South Africa — which brought the genocide case against Israel to the International Court of Justice over the Gaza campaign — has not criticised Washington for the strikes on Iran.
The silence is a departure from the position Pretoria established in December 2023, when it filed the ICJ application arguing that Israel was committing genocide in Gaza. That filing was the most consequential legal challenge to Israeli military operations in decades and positioned South Africa as the leading voice of the Global South on Middle Eastern conflicts. The expectation — among supporters and critics alike — was that Pretoria would apply similar scrutiny to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran. Brazil has condemned the strikes and called for adherence to international law . South Africa has not.
The reasons are structural rather than ideological. South Africa depends on preferential US trade access under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) — a programme the Trump administration has already signalled it may revoke. South Africa's economy contracted in 2024 and is growing below 1%; losing AGOA eligibility would cost billions in export revenue and accelerate an already severe unemployment crisis. The ICJ case against Israel carried no economic cost — Israel is a minor trade partner for South Africa. Criticising Washington carries a direct and measurable one. South Africa's silence does not represent a change in principle. It reveals where principle meets leverage — and where leverage wins.
