Tanzania: Why Samia's Moscow Visit Reflects Strategic Non-Alignment Rather Than a Geopolitical Blunder
[Daily News] Dar es Salaam -- THE recent article titled "The Moscow Miscalculation: Samia's Russia Trip Is a Geopolitical Blunder Tanzania Cannot Afford" offers a strongly critical view of President Samia Suluhu Hassan's historic visit to Russia.
Dar es Salaam — THE recent article titled "The Moscow Miscalculation: Samia's Russia Trip Is a Geopolitical Blunder Tanzania Cannot Afford" offers a strongly critical view of President Samia Suluhu Hassan's historic visit to Russia.
It claims that the trip damages Tanzania's ties with Western countries, hampers diplomatic efforts with Washington and puts the country at economic and political risk.
Although these concerns merit discussion in a democratic society, the article has a notable flaw: It predominantly emphasises the estimated costs of engaging with Russia, while largely overlooking the possible advantages of diversified diplomacy, economic independence, strategic non-alignment and Tanzania's long-standing foreign policy principles.
A balanced assessment involves considering both the potential risks Tanzania faces by engaging with Russia and the losses it might incur by restricting itself to a limited set of international partnerships in an increasingly multipolar world.
The false assumption that diplomacy is a Zero-Sum Game is perhaps what underlies the author of the Moscow calculation.
The article's main assumption is that Tanzania's cooperation with Russia inherently diminishes its ties with the United States and Europe. This assumption is increasingly outdated.
Modern international relations no longer depend on rigid Cold War alliances. Instead, countries frequently maintain strong connections with multiple powers simultaneously. For instance, India has close strategic relations with the United States while also engaging economically and diplomatically with Russia.
Saudi Arabia maintains a close partnership with Washington while also deepening its connections with China and Russia. Turkey stays a NATO member but keeps intricate relations with Russia. South Africa interacts with Western economies and BRICS nations.
The article does not clarify why Tanzania should be restricted from the same diplomatic flexibility that many emerging economies have. In truth, engaging with Russia does not mean refusing Western partnerships.
The edition also overlooks Tanzania's historical non-aligned stance. The author dismisses any comparison between President Samia's visit and Mwalimu Julius Nyerere's historic trip to Moscow in 1969.
The comparison is still relevant not because the global environment is exactly the same, but because the core principle stays consistent. Nyerere's foreign policy was built on strategic autonomy and non-alignment. Nonalignment never meant avoiding relationships with major powers; it was about preserving the freedom to in
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