It was never a war between us |
Publication |
Independent Online |
Date | 2013-02-07 |
Reporter | Stuart Sterzel |
Web Link | www.iol.co.za |
On guard: The Angolan war was fought in the strip between Namibia and Angola
as the terrain on the Namibia/South AfrIca border was geographically
impossible to defend, says the author.
The Angolan war still has the capacity to cause rancour among South
Africans. That is because many people link that war with the struggle to end
apartheid in South Africa, and assume that South Africans fought against
each other in that war.
However, both of these assumptions are incorrect, and that war should not be
an influencing factor in our relationships with each other.
During the Angolan War, the South African military fought a defensive war
against strategic USSR and USSR-proxy foreign forces, which had as their
target South Africa. These strategic forces included USSR Russian forces
(300 000 conscript soldiers), Cuban forces (500 000 conscript soldiers, paid
for by the USSR), Warsaw Pact soldiers and Fapla – the conventional army of
the USSR-aligned MPLA (the unelected Angolan government during the Cold
War).
These strategic forces’ overall strategy was directed by the USSR, which was
their principal funder.
The guerrilla wing of the Namibian political party Swapo also fought as a
USSR ally, but they were not a strategic force and had no hostile intentions
towards South Africa itself, as their interest was confined to Namibia.
The USSR’s targeting of South Africa was not due to the discriminatory
policy of apartheid. Its strategic Cold War aim was the seizure of South
Africa as the source of strategic minerals and metals.
These strategic minerals and metals were critical for Nato during the Cold
War, and other than in South Africa, the majority of them were located in
the USSR.
That is why South Africa was assisted in that war – either directly or via
assistance to the Western-aligned Angolan movement Unita – by numerous Nato
and Western-aligned African countries, including the US, France, West
Germany, Morocco, Ivory Coast and others.
These countries assisted South Africa and/or Unita with military matériel,
intelligence and even soldiers. Two examples are soldiers of the French
Foreign Legion who helped the South African army in Angola during 1987, and
personnel from US Special Forces and Special Operations units operating from
Matadi and other locations in Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the
Congo).
It is an indisputable fact that the US, Western European Nato countries,
Western-aligned African countries and the Western-aligned Unita were not
supporting South Africa to uphold, promote or defend the policy of
apartheid. This was rather a strategic Cold War conflict.
The Cold War between the USSR and Nato lasted from 1945 until 1990/91 when
the USSR’s economy imploded and it collapsed. This also resulted in the
immediate and total collapse of all financial, military and other
capabilities of all other countries and organisations that the USSR had been
funding and supporting.
The Angolan War was fought in a buffer zone between Namibia and Angola
because the terrain on the Namibia/South Africa border is impossible to
defend for geographic reasons. This is why it was not possible for South
African forces to leave Namibia while USSR forces were in Angola, as it
would have allowed them free access to this indefensible border.
The total of all USSR and USSR-proxy soldiers and weaponry in Angola was far
higher than in any other of the USSR’s foreign adventures during the Cold
War – including the USSR’s occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s.
The Angolan War – especially the great battles of 1987 – saw some of the
largest conventional battles of the entire Cold War, and the largest
conventional battles in Africa since the battle of El Alamein in 1942.
Therefore that period saw not only internal injustice in South Africa
through a racially discriminatory political policy, but also a strategic
external military threat against South Africa by foreign armies.
This situation was not unique to South Africa.
As a comparative example, it would be inaccurate to state that
African-American, or any other American, soldiers in the US military who
fought against foreign armies during World War II and in Korea were
“segregation soldiers” who fought to uphold, promote or defend segregation
simply because that policy existed in America at that time.
It would similarly be inaccurate to state that “black” (or any other) South
African soldiers in the South African military who fought against foreign
armies in Angola were “apartheid soldiers” – who fought to uphold, promote
or defend the discriminatory policy of apartheid – simply because that
policy existed in South Africa at that time.
When the Angolan War formally ended 25 years ago, the peace treaty had been
negotiated by the strategic parties in that conflict – the US and South
Africa one side; and the USSR, Angola and Cuba on the other.
