Blowback - S6 Episode 9 - "Something Big and Bloody"
Episode Date: February 9, 2026The fate of southern Africa is decided at Cuito Cuanavale. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
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Welcome to Blowback. I'm Brendan James. And I'm Noah Colwyn. And this is season six, episode nine, something big and bloody. Last episode, the Reagan government won re-election in a landslide. Good news for the forces of the Angolan nationalist Jonas Savimbi and his friends in apartheid South Africa, both of whom were making a renewed push to smash the government of Angola.
U.S. leaned toward South Africa's interests, but key diplomats, such as Chester Crocker at the State Department,
pursued a policy that was meant to mellow South Africa's expansionist impulses,
while driving Angola's Cuban allies out of the continent altogether.
Through ideas such as constructive engagement and linkage, the plan was to get the apartheid
state to allow elections in Namibia, the country sitting between South Africa,
and Angola, which the South Africans had been occupying militarily and running for years.
In return, the United States would pressure the Cubans and the Soviets to wind down
or even break off entirely their commitments to the Angolan government.
But that balancing act was harder to achieve than the Americans initially thought.
The South Africans in Savimbi, not to mention their allies in the West,
never accepted the idea that the United States could force them into coexistence with either an independent Namibia or an independent Angola.
Meanwhile, Jonas Savimbi, already a welcome guest in the White House,
poured millions of dollars into a PR campaign directed at the international, and particularly American media.
The warlord donned a black Nehru jacket, and never forgetting to mention his Christian pedigree,
preached the gospel of anti-communism.
Though there had been reports of his unsavory treatment of his enemies,
not to mention his allies,
the Savimbi lobby made up of the PR firm Black Manafort and Stone,
and lobbyists such as Jack Abramoff,
they were still able to craft an image of Savimbi as a freedom fighter,
not unlike the brave Mujahideen in Afghanistan.
By the late 1980s, three struggles in Southern Africa
were now converging.
First and foremost, the independence of Namibia,
where the Angolan government had been supporting
the anti-South African resistance movement, Swapo,
whom everyone knew would win elections,
should South Africa relinquish its occupation.
Second, the internal resistance
and external condemnation of South Africa itself,
whose apartheid system was wobbling,
and with it, all South Africa's regional plans
for white rule.
But the third struggle
that would have an outsized effect
on both of those
was the showdown
reaching its climax in Angola.
In this episode,
we'll see a damning reversal
of MPLA and Soviet tactics
as South Africa sinks its claws
deeper into Angola,
an event that will be answered
by a renewed campaign by Cuba
to turn the tide
against Unita and its sponsors
in Pretoria. In the southwest, Cuban forces would, for the first time, link up with fighters from
Swapo, delivering a serious blow to the enemy, while connecting the Angolan and Namibian struggles
outright. But the long war in Angola that began in 1975 would reach its zenith in a tiny village
called Quido Quanival. In this tiny village, the standoff between the Angolan government and
then its allies, and South Africa and its collaborators
would form the largest battle in Africa since the Second World War.
In Angola, war and fear are everywhere.
Men with guns are even part of the marketplace.
Outside the towns, the only safe way to travel is in armed convoys,
or by Soviet helicopter, fast and low to avoid American Stinger missiles,
reportedly supplied to rebel forces last year.
Angola has the highest per capita population of amputees in the world.
Large supplies of cheap landmines, deliberately hidden by Unita rebels along the edges of rivers and fields,
have maimed and killed thousands of peasants.
The day we visited one amputation center, yet another victim was brought in with smashed legs.
There will be more.
For years, the headquarters of Jonas Savimbi in his war against the MPLA,
was Jamba.
Located in the southeastern corner of the country,
wedged between the borders of Namibia and Zambia,
Jamba had become the heart of Savimbi's personal empire
of corruption, exploitation, ivory trafficking, sex trafficking,
and witch burning.
Were Savimbi ever to be truly defeated,
the MPLA government knew that it had to strike a dagger
into the heart at Jamba.
And so, in the summer of 1987, the government, advised by its Soviet ally in particular, launched Operation Salute to October.
It was a mission to crush Unita's presence in the southeast of Angola and dislodge Savimbi from Jamba.
Luanda's loyal allies in Havana vehemently disagreed with the Soviet commanders leading this campaign,
believing that it could invite an overwhelming South African response.
As we witnessed over the last several episodes, a year earlier,
Yanita had captured territory miles inward in a serious challenge to the government,
specifically the area of Mavinga, which the Angolan Army had consistently failed to recapture.
The MPLA knew it would have to carry out a major campaign for Mavinga to reverse enemy Mavinga,
to reverse enemy momentum.
And so the Angolan's decided to launch it
from the nearby town of Quito Kwanavale.
It was thought, at least by the Soviet commanders,
that this may even turn the tide of the war.
At first, the push for Mavinga looked to be a smashing success.
The Angolan army met little resistance
in its slow, deliberate advance, writes Pieroglajas.
Moral was high.
But the South Africa,
Africans had been aware of Luanda's plans and had been on standby to intervene and assist
Jonas Savimbi's forces, if necessary. And it was beginning to look rather necessary.
Quote, a South African Army history noted that Unita forces in the area appeared totally
incapable of halting the offensive on their own.
By late August, two of the four Angolan brigades, the 47th and 59th, had
reached the Lomba River, the last significant barrier before Mavenga, and the remaining two brigades
were approaching the river close behind. On top of already deployed special forces, the SADF then sent
new divisions to back up Yonita, but the commander in charge demanded that quote-unquote clues
of South Africa's involvement be kept to a minimum. The South African reinforcements spoiled Luanda's
rapid advance. Air strikes, not to mention long-range guns and heavy artillery,
turned their drive toward the enemy into a defensive action. Despite desperate warnings from the
Cubans, the Angolan commanders refused a tactical retreat, convinced that they only needed
to weather a brief counterattack. Behind the scenes, South Africa's leaders sensed an opportunity
to go for the jugular. President P. W. Bota gave his blessing
to a larger operation, to throttle the Angolan's, and back Unita to the hilt.
Just as Luanda had been convinced that Operation Salute to October would defeat its enemies,
Pretoria was starting to think its own counterattack, Operation Modular,
would be the beginning of the end for its enemies in Angola and Namibia.
