When all things Fall Apart
During the GNU the master minds behind Zanu PF spent much of their time planning and plotting how to regain total control of the State from the MDC. The GNU had been in place for four years and things had stabilized, and a sense of normalcy had returned to the country after the precipitous crash between 2000 and 2008.
Arrogance is a very dangerous trait - the most dangerous part of this human failing is that it can deceive you into thinking you can do it alone, or you have the capacity to achieve what you set out to do, no matter what. Well these guys set out to trounce the MDC in what was a very 'smart' way and when they maneuvered the MDC into a national election in 2013, they were able to virtually control who won what and, in the end, they took a two thirds majority in the Lower House and the Presidency for 5 years. We are back, they crowed!
Then it all started to unravel - the markets decided they did not like or trust the old power brokers and the economic recovery which had started when the GNU was floated in 2009, vanished. Revenues to the State declined while that old man who was back at the wheel of the Zimbabwe Bus, insisted that everything he mandated happen - even if it meant printing money again. No lessons learned from the Gono era. The budget deficit spiraled out of control reaching $2,5 billion in 2017 or 40 per cent of State expenditure. Cash vanished, and inflation resumed and is accelerating. Spending power is again declining, and workers are restive and on strike.
Then Zanu PF itself began to fall apart. Started in the early 60's, Zanu had gone on to fight the liberation war with their Zapu compatriots and to win the struggle for Independence in 1980. With the support of Britain, who wanted a smooth and relatively peaceful transition, Zanu won the election in 1980 with an overwhelming majority. Zapu conceded defeat and the political forces that had participated in the transition simply vanished.
In a campaign from 1983 to 1987, Zanu simply crushed Zapu in a program they called Gukurahundi - now defined by the United Nations as a genocide. Mugabe, sitting on top of a one-party State went on to amend the Constitution to give himself more and more power. As his arrogance grew, so did the mistakes he made multiply. Budget deficits averaged 9 per cent per annum - three times a sustainable limit, the national debt grew inexorably, the economy stagnated and then in 1997 he conceded a program of reparations to the veterans of the War and entered the Congolese civil war on the side of Kabila.