South Africa US tensions intensified after President Donald Trump announced that South Africa would not be invited to next year’s G20 summit in Florida, triggering strong diplomatic pushback from Pretoria. The remark has sparked fresh debate about the state of relations between the two nations and the political motives behind the decision.
South Africa US tensions as G20 dispute widens
President Trump accused South Africa of refusing to properly hand over the G20 presidency at the Johannesburg summit. He claimed that the ceremony should have been conducted in front of US officials and argued that the South African government acted in bad faith. As a result, he declared that the US would block South Africa from participating in the 2026 G20 summit in Miami.
However, South Africa insists it followed the correct protocol. President Cyril Ramaphosa explained that the US delegation did not attend the leaders’ gathering in Johannesburg. Because of that, South African officials delivered the handover documents quietly at the country’s foreign affairs headquarters, where a US diplomat accepted them without incident.
Political tensions escalate as Trump renews criticism
Trump has long criticised South Africa’s government, often repeating widely debunked claims of “white genocide” and land seizures targeting white farmers. His latest comments again accused South Africa of “killing white people” and suggested the country should not be part of global decision-making forums.
Ramaphosa rejected the accusations as misinformation meant to harm South Africa’s international standing. He noted that the US had chosen to skip the summit on its own, yet now blamed South Africa for events beyond its control. He also criticised the threat to cut payments and subsidies, calling it an unnecessary escalation.
G20 leaders defend process and call for unity
Other G20 members have criticised the US stance, urging the bloc to protect the integrity of its processes. The 2025 summit in Johannesburg—the first ever held in Africa—ended with a declaration focused on climate cooperation and efforts to reduce global inequality.
The US delegation disagreed with parts of the declaration and accused South Africa of using its presidency to advance political agendas. Pretoria denies this, insisting it ran a fair, transparent leadership term.
As diplomatic exchanges continue, analysts say the South Africa US tensions could influence upcoming G20 negotiations and shape broader geopolitical alliances.