Quito Kwanavale was where they had hoped to pin the tail on this donkey.
A South African commander recalled that Bota had approved, quote,
the total destruction of the enemy forces north of the Lomba River
and the advance to and possible capture of Quito Kwanavale itself.
We started with essentially the same battle plan we used in 1985,
simply to stop the Angolan offensive, remembered one general.
But our plans changed when everything went so well.
It was decided halfway through the battle,
Let's take Quito.
Though the South Africans officially denied any intimate involvement in this standoff in the Southeast,
the South African paper, the Johannesburg Star, summed it up.
Quote, deep in the Angolan jungle, something is stirring, something big and bloody.
In the opening weeks of October, the South Africans annihilated Angola's 47th Brigade,
a devastating blow to what only months earlier had been a confident military force.
The Cubans, who had so far stayed out of the catastrophe in Southeast Angola, were far from happy to be proven right.
By then, writes South African General Johannes Geldenhui,
it was an open secret that South Africa was up to something with Unita in southeastern Angola.
Pretoria, however, admitted only that its troops were launching raids against,
in Cuenesswapo in Cunene province, hundreds of miles west of Mavinga.
All the while, Savimbi was thumping his chest as the SADF flew 40 journalists from South Africa to Mavinga to celebrate Savimbi's latest victory.
Angola's president, Jose Eduardo de Santos, was frantic to understand how things had gone so wrong.
He summoned his cabinet, as well as his in-country Cuban and Soviet advice.
The head of the Cuban military mission more or less said, I told you so.
Quote, we Cubans were always against the Mavinga operation, end quote.
Meanwhile, the head of the Soviet mission, Rhezscheas, acted as if he were blameless.
Quote, I'm just an advisor.
But now it was the other side's turn to get complacent.
Throughout October, the South Africans and Unita dallyed, to use Glehessus' word.
Heses' word.
Yonita was not pulling its weight, said one SADF major.
Quote, its attitude seemed to be very much one of, well, the burrs are here, so we don't have
to do any of the fighting, end quote.
Instead of pursuing the retreating brigades, Savimbi bragged about the, quote, magnificent
victory his troops had achieved, forcing the Angolans and their Cuban and Soviet backers
into a full retreat.
Then something unprecedented happened.
On November 11, 1987, General Geldenheiss announced publicly that the SADF was fighting in southeastern Angola alongside Unita, against the MPLA and its Cuban and Soviet allies who were, quote, using tanks, sophisticated ground-to-air missiles, fighter aircraft, and attack helicopters to capture the province.
The SADF will continue to act, Galdenheim said, as long as Russian and Cuban forces intervene.
This open declaration of war surprised many, including Jonas Savimbi, who until then
had been quite happy with Unita taking credit for South African firepower and stratagems.
Savimbi attempted to deny reality to the press, but the toothpaste was out of the tube.
When Glehess asked Geldinheis himself,
why the government had also made public at this time
P.W. Bhutta's visit to South African troops inside Angola,
the general countered, they all do it.
Was it wrong for the U.S. presidents to visit the troops in Vietnam?
King's presidents have always visited their troops on the battlefield.
After a pause, Geldonheiss added,
the president wanted to score points with the public.
As the autumn drew on,
the South African campaign was not only recognized as blatant, but also illegal.
In November, the UN Security Council issued a resolution,
condemning Pretoria's new offensive on Angolan's soil.
It demanded South Africa withdraw ASAP,
but by now it was clear that the only thing in the way of Praetoria's ambitions
was military resistance,
the ANC and its allies at home, Swapo in Namibia,
and MPLA, Cuban, and Soviet forces in Angola.
On the Security Council, the United States had voted to condemn South Africa's new Angolan operation.
But behind closed doors, this maneuver was understood to be pure theater.
The Reagan administration assumed, Wright's scholar George Wright,
that it would give them leverage with the Angolan government
without having to apply any sanctions on Pretoria.
The South African ambassador winked at Chester Crocker, reports Glehessas, in response to the U.S. vote.
It was, he said, a necessary sop to the MPLA to keep the negotiation process in play.
Crocker agreed, writing in his memoir, the resolution did not contain a call for comprehensive sanctions
and did not provide for any assistance to Angola.
That was no accident, but a consequence of our own efforts to keep the rest of the resolution.
resolution within bounds, end quote.
South Africa, for its part, told America that it was planning a tactical withdrawal to be
completed by Christmas, reports right.
But in fact, South Africa had no intention of leaving Angola.
The South Africans considered the enemy at Cuidoquantivali doomed.
The Angolan troops were demoralized, their commanders overwhelmed, and the MPLA forces were
indeed spread thin, guarding a terrified population, but they had established a bridgehead,
defended by some 1500 soldiers on the eastern shore across from the town, writes Glehesus.
Quote, the South African generals decided that they would launch tank attacks,
supported by Unita infantry against the bridgehead. The fall of the bridgehead would
demoralize the defenders in Quito and lead to the fall of the town. It would take a few
more weeks. Geldenheis's instructions were that after the town had fallen, it should be left in the
hands of Unita. The SADF would give Savimbi the credit for the victory, hoping to boost his international
prestige and hide its own role, end quote. But something stood in the way of Savimbi's latest and
greatest battlefield coronation, the Cubans. While U.S. Soviet relations had a misled war, the Cuban's, while U.S. Soviet relations had
improved since Mikhail Gorbachev had become General Secretary,
relations between Moscow and Havana were coolant.
The Cubans were unhappy with a newfound reluctance in Moscow
to provide weapons to places like Angola.
Nor did the Cubans agree with Gorbachev's perestroika,
the liberalization of the Soviet economy,
a self-imposed restructuring around market forces,
rather than government planning.
In July 1987, the CIA suggested, quote,
while he seems to respect Gorbachev for his audacity, vitality, and decisiveness,
Castro is also convinced that the Soviet leader has embarked on a disastrous course.
Not only that, but some of the new political wins in the USSR brought on criticism of long-time Soviet support for allies such as Cuba.
Much of this was private discussion among the new Gorbachev crew,
but some of it was aired out in the open in the Soviet press.
As we witnessed in our season about Afghanistan,
a Soviet occupation from which Gorbachev was eager to disengage,
the priority for the new chairman's foreign policy
was normalization with the United States,
rather than the Brezhnev era's support for revolutionary
and progressive struggles around the globe.
