Article contents
“Heading for the Gun”: Skills and Sophistication in an African Guerrilla War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 March 2009
Extract
For much of the last seventy-five years African combatants, especially in wars of their own making, have not been seen as masters of the guns they shoot. In Kenya in the 1950s, for example, captured Mau Mau were humiliated: they were taken to shooting ranges where they failed to hit a target with their guns. More recently, rebels in southern Sudan considered guns poor, if effective substitutes for more embodied weapons like spears, while young men in Sierra Leone fought with the weapons at hand such as knives or machetes, because they were too poor to obtain guns. When the armies of Ethiopia and Eritrea fought well and hard with sophisticated weapons, it was said to be the result of Cold War rivalries or national agendas gone berserk. Rhodesia's bush war, Zimbabweans' liberation struggle, suggests something else, a space shaped by technology and clientelism in which guns, most especially guns in guerrilla hands, exemplify very specific European ideas about Africans, that they are skilled and sophisticated.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2009
References
1 Ian Henderson, with Goodheart, Philip, Manhunt in Kenya (Garden City: Doubleday, 1958), 70–71Google Scholar.
2 Hutchinson, Sharon, Nuer Dilemmas: Coping with Money, War, and the State (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), 103Google Scholar; Richards, Paul, Fighting for the Rain Forest: War, Youth, and Resources in Sierra Leone (Portsmouth, N.H.: Heinemann, 1996), xxGoogle Scholar.
3 Wrong, Michela, I Didn't Do It for You: How the World Betrayed a Small African Nation (New York: Harper, 2005), 345–47Google Scholar; but see Westad, Odd Arne, The Global Cold War: Third World Interventions and the Making of Our Times (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), 261–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Negash, Tekeste and Tronvoll, Kjetil, Brothers at War: Making Sense of the Eritrean-Ethiopian War (Oxford: James Currey, 2000), 17–19, 84–91Google Scholar.
4 Smith, Ian, The Great Betrayal: The Memoirs of Ian Douglas Smith (London: Blake, 1997), 106Google Scholar, quoting from his radio address announcing UDI to the nation.
5 Storey, William K., “Guns, Race, and Skill in Nineteenth-Century Southern Africa,” Technology and Culture 45 (2004): 687–711CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
6 Tippette, Giles, The Mercenaries (New York: Dell, 1976), 225Google Scholar.
7 Quoted in Wilkinson, Anthony R., Insurgency in Rhodesia, 1957–1973 (London: International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1973), 16Google Scholar; Supt. Isemonger, BSAP HQ, Salisbury, Terrorist Tactics, 28 June 1977, Rhodesian Army Association, British Empire and Commonwealth Museum, Bristol. RAA/2001/086/010/869.
8 For example, see O'Connell-Jones, Basil, Amazing Grace (Kirksville, Mo.: Scribbles and Scribes Inc., 2001), 68Google Scholar; and Doke, Graham, First Born (Cape Town: Book, 2000), 15, 34–35Google Scholar. Military historians may be more comfortable with my use of novels and memoirs than African historians are. But military historians have long argued, after Lord Wellington, that the experience of war is too fragmented and too constricted (it was like a ball, he wrote) for anyone, general or private, to know what was going on in all of it; different accounts from different vantage points helped reconstruct battles and patrols. See Keegan, John, The Face of Battle (Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1976), 117Google Scholar. More important, perhaps, is that these fragmentary accounts make up for some of the problems with an undifferentiated notion of experience, in which what is seen is depicted exclusively in contemporary language. Novels and memoirs are not eyewitness accounts in any classic sense, but taken together they allow me to see broader patterns in wartime actions and ideas that I otherwise might. See Smith, Leonard V., The Embattled Self: French Soldiers' Testimony of the Great War (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2007)Google Scholar.
9 Consolidated Report from Main Joint Operating Commands, “State of Morale in the Territorial Army,” 5 May 1977, RAA 2001/086/263/997.
10 Martin, David and Johnson, Phyllis, The Struggle for Zimbabwe: The Chimurenga War (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1981), 88–90Google Scholar; ZAPU's army became ZIPRA in 1970, but almost everyone uses the term ZIPRA to describe those ZAPU fighting in the 1960s. There were two other African nationalist parties: the African National Council (ANC), which was the umbrella organization for ZAPU in the mid-1970s, and the Front for the Liberation of Zimbabwe (FROLIZI), founded in 1971. FROLIZI had a very small army of ZANLA deserters, while the ANC briefly recruited soldiers under its own name.
11 Hotz, Paul, Muzukuru, A Guerilla's Story (Johannesburg: Ravan, 1990)Google Scholar.
12 Moore, Robin, The White Tribe (Encampment, Wyo.: Affiliated Publishers of America, 1991), 165Google Scholar.
13 Cocks, Chris, Fireforce: One Man's War in the Rhodesian Light Infantry (Roodeport: Covos-Day, 1988), 139–40Google Scholar.
