Nations to impose international sanctions. In 1946 CAA members Alphaeus Hunton and Eslanda Robeson worked with India's representative Vijaya Pandit to block South Africa's attempt to annex South West Africa and to impose sanctions on the regime for discriminating against people of Indian descent. In addition to the rally, the CAA also organized a picket at the South African embassy on November 21, 1946. To the surprise of South Africa, the Council's view prevailed and the UN rejected South Africa's attempt to annex South West Africa. While the efforts to pass sanctions against South Africa was vetoed by the United States and the United Kingdom, the campaign to raise the world's awareness of the plight of nonwhites in South Africa was a resounding success. It set in motion the sanctions movement that would eventually succeed in isolating South Africa and expelling it from the United Nations. As more African and Asian 1 countries joined the United Nations in the 1950s and 1960s, the body moved inexorably toward sanctions. These efforts paid off on 6 November 1962 when member states voted in the General Assembly to sever diplomatic, transportation and economic relations with South Africa. Although this resolution was nonbinding, it was a major victory for the external anti-apartheid movement. To be effective, however, the movement needed the support of the Security Council where the UK and the US continued to block mandatory sanctions. The study examines the United States government's role in suppressing radical anti-colonial organizations and financing the establishment of cold war alternatives like the African American Institute and the American Society of African Culture. These organizations were ostensibly created by African-American liberals to establish ties between African nationalists and African-Americans but were really designed to influence African students in the United States by steering them away from "radicals" like Paul Robeson and W.E.B. Du Bois. These official and unofficial interests in Africa's minerals and anti-communism also led to the establishment of African studies as a legitimate field of study in the United States. The early African studies programs were funded by the CIA and Pentagon, which encouraged scholars to produce reports about the emergence of African nationalism. The African studies programs established had a distinctive cold war ideology and orientation. They were the academic arm of US imperialism in Africa. They provided the data that were used to make decisions about the importance of the Congo and South Africa to the United States. By the 1960s, these cold war organs were discredited and their journals considered anti-black and neocolonialist. Both AMSAC and ANLCA folded after revelations of CIA funding. The AAI continued to exist as a predominately white organization. These new tensions were demonstrated in the withdrawal of African Americans and Africans 2 from the African Studies Association in 1969 because of differences over involvement in political actions like the anti-apartheid movement and the lack of representation of people of African descent in the board of directors. These black scholars then formed the African Heritage Studies Association with a political action committee that included many of the veteran anti-apartheid activists who would work behind the scenes in the formation of TransAfrica and the Free South Africa Movement. Among the members of this committee were Hershelle Challanor, Willard Johnson and Ronald Walters who would all become members of the board of TransAfrica and TransAfrica Forum in the 1980s. It is this group that brought in Randall Robinson to lead TransAfrica after the organizing conference in 1976. The study argues that radicals played an important role in pushing the movement to support the national liberation struggles in southern Africa. In the 1970s, radical groups espousing ideologies ranging from Black Nationalism to Maoism to Marxist Leninism played an important role in pushing the movement to support armed struggle. This was demonstrated in the 30,000-strong crowd that attended the Africa Liberation Day march in Washington D.C. in 1972 and the large crowds that returned for ALD activities throughout the 1970s. These groups reflected a revival of pan-Africanist sentiment that created the conditions for the emergence of an anti-apartheid culture in the United States. Like the civil rights movement of the 1960s, the anti-apartheid movement introduced a new language and culture with its own language, values and heroes to the United States. A specific discourse on sanctions, divestment, divestiture, disinvestment and krugerrands was clearly associated with the movement. Images of Nelson Mandela, Robben Island, Soweto and Sharpeville became tools for galvanizing outrage against the racist regime. SNCC and the Black Panthers evolved into anti- 3 imperialist and Third Worldist organizations. SNCC formed an international affairs desk under James Forman in 1966 and organized sit-ins at the South African Embassy in Washington D.C. Forman attended the International Conference on Apartheid, Racial Discrimination and Colonialism in Southern Africa in 1967 where he presented SNCC's position paper on apartheid. By its demise in 1970, SNCC had taken on a strong Pan Africanist orientation although it was split between the "back to Africa" emigrationists and those who saw their future in the United States. This latter group became very important in moving the anti-apartheid movement from a pacifist orientation to unequivocal support for the armed struggle. It was also this upsurge in popular anti-apartheid sentiment in the African American community that led the CBC to take up the issue of apartheid. Ron Dellums drafted the first sanctions bill introduced in the US Congress in response to a petition from the Polaroid Revolutionary Workers Union. It is this bill that becomes the basis for US sanctions against South Africa thirteen years later when Congress passes the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act over President Reagan's veto. The PRWM's access to Congress demonstrates how the black freedom movement in the United States created the conditions for the success of the antiapartheid movement. It is the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965 and the election of African American legislators that led to a key turning point in the U.S. anti-apartheid movement. Before the election of African Americans to Congress, anti-apartheid activists were outsiders with no access to the decision-making process. It is the establishment of the Congressional Black Caucus in 1969 that made the institution of a black lobby (TransAfrica) possible in 1977. The CBC included South Africa in its legislative agenda from the outset. The Black Caucus 4 was also the source of the Comprehensive Antiapartheid Act of 1986 that transformed U.S. policy toward South Africa. This collaboration between congressional leaders and human rights activists was reflected in the Free South Africa Movement, which organized the arrests of thousands of demonstrators outside the South African Embassy in Washington D.C. in the early 1980s. During the demonstrations numerous African American Congressmen were arrested along with ordinary citizens and celebrities in the sit-ins outside the South African Embassy. The study examines the complex process through which this loose coalition of politicians, activists, scholars, students, ministers and journalists was established to implement on of the most remarkable examples of grass-roots human rights groups influencing the foreign policy of a major superpower. The movement forced the pro-apartheid Reagan administration to change its foreign policy and debunked the myth that foreign policy is the preserve of national elites. Prior to the emergence of the CBC, anti-apartheid organizations were limited to disseminating information to the media and the public without having any impact on the Congress where decisions were being made. With the election of African-American legislators following the Voting Rights Act of 1965, however, the anti-apartheid movement acquired important allies in Congress and moved to a different level. The CBC itself also recognized the need for a partnership between black legislators and activists in the effort to change domestic and foreign policies. This need stemmed from the fact that CBC initiatives like sanctions against South Africa were not likely to be sponsored by corporations or the traditional lobby groups that control interest group politics in Washington. Thus the CBC was involved in the formation of advocacy organizations like 5 TransAfrica and the Free South Africa Movement as an alternative source of influence and power. This collaboration between legislators and activists was the key to the transformation of U.S. foreign policy toward South Africa. This partnership also points to the weaknesses of the "interest group politics" theories of the political scientists that fail to account for the role of racism in U.S. foreign policy. Classical political science theories consider foreign policy the preserve of a small elite usually working in close contact with Congress and the president. The focus is usually on the influence of "interest groups" formed by corporations and other powerful elites who have investments abroad and, therefore, a stake in U.S. policies. There is no place for Blacks, Native Americans, Hispanics or communitybased organizations in this theory as they have no investments abroad and do not finance elections. As we have seen, most studies of the anti-apartheid movement fail to deal with the issue of racism in U.S. policies and the impact of black organizations in the antiapartheid movement. The role of the CBC, TransAfrica and FSAM in the transformation of U.S. policies toward South Africa, however, can only be understood through an examination of the links between racism and U.S. foreign policy and the roots of the anti-apartheid movement in the black freedom movement of the 1940s. 6