Fidel Castro knew this, and with Angola on his mind, was growing increasingly frustrated with
the new Soviet administration's refusal to commit more weapons to the defense of Quito-Quanovali.
Whereas the Americans and South Africans were exchanging figurative winks and nods,
the Cubans and the Soviets were quietly judging each other.
At a meeting in Moscow, in which the Cubans intentionally arrived late for the
anniversary of the October Revolution,
Castro and Gorbachev tiptoed around the issue of third world liberation.
By the time Fidel was back home in Havana, the situation in Quito was clearly crumbling.
On November 15th, Castro met with his brother Raoul, the Minister of Defense, as well as Jorge
Risket, who had long been Cuba's top diplomat in both Angola and Namibia.
Here Castro decided to pledge, on top of the tens of thousands of Cuban troops already serving
an angle, another wave of military support. By March of 88, their troops would line the Namibian border
west of Quito. Not only that, reports right, Cuba would deliver, quote, the best planes,
with the best pilots, the most sophisticated anti-aircraft weapons, and the most modern tanks.
they would send all the fuel needed for the planes.
This decision, he reports, was not just a military calculation.
Castro assumed the only way to force South Africa to agree to a political solution
was to intensify military pressure on them, end quote.
All of this was decided, as it had been 13 years earlier in 1975,
at the time of Angolan independence, without,
consulting the Soviet Union.
The Cuban idea was to begin an offensive to the West,
where South Africa and Unita had less of a presence.
Throwing everyone straight into the hot zone in the southeast,
Fidel said, would be suicidal.
Quote, the South Africans have chosen the worst place for us to fight.
It is at the end of the world.
The key, Fidel told his brother,
was to establish air supremacy.
Raoul, we have to be the master.
of the air, Fidel said.
We are going to create the conditions
to strike a very heavy blow.
Finally, we will wage war
down there in the southwest.
But none of this
had been run by the Soviets.
While meeting in Moscow,
Castro and Gorbachev had sized each other
up and exchanged cliches
about the imperialist West,
but neither laid down their cards about
what to do in Angola.
That dialogue only started
once Havana's operation,
was underway. In his own visit to Moscow in late November, Cuba's deputy defense minister,
General Ulysses Rosales, briefed and increasingly stressed Marshal Akromyev, the Soviet general
chief of staff, about the plans of the Castro brothers. Quote, when do you plan to send the
first ships from Cuba, Akramaev asked. Ulysses responded, the first group is now on the high
C's headed toward Angola. The others are loading at the docks as we speak.
Ulysses later said, quote, when I met with Akromaev. He thought I was going to present a proposal
to him, but then he realized that we were not consulting him, we were informing him.
He was taking notes with a pencil, and when I told him that the first group had already left,
he pressed down hard on the pencil and broke the point. But Akromayev, in fact, understood the
Cuban's position. He didn't.
not object or even threatened to make a stink. He even admitted that the Soviets had made a huge
mistake in advising the Angolans to make a stand at Mavinga months earlier. The next day, the Cuban
minister, Ulysses, got an earful from the new Soviet defense minister. This guy accused the
Cubans of abandoning the earlier Soviet-approved MPLA assault in the southeast, but Akramaya
backed up the Cubans. Comrade Ulysses is right, he said, in the sense that the Cuban comrades
have never been in favor of these offensives in the southeast.
Next came letters from Gorbachev himself. In an echo of the messages exchanged between
John Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev over Cuba during the missile crisis, it was now Gorbachev
and Castro exchanging letters over Angola. After a testy back and forth between
Raul Castro and the Soviet-charged affair in Cuba, Fidel Sandgorbachev, a blunt missive.
We do not bear any responsibility for the military situation that has been created there.
The responsibility belongs entirely to the Soviet advisors who insisted on urging the Angolans to
launch an offensive in the southeast. We have always been against foolhardy operations like this,
which cannot solve the problem, squander resources, and divert attention from operations
against the Anita guerrillas.
The Americans can be assured that Cuba sincerely wishes to cooperate
in the search for a political solution to the problems of Southern Africa.
At the same time, they must be warned
that South Africa's actions have gone too far,
and the result may be serious conflict with Cuban troops.
Gorbachev responded, quote,
The news of Cuba's decision to send additional troops to Angola was, for us, frankly,
a complete surprise.
Maybe you coordinated with the Angolan president of Santos,
but in any case, I find it hard to understand
how you could have taken such a decision
without consulting us when we have relied for a long time
on tripartite consultations
to develop a coordinated policy in Angola, end quote.
But Ivana's decision was final.
The new Cuban troops and hardware made it to Angola,
and the Cuban-Angolan offensive in the southwest,
was already underway by early 88.
Perglaheses, the Cubans were feeling bold,
not only in their desire to dislodge the apartheid state from its neighbors,
but also against the White House,
which had been chastened and tamed by the Iran-Contra scandal.
Quote, Reagan had been defang,
and the danger of a U.S. military attack against Cuba
receded at the same moment that the South Africans
had become even more aggressive in Angola.
I think the possibility of war there in Angola is 20 times greater than here in Cuba, Castro said in November 87.
For us, the danger is in Angola. The war is there, not here.
During this escalating military situation, U.S. representatives had, in fact, been meeting with the Angolan's.
At those sessions, per George Wright, the Angolan government accepted further terms for Cuban withdrawal,
but insisted that the Cubans themselves become party to negotiations.
A few weeks later, Chester Crocker proposed, in essence, a three-year timetable for a
complete Cuban withdrawal from Angola.
During that period, the idea went, the U.S. would bring South Africa to heal and yank them
out of both Angola and Namibia, not to mention smooth over Angola's acceptance to the
International Monetary Fund.
This wasn't the final deal, but to the Angolan's, the Americans were getting warmer,
and the influx of Cuban troops on the battlefield were about to heat things up even more.
Cuba's deployment had secured Cuido Kwanival, historian Pahiro Glahesus told us in an interview.
But he added, it was not what won the war.
In late February
in 1988, the Soviets
start sending additional weapons.
But the Cubans are already moving
without reinforcement in weapons
from the Soviets
because they no longer worry
that the Americans might strike.
And Friedel-Caster's a strategy
which describes
again to Slove on another occasion
as the boxer that
with the left hand, holds the blow and with the right strikes.
