SOUTH African President Cyril Ramaphosa will travel to the United States next week for a working visit that includes a closely watched meeting with US President Donald Trump, his office announced late Wednesday.
The bilateral talks will take place on May 21 at the White House in Washington DC. According to a statement from the South African Presidency, the leaders will discuss a range of bilateral, regional and global issues.
‘The president’s visit to the US provides a platform to reset the strategic relationship between the two countries,’ the statement said.
Aid cuts and ICJ case sour ties
Relations between South Africa and the United States have deteriorated significantly since Trump’s return to the White House in January. Tensions escalated after the US administration cut all financial assistance to South Africa, citing opposition to Pretoria’s land reform programme and its decision to pursue a genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice.
The move dealt a blow to long-standing development and trade ties between the two nations. The United States remains South Africa’s second-largest bilateral trading partner, after China.
Refugee status for White South Africans sparks backlash
The diplomatic strain deepened further this week when the Trump administration granted refugee status to 59 White South Africans, claiming they faced racial discrimination and threats linked to land reform.
Pretoria has pushed back strongly, insisting there is no credible evidence of systemic persecution against White citizens. President Ramaphosa criticised Washington’s stance, saying the US ‘has got the wrong end of the stick’.
South African officials argue that land reform is being pursued through legal and constitutional means, aimed at addressing deep-rooted inequalities stemming from apartheid-era land dispossession.
Strategic dialogue under difficult conditions
Ramaphosa’s visit comes at a critical juncture, with key issues such as trade preferences under AGOA, energy cooperation, and Africa’s global positioning likely on the agenda. The Biden administration had previously offered warmer engagement on these fronts, but Trump’s new foreign policy posture has unsettled Pretoria.
The South African government views the trip as a chance to repair diplomatic trust and ensure continued collaboration despite the tensions. However, analysts note that any improvement in ties may hinge on resolving the growing ideological rift over international law, aid, and migration.
Whether the meeting results in a reset or further friction remains to be seen, but the stakes are undeniably high.