Categories: Stories

What if Tsvangirai wins and Mugabe challenges the result

If this were not really a serious matter, I would have wished that Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai wins today’s elections and then Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front leader Robert Mugabe challenges the result.

I am quite certain this would expose the hypocrisy of the West once and for all, and demonstrate that the West is not interested in the people of Zimbabwe but their own, judging from what former State Department official Todd Moss said yesterday.

Zimbabwe, is nothing more than a potential market for United States companies waiting to be exploited, and us such must be opened up for investment with no strings attached.

The country was parcelled out more than a decade ago when then United States ambassador to Zimbabwe Joseph Sullivan wrote a cable in which he gave an after Mugabe scenario.

“In a reform environment, we also recommend OPIC and ExIm Bank consider loan guarantees for projects that promote US exports and shore up Zimbabwe’s dilapidated infrastructure. This could involve badly-needed rejuvenation of General Electric locomotives at the National Railway of Zimbabwe, Caterpillar machines at coal-miner Wankie Colliery and Boeing jets at Air Zimbabwe.

“Furthermore, the country’s participation in African Growth and Opportunity (AGOA) sessions as an observer (with full admission following free and fair elections) would allow Zimbabwean firms to plan a re-entry into the U.S. market. (Most U.S.-bound textile production here has migrated to AGOA countries.).

“We should also explore possibilities for including Zimbabwe in free trade negotiations with the Southern Africa Customs Union,” Sullivan said.

The United States has never deviated from that policy and Mugabe has been the only obstacle. If he lost, that would be the end, no matter how much he protested. But if Mugabe wins this is not the time for the State Department to sit on its hands and merely wait for Mugabe to die before pushing for change.

(39 VIEWS)

Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

Recent Posts

Zimbabwe third among the least free countries in SADC

Zimbabwe has been ranked third among the least free countries in Southern Africa but it…

May 24, 2026

Why I had a girlfriend two months after my wife’s death- Take 1

I had always considered it a curse for a wife to die before her husband.…

May 18, 2026

Why I had a girlfriend two months after my wife’s death

This is a true story about the challenges and loneliness I faced when my wife…

May 17, 2026

Coming soon

My first long-form article in booklet form: Why I had a girlfriend two months after…

May 16, 2026

Insider Publisher starts whatsapp channel

The editor and publisher of The Insider, Charles Rukuni, has started a whatsapp channel through…

May 15, 2026

Who propped whom: Masiyiwa vs Nyambirai?

A friend who knows about my legal battle with Zimbabwe’s richest man, Strive Masiyiwa, way…

May 1, 2026