14 Moorcraft, Paul L. and McLaughlin, Peter, Chimurenga! The War in Rhodesia 1965–1980 (Johannesburg: Sygma/Collins, 1982), 104Google Scholar; Pandya, Paresh, Mao Tse-tung and Chimurenga. An Investigation into ZANLA's Strategies (Pretoria: Skotaville Publishers, 1988), 103–4Google Scholar.
15 Hampshire, Tom, If I Should Die (Victoria, B.C.: Tafford, 2005), 140Google Scholar; Elderkin, Vera, Last Rhodesian Soldiers (Baltimore: Publish America, 2004), 128Google Scholar; Croukamp, Dennis, Only My Friends Call Me ‘Crouks’ (Cape Town: Pseudo Publishing, 2006), 164Google Scholar; Warren, Charlie, At The Going Down of the Sun (n.p.: Booksurge, 2006), 149Google Scholar.
16 Shaw, Angus, Kandaya: Another Time, Another Place (Harare: Baobab, 1983), 63–64Google Scholar; author's field notes, Harare, 5 July 2001. See also Nkomo, Joshua, Nkomo: The Story of My Life (London: Methuen, 1984), 165Google Scholar.
17 Parker, Jim, Assignment Selous Scouts: Inside Story of a Rhodesian Special Branch Officer (Alberton: Galago, 2006), 188–89Google Scholar; Carney, Daniel, The Whispering Death (London: Corgi, 1969), 137; Moorcraft and McLaughlin, Chimurenga!, 105–7Google Scholar.
18 Hotz, Muzukuru, 172.
19 The M-16 is a close second. An automatic weapon hastily put to use in Vietnam, soldiers soon condemned it for jamming. But the U.S. Army and its manufacturers could find no fault with the gun, only its maintenance by troops. In this the M-16 is a story of unsophisticated youth rather than one of a sophisticated weapon. See McNaugher, Thomas L., The M16 Controversies: Military Organizations and Weapons Acquisition (New York: Praeger, 1984)Google Scholar.
20 Keegan, John, The Face of Battle (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1976), 232–34Google Scholar; see also Strachen, Hew, “Training, Morale, and Modern War,” Journal of Contemporary History 41, 2 (2006): 211–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
21 Ezell, Edward Clinton, The Great Rifle Controversy: The Search for the Ultimate Infantry Weapon from World War II to Vietnam (Harrisburg: Stackpole Books, 1984), 164–66, 285–87Google Scholar; McNaugher, M16 Controversies, 26–27, 52–54, 128–29; Raudzens, George, “War-Winning Weapons: The Measurement of Technological Determinism in Military History,” Journal of Military History 54, 4 (1990): 403–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
22 “ZAPU Terrorist Arms, Clothing and Equipment, 27 August 1966,” in papers relating to Operation Grampus, Binga District, 11–18 Aug. 1966. Papers in possession of Brig. David Heppenstall.
23 Stiff, Peter, The Rain Goddess (Alberton: Galago, 1973), 193Google Scholar; Early, Robert, A Time of Madness (Salisbury: Graham Publishing, 1977), 110Google Scholar; Rayner, William, The Day of Chaminuka (New York: Atheneum, 1976), 34Google Scholar.
24 Headrick, David, Tentacles of Progress: Technology Transfer in the Age of Imperialism, 1850–1940 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988), 12Google Scholar; Mavhunga, Clapperton, “Firearms Diffusion, Exotic and Indigenous Knowledge Systems in the Lowveld Frontier, South Eastern Zimbabwe, 1870–1920,” Comparative Technology Transfer and Society 1, 2 (2003): 201–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar; see also Rasmussen, Nicholas, “What Moves when Technologies Migrate? ‘Software’ and Hardware in the Transfer of Biological Electron Microscopy to Postwar Australia,” Technology and Culture 40, 1 (1999): 47–73CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.
25 Moorcraft and McLaughlin, Chimurenga!, 104–5.
26 Tawala, Mwezi and Benard, Ed, Mnokodo: Inside MK: Mwezi Twala–A Soldier's Story (Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball, 1994), 32Google Scholar.
27 Charles Maviyane Davies, Harare, 29 Nov. 1989, National Archives of Zimbabwe, (NAZ)/ORAL/325.
28 Shaw, Kandaya, 77; author's field notes, Harare, 5 July 2001.
29 Special Branch HQ, Salisbury, “Memorandum: Sabotage and Military Training in Tanganyika,” 7 Jan. 1964; “Terrorist Training Camp, Zimbabwe African National Union (Z.A.N.U.), Intumbi Reefs, Tanzania,” 28 Nov. 1966; “Terrorist Training Camp: Zimbabwe African Peoples Union (Z.A.P.U.): Baghari Camp, Algeria,” 29 Nov. 1966. RAA/2001/050/1001.