The left hand is the Cubans who stopped the South African offense against Guido Bonavale.
Again, it's a joy to follow the military development through South African documents.
Because you have the surprise, almost fear, panic of the South African commanders,
because they lose the control of the air over Quito Guanavale.
For the first time, the South Africans lose the control of the air.
Cuban mix gained the control of the air.
South Africans supply to the troops surrounding Quito Guanavale
can no longer arrive by air because the Cubans control the air.
It's danger to make a long story.
By March 88, the Cubans have won the battle with Guidoquana.
But Quitoquanava is a defensive battle.
It's a defensive victory.
It's only in war with defensive battles.
What decides to war is the Cuban offensive in the South West.
For years, the U.S.'s top diplomat on Angola,
Chester Crocker had been facing pressure to get the South Africans
to end their occupation of neighboring Namibir.
This was one half of the linkage deal meant to get the Cubans out of Angola.
Here's Crocker, in his own words, in a BBC documentary from the 1990s.
I guess I was inspired more than anything else with a conversation I had with Julius Nerey,
the then president of Tanzania.
He said, Mr. Crocker, the Southern African process must begin in Namibia.
That's where you must focus your efforts.
That's where you must start your efforts.
Namibia is the key. He didn't really want to hear a lot about Cubans in Angola.
He recognized ultimately that we were serious about that agenda, but he said begin in Namibia.
But change in Namibia would not begin at the negotiating table, as Crocker might have imagined.
As the battle at Cuito-Quinovale expanded, another piece of the Cubans and Angolan's strategy became operational.
First concentrating the fighting in Southeast Angola, in the region,
of Mavinga and Quito, Chester Crocker writes in his memoir that the next step of the Cubans
and Angolans was, quote, to move a major combat force into the southwest, Cunene province,
bordering Namibia. Just a few years earlier, Cunene had been mostly off limits to aggressive
military action, per the 1984 Lusaka Accord, which stopped Swapo from using the province
to launch operations into Namibia itself.
Quote, much of the southwest could be considered a no-man's land, writes Crocker,
looked upon by South Africans as a free-fire zone for their special forces
and more or less emptied of towns and other population centers.
Castro, on the other hand, quote,
aimed to fill this zone with a major deployment of modern, conventional combat power.
deploying Cuban forces to Namibia itself had always been a tricky proposition.
Luanda and Havana both correctly believed that the apartheid regime possessed an atomic arsenal
and suspected that Pretoria would use nukes if its rule over Namibia came under direct threat.
Thus, as Castro himself later explained, quote,
Our troops advanced at night with a formidable array of anti-aircraft weapons.
weapons, in groups of no more than 1,000 men, strongly armed, at a prescribed distance from one another, always keeping in mind the possibility that the enemy might use nuclear weapons."
Castro was right to be worried. As the fighting intensified, writes journalist Sasha Polokov Sarensky, the South Africans, quote, scrambled to put the finishing touches on nuclear-capable missiles being built with his
help," end quote.
But in the end, the South Africans proved unwilling or unable to take the nuclear plunge.
Cuban arrivals surged in from March to May of 88, writes Crocker.
By late May, they had established a new Southern Front running some 250 miles in rough
parallel with the Namibian border, and coming to within 12 miles of it in some places.
The front was manned by 11,000 to 12,000 of Cuba's best units, end quote.
The linchpin of these moves toward northern Namibia, however, was rehabbing an old airfield
located near the ghost town of Kahama, which had been destroyed by South African attacks.
The Soviets had declined to provide the Cubans with fuel tanks to extend the range of their fighter jets.
So if the Cubans wanted to threaten the South Africans in Namibia,
they would need an airfield further south that could refuel their planes.
In late March, Castro had cabled his generals asking,
how long would it take to construct an operational airfield for fighter planes at Kahama?
The answer? About 10 months.
But as Castro later boasted, we built it in a few weeks.
The airport's first runway was ready, and a second one was being built by June of 88.
Accompanied by mobile anti-aircraft units, the Cubans had begun conducting their first joint operations with Swapo,
serving together in scouting patrols as they barreled through Kunene to deal a direct blow to apartheid South Africa.
Twenty years later, writes Glehessas, quote,
The Cubans remembered their Namibian comrades, with her.
respect and affection.
They had so much experience, and they were very brave and intelligent,
our former Cuban Special Forces Lieutenant Tolglajas,
while displaying a yellowing photograph of his Namibian friends.
Quote, without them, we could not have accomplished our mission as successfully as we did.
The South Africans, meanwhile, initially adopted an arrogant posture toward these Namibian maneuvers.
One of their colonels told an American colleague at first that, quote,
the SADF is going to give the Cubans a bloody nose now that they are down in our operational area.
Its territory we're familiar with, and they're not.
The swift construction of the Kahama airfield, however, suggested that South Africa was quickly losing air superiority,
even as enemy forces were barreling toward Namibian territory.
quote, in happier times, writes Clehesis,
these Cuban troops would have been tempting targets for the South African Air Force.
But now, the SADF leaders were paralyzed by the Cuban anti-aircraft defenses.
Jan Breitenbach, the infamous ex-South African Special Forces commander,
summed up what had happened in an interview years later with Glehesas.
Bloody Fidel Castro outwitted South Africa's generals.
At the same time that South African forces, Unita, the MPLA, the Cubans, Swapo, and the ANC were all
fighting on the ground. The Americans made another pass at diplomacy.
Throughout 1987, there had been more or less talks about talks, a discussion among Angolan
and U.S. diplomats about what would be discussed in actual negotiations. The only major thing worked out
was a preemptive Angolan concession to the Americans by President Dos Santos to agree that future
talks would lead to the complete withdrawal of the Cubans. But in January of 88, Quido
Guanevali pushed the Americans, the Angolans, and, for the first time, the Cubans, toward one
another. There were now a few reasons why 1988 was looking to be a diplomatically fruitful year.
For one thing, no one respected South Africa's demand for Unita to be installed in power in Luanda.
For another, there was a new Africa director at the U.S. National Security Council,
someone a little less warlike, Herman Cohen.
Well, I was in the National Security Council, and I got a call from Peggy Delaney,
the daughter of Rockefeller.
And she said, I'm here in Cuba on some sort of a meeting of NGOs.
and Castro called me in and gave me a message.
