In Focus March 08 2026

Adekeye Adebajo | Rubio’s racist rant in Munich

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  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks to reporters before his scheduled House and Senate Intelligence Committees briefing about Iran on Capitol Hill in Washington DC. Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks to reporters before his scheduled House and Senate Intelligence Committees briefing about Iran on Capitol Hill in Washington DC.
  • Adekeye Adebajo Adekeye Adebajo

Proudly touting his Christian Italian-Spanish ancestry, and echoing his president, Donald Trump’s prejudices and pet hates, United States (US) Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently delivered one of the most historically flawed speeches in living memory at the annual Munich Security Conference.

Praising the supposedly benevolent role of Western Christian nations in creating the contemporary world, he persistently stressed to his largely European audience that: “We are part of one civilization – Western civilization. We are bound to one another … by centuries of shared history, Christian faith, culture, heritage, language, ancestry … .” Rubio went on to extol a “great civilization that has every reason to be proud of its history”, and not be “shackled by guilt and shame”. The fact that the cream of Europe’s political elite greeted this prejudiced speech with a standing ovation exposed its own moral turpitude and historical amnesia.

WHITE MAN’S BURDEN

Rubio gloated effusively in noting that: “For five centuries … the West had been expanding – its missionaries, its pilgrims, its soldiers, its explorers pouring out from its shores to cross oceans, settle new continents, build vast empires expanding out across our globe.” However, we should more accurately recall that five centuries of European slavery and colonialism caused massive political, socio-economic, and cultural damage to indigenous people across the Black Atlantic in Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas.

Between 1450 and 1888, 12-15 million African enslaved were transported across the Atlantic as human chattel. Their four centuries of free labour greatly benefited European slaving nations and America, enabling the West’s industrialisation. The rape and abuse of indigenous women by European and American men was ubiquitous. Across the Americas, European invaders committed genocide against indigenous populations. Britain seized India in 1700 – with 27 per cent of global GDP – and, two centuries later, left it as one of the world’s most impoverished countries.

Rubio describes the Western alliance as one that “saved and changed the world”, without acknowledging how much of the world’s people regarded Hitler’s war as having represented their own liberation, as exhausted European colonial powers were, in fact, forced by Asian and African liberation fighters – from Dien Bien Phu, to Java, to Algiers, to Kenya – to give up their ill-gotten imperial loot.

Between 1945 and 1960, 40 Asian and African countries with populations of 800 million won their independence in the ‘Revolt against the West’. The death knell was finally sounded on the notorious European legal concept of colonial territory being declared terra nullius (no man’s land) in an era of a perverse “White Man’s burden”.

CURSE OF BERLIN

Rubio then portrays Berlin as the symbol of the Western alliance’s victory during the Cold War. Berlin, however, holds a different significance for Africans. This was the city where 14 largely European states met in 1884/1885, with no Africans present, to set the rules for the orderly partition of Africa, cloaking the fraudulent scheme under racist moral platitudes of a civilising mission. The effects of this conference on Africa remain devastating: imported political systems; fragmented and weak economies; and 16 land-locked countries, all of which have resulted in six and a half decades of post-independence conflicts.

Contrary to Rubio’s rosy picture of a beneficent Western civilisation, European rule in Africa saw widespread human rights abuses that contradicted the very Christian principles that these imperialists were preaching. Belgium’s King Leopold’s annexation of the Congo saw unspeakable atrocities and forced labour on rubber plantations, which resulted in 10 million African deaths. Germany perpetrated the 20th century’s first genocide in Namibia (1904-1908), exterminating 80 per cent of the Herero and 50 per cent of the Nama populations, while establishing concentration camps in which diabolical experiments were conducted on human flesh and skulls.

One million Algerians died in the savage French war of 1954-1962, while British troops killed 25,000 Kenyans and detained 100,000 in torture-filled concentration camps during the Mau Mau anti-colonial rebellion in the 1950s. Italian imperial rule involved the use of chemical weapons in Libya in a brutal attempt to exterminate the Bedouins in the 1920s, accompanied by forced labour in Somalia, and the widespread rape of local women by Italian soldiers across its African colonies.

WEST’S ORGANISED HYPOCRISY

Rubio then falsely portrays the West as having “embraced a dogmatic vision of free and unfettered trade”, which is contradicted by massive Western subsidies to its industries and farmers. America’s Secretary of State demonstrates his economic illiteracy in talking of the West naively deindustrialising. However, post-industrial Western economies instead became service-oriented ones, as their avaricious corporations went abroad to exploit cheap labour, particularly in Asia. Rubio goes on to condemn the naivety of a “rules-based global order” having been pursued instead of the “national interest”. But, even Canadian Prime Minister, Mark Carney has caught up with what the global South has known for eight decades: that the rich and powerful never really observed the rules of this system.

Rubio – whose country accounts for 39 per cent of global military spending – then makes the extraordinary claim that “other countries have invested in the most rapid military buildup in human history.” He castigates the ineffectiveness of the United Nations in Gaza, but ignores American and European arming and enabling of Israel’s genocide in the territory.

MASS MIGRATION AND OTHER MYTHS

Rubio then repeated the lie that “we opened our doors to an unprecedented wave of mass migration that threatens the cohesion of our societies”. Nothing could be further from the truth. It was, however, migration that had earlier built America into the largest and most innovative economy in the world. Not only are the draconian policies being pursued by the Trump administration to exclude black and brown immigrants in a bid to whiten America counter-productive, much of Europe is actually enacting similar policies.

Rubio’s white supremacy then went into overdrive, crediting Europe with having invented everything from ideas on liberty, rule of law, universities, the scientific revolution, music, and literature. It is almost as if Egyptians, Chinese, Indians, and Aztecs did not contribute anything to world civilisation.

The best riposte to Rubio’s racist rant was provided by India’s anti-colonial hero, Mahatma Gandhi. When asked what he thought of Western civilisation, he wryly quipped: “I think it’d be a very good idea.”

Professor Adekeye Adebajo is a senior research fellow at the University of Pretoria’s Centre for the Advancement of Scholarship in South Africa. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com