Ebrahim Rasool, the South African ambassador expelled from the United States following a dispute with the Trump administration, arrived back in Cape Town on Sunday to a welcoming crowd.
"It was not our choice to come home, but we came home with no regrets," Ambassador Rasool said, striking a defiant tone.
The expulsion stems from escalating tensions between Washington and Pretoria. These tensions have been fueled by disagreements over South Africa's land reform policy, its pursuit of a genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice, and other foreign policy clashes.
US Senator Marco Rubio stated that Rasool's expulsion was due to his characterization of Trump's "Make America Great Again" movement as a supremacist response to US diversity.
Rasool, a former anti-apartheid activist, defended his remarks, explaining they were made to a South African audience of intellectuals and political leaders. He argued that South Africa's approach to the US must adapt to the changing political landscape.
"It is not the US of Obama; it is not the US of Clinton – it is a different US," Rasool asserted, suggesting a need for a new approach to dialogue that acknowledges the Trump administration's apparent support for a specific demographic within South Africa.