Another reason that negotiations had some sudden promise
was because the Cubans, buffeted by the stalemate at Queen de Guinevali,
could now credibly demand to be at the negotiating table,
side by side with the Angolans.
Chester Crocker himself, interviewed later by the BBC,
relays Castro's message.
The basic message was, this diplomacy is missing a critical ingredient.
Yes.
That critical ingredient is direct physical Cuban participation.
If there were to be Cuban participation, this diplomacy would be more realistic
and it would have better prospects for success.
And the Americans continued refusal to talk directly to the Cubans
and to include them in the negotiating process.
Crocker, with Secretary of State George Schultz's permission,
agreed to the condition and met with the engagement.
Angolan's and Cubans in Luanda, all together for the first time in January and March of 88,
before formally meeting with the Americans and South Africans altogether in London that met.
Cuba went to London with two non-negotiable demands.
The first was South Africa to finally implement Resolution 435,
the long since past UN resolution which called for an independent Namibia,
and for South Africa to acquiesce to Resolution 435 without any changes.
And the other demand was for South Africa to cut Savimbi loose.
Although the Cubans privately had no plans to enter Namibia, Washington was spooked.
Crocker asked Cuba's diplomat, Risket,
How do I know your troops will stop at the Namibian border?
Pierre O'Glajas told us Riscuit's answer,
which was that he could not give the Americans a tranquilized.
And risky answers, I cannot give you a tranquilizer.
Use as a human word, my programato.
If I were to tell you that our troops will stop at the border,
I would be giving you a tranquilizer.
If I told you that our troops will cross the border,
I would be threatening you.
All I can tell you is if you want to be sure that we're not going to be
that we're not going to cross the border.
There are the South Africans to get out completely of Angola
and to accept the independence of them.
And this is the Cuban position.
But South Africa was stubborn.
It was getting nervous about its deteriorating situation in Namibia.
At a June summit in Cairo,
the apartheid state kept up its front.
The Cubans had to stop driving toward Namibia.
The MPLA had to stop helping the ANC and Swapo.
and Resolution 435 had to be modified to suit South African preferences.
When Fidel Castro received these South African terms for a peace proposal,
he exclaimed,
This is a proposal written by idiots.
They are not intelligent.
His brother Raul agreed,
We flipped the tortilla, and things are getting rough for them.
At the opening of the Cairo talks, the Angolans agreed, saying,
quote, the proposal reveals an absolute lack of seriousness.
Under this pressure, South Africa's position softened as the Cairo talks proceeded, but not completely,
not yet.
There was dramatic new evidence today of the growing split in South Africa's white community.
As NBC's Robin Lloyd reports now throughout the country, young men declared they will not fight
for a party.
There are thousands of white South Africans who fundamentally disagree with fighting a war in the interest of apartheid.
This is the kind of anti-government protest increasingly being heard in South Africa.
Today, 143 white South Africans refused to report for compulsory military service.
For many years, South Africa's military enjoyed a reputation as perhaps the most powerful on the entire continent.
and by most measures this held true at the end of 1987 and into 1988.
But the apartheid state had become bogged down in Quito Kwanavale,
thwarted in other guerrilla campaigns against neighboring black-ruled countries,
under attack by Swapo Cuban forces in Namibia,
and facing a domestic insurgency led by the ANC.
With all this, the most of the most,
powerful military in southern Africa was beginning to look like the beefy appendage of a weak,
overmatched regime.
The armed wing of the ANC, writes scholar Stuart Kaufman, launched about 200 armed attacks each
year from 1986 to 1988.
Most of these attacks failed, but a campaign of laying landmines alone killed 20 people
between 1985 and 1987.
A number of people were also killed
in a spate of attacks on restaurants,
bars, shopping centers,
and other public venues in this period.
ANC activists, he writes,
quote, used threats and violence
to enforce strikes and boycotts,
aiming to make the townships ungovernable.
Also part of this ungovernability strategy
were attacks on police
and on black township counselors.
One tally identified 807 attacks on police homes between September 84 and April 86, resulting in 33 deaths,
although most of the deaths in political violence were inflicted by government security forces, end quote.
On the war front, the Cuban breakthrough in Namibia appeared to have become a tipping point.
quote, the reputation of the South African Army as an invincible force has been challenged by the war along the Angolan-Nemibian border, read in August 88 New York Times dispatch by reporter James Brooke.
Brooke correctly observed that despite Pretoria organizing the war on Angola and the occupation of Namibia,
fighting was done not by white South African soldiers, but by black troops,
recruited in Namibia and by Angolan rebels,
a practice that served to insulate many South Africans
from the heavy costs of the war, end quote.
Jonas Savimbi's Unita was one instrument of this policy.
So was the infamous 32 Battalion,
or Buffalo Battalion,
an SADF unit composed mostly of blacks.
But, he continues,
that has changed in the last year
as white combat units suffered an unification,
a custom number of casualties in battles against Cubans, Angolan's, and Namibian rebels,
notably around the Angolan's stronghold of Quidoquantivali.
This took some of the luster from South Africa's military reputation
and raised questions among the public about the army's role in Angola, end quote.
Piero Glehassas identifies the moment that, quote,
the ground shifted, as June 26th and 27th, 1988.
On the first day, the South Africans launched an artillery bombardment on a Cuban patrol on the
Namibian Front by the town of Calike.
Quote, the timing suggests that the South African generals were responding to their setbacks
at the Cairo round of negotiations.
Ten Cubans were killed.
A few hours later, in the early morning of June 27th, 10,000.
Cuban-Mig jets carried out an attack, killing 11 South African soldiers, 50, according to
Cuban sources, and damaging their installations.
And quote.
Shortly thereafter, the South Africans blew up a bridge over the Kunene River, evidently
fearful of another Cuban advance at Calaiske.
But the South Africans did not counter-attack.
Quote, they responded with extreme violence verbally.
Having stung each other, writes Chester Crocker of the Cubans, Angolan's, and South Africans.
Quote, The Scorpions took a deep breath and never touched one another again.
The events of June 26th to 27th, 1988, marked a psychological watershed.
The follow-up to the Cairo Talks took place in New York in July 1988, just a few weeks after Calkeke.
Now the South Africans were singing a different tune.