These peace negotiations started in September 1987 after the decisive
battles in the area between the Lomba and Cuito rivers.
After the second round of talks in January 1988, the Angolan government
announced that all non-Angolan USSR and USSR-proxy forces had accepted in
principle to leave Angola.
The peace talks then continued at venues in Western Europe, Cuba and the US.
In October 1988 at the New York talks came the final peace agreement between
all parties, and it was implemented shortly thereafter.
The terms were that non-Angolan USSR and USSR-proxy forces would leave
Angola permanently; and South African forces would return to South Africa.
In late 1988/early 1989, all non-Angolan USSR and USSR-proxy forces, and
South African forces, left Angola. This was the third time in 13 years that
South African forces had left Angola. Twice before they had returned. To
ensure that they would not have to return again, while Angolan monitors
verified the withdrawal of South African forces, South African monitors also
verified the departure of USSR and proxy forces from Angola.
In the same way that the war had been hard but honourably fought by them,
all the terms of the peace treaty were fully, correctly and honourably
carried out by all the strategic combatant parties.
The only entity that did not fully comply with the peace process was Swapo,
which unexpectedly resumed hostilities halfway through this process.
However, as they were not a strategic entity, and received no support from
the USSR or major proxies, this petered out after less than two weeks.
The end of the Angolan War, and the withdrawal of non-Angolan USSR and
USSR-proxy forces, allowed the process to be set in motion which saw South
Africa able to leave Namibia (which then held its own independence
elections), and allowed for transformation to take place in South Africa.
The end of the Angolan War had ramifications for many countries. It had very
positive results for Namibia, South Africa and, eventually, Angola from 1990
onwards.
The Nato and Western-aligned African countries that assisted South Africa in
that war continued largely unchanged.
It had ambivalent results for the USSR – contributing negatively towards
those who sought to sustain the economically non-viable USSR, but
contributing positively towards those who created the economically viable
Russian Federation, Ukraine and other independent republics out of the
collapsing USSR in 1990/91.
There were major negative consequences for Cuba after the Angolan war
because the USSR stopped funding it. As USSR funding accounted for 85
percent of Cuba’s economy, it totally collapsed
in 1990/91 and Cuba entered a critical period which it called “the
Special Period in Time of Peace”, characterised by nationwide famine,
malnutrition, food rationing, epidemics, civil unrest and a general
implosion of the manufacturing, industrial, transportation and agricultural
sectors.
Fortunately, Cuba is now recovering, especially with assistance from
Venezuela.
In short, the war in Angola was fought to keep
foreign soldiers from the USSR and its proxies away from South Africa.
This occurred at the same time as the internal struggle against
apartheid, but the two events were not directly linked – other than that
some anti-apartheid organisations allied themselves with the USSR, which
funded and supported them until its collapse in 1990/91.
The Angolan War was not a war between South Africans, and should not be
regarded as such, nor should it impact on dialogue or interpersonal
relations between South Africans.
South Africa started its transformation 23 years ago, and had its first
universal franchise elections almost 19 years ago.
This created a unified nation of South African citizens equal before the
law; to end – not perpetuate or create – firsts and seconds among equals.
The Silent Majority in South Africa comprises reasonable people, who are
predominantly good, progressive and positive in their outlook, and who are
committed to a successful South Africa. If they exercise their unified will,
then national goodwill, unity and harmony can prevail.
This – not continual discussion of a war long-ended – is relevant in today’s
South Africa.
With acknowledgement to Stuart Sterzel and Independent Online.
Peace broke
out in Southern Africa.
So why then did the ANC need the Arms Deal?
Or is it a matter of if one wants peace one prepares for war?
Or is it a matter of if one wants money one pretends to prepare for war?
But then why did we need so many foreign equipment suppliers help us prepare
for our peace?
The South African defence industry could have done the most of it.
But the SADI didn't and still doesn't have wonga to splodge in the direction
of the new bumiputerians.
Any which way the logic is pretty compelling.