Principles for an agreement were quickly hashed out,
setting a date to implement Resolution 435,
granting Namibia independence,
and affirming a staged and total withdrawal of Cuban forces from Angola.
On July 13, 1988, Glehurst writes,
quote,
As the delegations prepared to leave,
a small incident hinted at the possibility of better,
times. South African General Johannes Geldenhoise approached a member of the Cuban delegation,
Colonel Eduardo Morayhon, who spoke English perfectly. A surprised Morayhon reported, quote,
Geldinweiss asked me if at our next meeting I could bring him a cassette with Cuban music.
Unable to win any concessions from the Cubans at subsequent talks in Cape Verde,
General Geldonheiss instead negotiated the withdrawal of South African.
forces from Angola. On August 8th, in Geneva, a ceasefire agreement was reached.
Today, the governments of South Africa, Angola, and Cuba have finally agreed on the details
for ending a war in Angola and granting independence to next door Namibia.
The war in Angola has lasted since 1975, and as of today, a ceasefire is in effect.
On August 30th, the SADF's last troops left Angola.
implementation of Resolution 435 was set for April 1989.
For 13 years, the war in Angola has embroiled several countries in a no-win conflict.
On the one side, rebel forces, supported by at least $15 million a year in covert U.S. military aid,
and backed more directly by South African soldiers.
On the other side, the Marxist-Angolan government, supported by Soviet military aid,
and more directly, by 50,000 Cuban soldiers.
It has become a military stalemate.
Now, South Africa and Cuba have agreed to gradually withdraw their forces from Angola.
The final set of meetings negotiating the Angolan peace were in New York City.
On the major two points, the timetable of Cuban withdrawal and the pace of that withdrawal,
Havana and Luanda met Washington and Pretoria in the middle.
It would take place over 27.
months, with 66% of Cuban troops returning home in the first year.
The complicated agreement also calls for South Africa to grant eventual independence to the
neighboring country of Namibia. South Africa, which occupies Namibia in defiance of the
United Nations, will allow independent elections there, but tied to the Cuban withdrawal from
Angola. It is a fragile agreement, hammered out over months of talks mediated by the United
States. However, it brings to an end, at least for now, a crippling war which has cost billions of
dollars and more than 200,000 lives. Jim Hickey, ABC News, Johannesburg. Another peace agreement is being
honored today in Afghanistan. A major previous sticking point had been Cuban-Angolan support for the
ANC and South African support for Jonas Savimbi's Unita. But the ANC's own battle was now squarely focused
within South Africa and, quote,
therefore, an Angolan pledge to cease aiding the ANC
was of little consequence, right's glazes.
The South African pledge to cease aiding Unita,
on the other hand, was enormous.
In Fidel Castro's words,
we're getting a ton and giving a kilogram.
The official signing of the so-called New York Accords
took place on December 22nd, 1980.
But what should have been an unequivocal day of celebration was overshadowed.
The day before, a bomb had gone off on Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.
The explosion killed everyone on board, including Namibia's UN Commissioner,
who was en route to New York for the signing of the landmark agreement.
After all of the friction, the scheming, and the risks,
Havana's campaign in South Angola was a success.
Cuban troops, not to mention planes and tanks,
arrived in Angola throughout 1988.
The head of the military mission, General Arnoldochoa,
coordinated directly with Fidel Castro in Havana.
Glehessus writes that Fidel was as close to the military operation
as he could possibly have been.
The documents in the Cuban archives
make it incontrovertible that he directed every aspect of the campaign,
from grand strategy to tactics.
Castro's strategy was to break the South African offensive against Guidoquantavale,
and then to attack in the southwest.
By going into Quito, we placed ourselves in the lion's jaws, Castro explained.
Magnus Milan, South Africa's Minister of Defense,
told the BBC he couldn't quite wrap his head.
around how Castro was able to micromanage a battle fought halfway around the world.
The whole effort was conducted by Fidel Castro, by telephone, from Havana.
He was a commanding officer. How you can do a thing like that, I wouldn't know.
I mean, it's impossible. It gave us a problem from our side, because we didn't know him.
We didn't know his way of thinking what type of person
personality you was, because that's the thing you know. You've got a known war. You've got to know
the chap on the other side as well as you know yourself. The battle at Quito Kwanavale shifted
in Angola's favor, says George Wright, quote, as Cuba redeployed forces in southern Angola.
This development, along with South Africa's domestic crisis, had forced the Butta regime to reassess
its approach toward Angola and Namibia, end quote.
Fidel's obsession with air power had clearly paid off.
Because the MIG jets provided, quote,
virtually uninterrupted air cover, as the SADF remarked in December,
it had become extremely difficult for the South African Air Force
to attack convoys along the road.
South Africa's misplaced confidence had led it to believe
it could never lose air superiority,
and also led Pretoria to overrate its military abilities without.
the power from the skies.
Pierre-Glahesus' summary of Cuido-Quonavale is worth quoting here at length.
No climactic battle was fought at Cuido-Quanovali.
The South Africans did not launch a major assault on the town, nor did the Cubans and the
MPLA surge from the town to push them back to Mavinka.
The battle of Quido-Quoanavale, the defeat of the South Africans, consisted of two key
elements. First, the Cuban victory in the air. Second, the Cuban and Angolan defensive victory
on the ground, repelling the South African attacks on the bridgehead east of Quito. This saved
key MPLA brigades, and it had great psychological importance. South Africa's onslaught had been
broken for all to see, and its troops were demoralized, end quote. The law. The law. The law
long-imprisoned leader of the ANC, Nelson Mandela, later said,
the successful defense of Cuido Quinevali destroyed the myth of the invincibility of the white
oppressor and inspired the fighting masses of South Africa. Quido Quinevali
was the turning point for the liberation of our continent and of my people from the scourge
of apartheid. Speaking with us, Professor Antonio Tomas said that this legacy
of Quito is still felt in Angola today.
I think even today, in Angola, you have a lot of celebration.
Everything Quito Canaval comes and every time that it celebrated, right?
Angolan have built a whole mythology around Crito Canaval.
And they use the battle of Crito Canaval to justify, you know,
independence of Namibia democratization of South Africa.
They say that's because of Quito Canaval,
that Nelson Mandela came to be liberated, freed, and then became South Africa president.
It became capital of Kuido-Kanoval that Namibia became independent.
Over 1988, all four involved parties, the United States, South Africa, Cuba, and Angola,
had started consenting to a peace process, culminating with the New York Accords in December.
But one person had not consented.
Jonas Savimbi. Instead, Chester Crocker had essentially presented Savimbi with a Fedocomplee in late 1988.
South Africa was exiting Angola, and Swapo would soon come to power in Namibia.
Between 1984 and 1988, the Savimbi lobby had achieved great things in Washington.
Savimbi's paid lobbyists, the firm of black Manafort and Stone, got him meet.
media appearances and got him elbow to elbow with the cream of the crop of conservative America.
What's more, Savimbi's friends had successfully bullied Chevron and the oil companies,
not into pulling out of Angola, writes Elaine Windrich, but rather deterring them from continuing
to lobby Congress against aid to Unita, end quote.
But the changing tides of 1988 had regiggered Washington's priorities.
The earlier Iran-Contra affair led to the expulsion of some of Savimbi's biggest fans from Reagan's orbit.
And 1988 was an election year, the first general election in 12 years without Ronald Reagan on the ticket.
A sore spot for the Republicans and their candidate, Vice President George H.W. Bush, was Reagan's Southern Africa policy.
early in the year another wave of repression was underway in South Africa,
and Reagan himself had done little to distance the U.S. from the apartheid state,
whose government was becoming more unpopular all the time.
Mr. President, the white minority government of South Africa has now effectively banned activities by dissenting organizations,
even when those activities are peaceful.
What is your view on that and what can you do, if anything, to reverse it?
Well, the State Department has already contacted them about that,
and we are making our own feelings clear that they should be working toward a multiracial democracy
and not oppressing organizations, of political organizations there,
and we've made our feelings clear about that.
Well, sir, may I follow them.
Have you considered sending aid to the freedom fighters, the ANC, or any other organization,
against this oppression, just as you send aid to other freedom fighters around the world,
No, we have not involved ourselves in that other than things such as the sanctions and so forth.
We have tried our best to be persuasive in this very difficult problem and to find a,
or to encourage a better solution.
What's the difference, sir?
Well, the difference is that we don't have an armed insurrection going as we have in some other countries
and we have a great division even among the people who are being oppressed.
it is a tribal policy more than it is a racial policy.
And that is one of the most difficult parts here.
It was in this domestic context that Secretary of State George Schultz,
now Reagan's most influential advisor,
empowered Chester Crocker to make peace in Angola,
even if it meant sitting at the same table as America's hated enemies, the Cubans.
Whenever Crocker and the dealers had made progress diplomatically before,
the Savimbi lobby had screamed bloody murder in the right-wing press,
but this time they went further.
Wright's Windrich, quote,
both the military setbacks and Unita's exclusion
from the U.S. brokered peace negotiations on Southern Africa,
were important factors in bringing Savimbi to the United States in June of 88.
Many admire him, many despise him,
but all agree he's a survivor.
Jonas Savimbi, who for 13 years, has led his guerrillas in a bushwar
against Angolan forces backed by Soviet technology
and as many as 45,000 Cuban troops.
The United States is supplying Sabimbi with arms estimated this year at $15 million,
and that outrages some prominent American blacks because
Savimbi's other ally is the white supremacist government of South Africa.
The most important arm of South Africa's strategy,
is Jonas Savimbi.
Aid to Savimbi
is aid to South Africa.
Savimbi is a
blood-sucking vulture.
A buzzard who prays
of the blood of his own people.
Savimbi, now in the U.S.
to drum up support, says he has to accept
help wherever he can get it.
Does it disturb you
to have to work hand in glove
with a white supremacist regime?
It does not. I tell them.
I am a black nationalist.
I'm not going to be your puppet.
Sabimbi is engaged not only in a shooting war, but in a public relations battle.
Both he and the Angolan government hiring American PR firms to win sympathy and support.
An Angolan minister met this week with Secretary of State Schultz and White House officials
who urged the Marxist Angolan's to share power with Savimbi.
The Angolan reply, no, period.
All of the signs that Savimbi was still a friend of the Reagan White House were there to see.
He was still getting military assistance from Washington.
Officials more than gave him the time of day.
Savimbi on this trip received the honor of a photo op with Reagan in the Oval Office,
an encounter also caught on video.
Well, it's good to have you been visiting here again.
Mr. President, thank you very much for a seat.
But in the end, Windritch calls Savimbi's visit counterproductive.
The optics of working with apartheid South Africa and the momentum of the peace talks made Savimbi more and more of a political liability.
Now, rather than openly support Savimbi's bid for total control of Angola, the White House talked about power sharing and national reconciliation between the factions of Angola.
Fewer newspapers, magazines, and TV networks covered Savimbi's visit in 1988 than had in 1986.
In fact, Savimbi had become an object of scorn in his own right in the United States,
targeted both by the anti-apartheid movement and black political leadership.
Pretty quickly, it seemed that a trip meant to bolster Savimbi's reputation in America had failed.
protesters outnumber supporters as Angolan rebel tours U.S. South, read the Washington Post.
Quote, in Port Gibson, Mississippi,
Savimbi was grilled about his ties to South Africa by a local official who sat beside him on the podium when he addressed 15 civic leaders.
Claiborne County tax assessor, Evan Doss, said that the official reception was not an indication of support for Savimby,
and that most of the officials who were present oppose him, end quote.
Furthermore, the Angolan government responded to Savimbi's lobbying push
by hiring its own PR agency.
The MPLA paid for ads that were plastered in newspapers across America,
calling Savimbi South Africa's secret agent,
and featuring Savimbi quotes praising South African leader P.W. Bota.
One of the more ornate products of the Savimbi Propaganda War
was a film production put together by Jack Abramoff,
co-organizer of the Jamba Jamboree back in 1985.
The film was Red Scorpion,
an action flick starring Dolph Lundgren,
aka Ivan Drago of Rocky 3.
And the film was directed by Joseph Zito,
the B-movie Autour behind the pro-America,
anti-commy Chuck Norris vehicles,
missing in action and invasion USA.
Red Scorpion was the story of a Russian soldier in a nameless African country
who winds up joining forces against the Soviets with a black resistance leader,
a story, quote, loosely based on the life of Jonas Savimbi,
as the New York Times wrote it.
What proved embarrassing, however, was the revelation in Namibian newspapers
that Red Scorpion was essentially a co-production with the South African.
military. The movie had been filmed in Namibia using tanks, jeeps, mortars, trucks, and other gear
supplied directly by the apartheid government, as well as taking on South African officers
directly as consultants. The previous fall, producers published ads in Namibia, looking
for light-skinned people to play the role of the villainous Cubans. This obviously went above and
beyond breaking the ongoing cultural boycott of South Africa.
The movie's dismal critical reception upon release in 1989
was personally embarrassing to Jack Abramoff.
And it certainly didn't help Jonas Savimbi's cause in the end.
Despite losing the PR war, Jonas Savimbi's allies did score a major victory at the end of the year.
Quote, Senate supporters of Jonas Savimbi came together to
to block the Reagan administration's request for $150 million for UN peacekeeping.
Windrich reports, most of it, for the operations in Namibia,
and that were linked with the settlement on Angola, end quote.
Senator Jesse Helms and others had put a hold on the UN bill,
quote, despite the assurance of continuing support for UNITA
from National Security Advisor, Colin Powell.
In the time between the Cairo talks of June 88 and the signing of the New York Accords in December,
Elaine Windritch writes that, quote,
Savimbi's response to the peace moves was first to take credit for them,
and then to disparage their chances for success.
Not unlike the false allegations of chemical warfare leveled against communists in Afghanistan and Southeast Asia
that we've seen in previous seasons,
Savimbi and South Africa made the same fake charges against Cuba.
They falsely accused the Cubans of deploying nerve gas on the battlefield.
But in the spring of 1989,
Savimbi's reputation in the West had begun to decline, precipitously,
and these types of sensational allegations did not attract the attention or support
that they once might have.
In the waning years of the Cold War, Jonas Savimbi's firebrand anti-communism lost some luster.
And that March, a series of stories appeared in the U.K. and in the U.S.
that, more than any such stories before, published by the mainstream press,
put on display Savimbi's and his movements penchant for cruelty, violence, and paranoia.
In 1989, Savimbi's rather sympathetic biographer, Fred Bridgland,
began to piece together a more accurate portrait of Unita and its leader.
Over several months, he put together a story that painted Jonas Savimbi and his organization
as a brutal and terrifying cult of personality.
What had previously been known only to insiders was now public information.
As summed up by Meredith,
Savimbi systematically purged Unita of rivals and critics,
ordering death sentences not only for party dissidents, but for members of their families as well.
We have already discussed the bonfires in which Savimbi threw women and children on charges of witchcraft.
He chose wives for his senior officers and slept with them in a bizarre rite of passage before they were married, end quote.
He had even seduced his own teenage niece, writes Meredith, and made her one of his concubines.
Her parents protested and were executed.
Two of Savimbi's closest colleagues, his foreign minister and his interior minister,
announced that they had quit Unita after discovering that Savimbi had ordered the death of two prominent officials,
Tito Chigunji and his brother-in-law, together with their families.
Chigunji came from a distinguished Ovimbundu family, which Savimbi was said to regard as potential rivals.
Several members had previously died in suspicious circumstances.
According to the two defectors, Chigunji's two children, one,
a baby, had died with their heads smashed against a tree.
The U.S. Secretary of State James Baker wrote to Savimbi, demanding a full account of what had
happened to the two men.
Savimbi denied any involvement in their deaths and rode out the storm, end quote.
Not only were the revelations denied by Savimbi's supporters, writes Elaine Windritch.
Savimbi's supporters in Congress, like Utah Senator Orrin Hatch, believed that Tito and others
had organized an anti-Sovimbi conspiracy.
Some of Savimbi supporters in the right-wing press,
such as Radik Sikorsky,
today Poland's deputy prime minister
and Vana Stringer for National Review magazine,
acknowledged that Savimbi was the murderous head of a cult of personality.
But National Review and other outlets,
quote, continued to advocate U.S. support for Unita,
even though their strictures against the recipient's worthiness
made nonsense of it.
Furthermore, Windrich writes,
The human rights allegations against Civimbi had singularly little effect upon the U.S. government,
with Reagan's successor, George H.W. Bush, continuing to supply military aid,
and Congress taking no effective action to prevent it,
despite the growing effort of several African states to get a ceasefire in the Angolan War.
If the New York Accords were meant to have resolved the international dimension of Angola's war,
It was the Bissess Accords, mediated by Portugal, that were supposed to resolve the war between the government and Unita.
After much back and forth, and with the United States still officially backing Jonas Savimbi,
having essentially bribed Mobutu and Zaire to keep weapons flowing,
the two sides agreed to a transition, a ceasefire, and elections under a multi-party democracy,
in an agreement reached in the summer of May 1991.
The two sides were to be disarmed.
Their patrons were to be barred from supplying weapons and material.
The 16 months anticipating the election was, to many, a surreal but welcome Fantasia.
It was arguably the first time since 1975 that Angolens had felt any sense of relief,
maybe even hope, about the future of their country.
By the next year in 92, elections would be underway, monitored.
by international bodies.
The government would run its candidates.
Unita would run theirs.
There was just one question.
What would Savimbi do if he lost?
End of another era in another part of the world.
Cuban soldiers today left Angola.
After 16 years, the government and U.S. back rebels
planned to sign a peace agreement next week,
ending Angola's civil war.
In May of 1991,
the final contingent of Cuban soldiers deployed to Angola returned home.
For 16 years, Cuban troops had been indispensable in the protection of Angola from the armies of apartheid.
Now, with success at Quidoquanaval and at the negotiating table, the Cubans were heading home.
The war inside Angola was not over, but Havana's mission to neutralize the threat from South Africa
had been achieved.
The cost for the Cubans had been high.
Thousands killed or wounded.
Even the legacy of those who participated did not emerge unscathed.
In 1989, Arnaldo Ochoa, the head of Cuba's military mission in Angola, he was subsequently
tried and executed, convicted of trying to cut a deal with the Medellin cartel and for siphoning
thousands of dollars away from Angola's state coffers. And in the 1990s, the country to which
Cuban troops were returning was in bad shape. But as bad as things would get in Cuba's so-called
special period, Angola was in for something even worse. Quote, what I regret, said Fido Castro,
is that when we withdraw the troops, we'll also have to withdraw the aid workers. The reason being
any Cubans left in Angola would be targets.