30 Brown, Robin, When the Woods Became the Trees (London: Michael Joseph, 1965), 22–23Google Scholar; Hoare, Mike, Mercenary (London, Corgi, 1967), 21–22Google Scholar; Carney, Whispering Death, 81–82; Craven, David, Mapolisa: Some Reminiscences of a Rhodesian Policeman (Weltrevreden Park: Covos Books, 1998), 119Google Scholar.
31 Ballinger, W. A., Call It Rhodesia (London: Howard Baker, 1966), 315Google Scholar.
32 Davis, John Gordon, Hold My Hand I'm Dying (London: Diamond Books, 1993 [1967]), 430–33Google Scholar. See also Chapman, David, The Infiltrators (Johannesburg: Macmillan, 1968), 106, 138Google Scholar.
33 Chennells, Anthony, “Rhodesian Discourse, Rhodesian Novels and the Zimbabwe Liberation War,” in Bhebe, N. and Ranger, T., eds., Society in Zimbabwe's Liberation War, v. 2, (Harare: University of Zimbabwe Press, 1995), 108–9Google Scholar.
34 “Notes on Brief Interrogation of a Terrorist Leader, 27 August 1966,” in papers relating to Operation Grampus, Binga District, 11–18 Aug. 1966, in possession of Brig. David Heppenstall.
35 Statement of Gideon Ngoshi and Joseph Nyandoro, Francistown, 24 Oct. 1965, Botswana National Archives (BNA)/OP55/41, “Refugees: Individual Cases”; Statement of Tshinga Dube, Francistown, 6 Dec. 1966, BNA/OP55/58, Peoples' Caretaker Council, ZAPU and ZANU.
36 Contact report: Operation Grampus, Annex C, “Report on the Brief Interrogation of a Terrorist Leader,” 27 Aug. 1966. In the possession of Brig. David Heppenstall.
37 Chimutengwende, Hassan, “The Formation of a Guerrilla Fighter,” The Listener 79, 2038 (18 Apr. 1968): 491–93Google Scholar; Martin and Johnson, Struggle for Zimbabwe, 83; Burton, Lloyd, The Yellow Mountain (Salisbury: Regal Publishing, 1978), 134–35, 199–200Google Scholar. The Rhodesian Army was concerned that men were trained in Cuba; see “Cuban Training,” report from an ex-Cuban intelligence officer, Sept. 1974, RAA/2001/086/009/143/2.
38 Chapman, Infiltrators, 107; Hartmann, Michael, Game for Vultures (London: Heinemann, 1975), 134–35Google Scholar; Stiff, Rain Goddess, 193; Tippette, Mercenaries, 156; Early, Time of Madness, 248–56; Ward, Harvey Grenville, Sanctions Buster (Glasgow: William MacClellan Embryo, 1982), 62–63Google Scholar. Ward was the news announcer of the Rhodesian Broadcasting Corporation. He later claimed that his novel, in which a United Nations sub-committee hired the Baader-Meinhof gang to assassinate a Rhodesian sanctions buster, was “seventy-five per cent true.” Harvey Grenville Ward, London, 4 June and 17 Oct. 1984, NAZ/ORAL/246.
39 Kempton, Daniel J., Soviet Strategy toward Southern Africa: The National Liberation Movement Connection (New York: Praeger, 1989), 101–2Google Scholar; Alexander, Jocelyn and McGregor, JoAnn, “War Stories: Guerrilla Narratives of Zimbabwe's Liberation War,” History Workshop Journal 57 (2004): 89–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Andrew Nyathi with Hoffman, John, Tomorrow Is Built Today: Experiences of War, Colonialism, and the Struggle for Collective Co-operatives in Zimbabwe (Harare: Anvil Press, 1990), 25–27Google Scholar.
40 Caute, David, Under the Skin: The Last Days of White Rhodesia (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1983), 19–21Google Scholar. A few fictive guerrillas tried to make their comrades admit they had been trained by Chinese in Africa, not in China, see Raynor, William, The Day of Chaminuka (New York: Atheneum, 1977), 13Google Scholar.
41 Raeburn, We Are Everywhere: Narratives from Rhodesian Guerrillas (New York: Random House, 1979), x, 46–50, 108; Wilkinson, Peter, Msasa (Warksworth, N.Z.: Peter Wilkinson, 1992), 98Google Scholar. Both Raeburn and Wilkinson, the latter a Commonwealth observer in the 1980 election, based their work on conversations with former guerrillas. Raeburn's book, however, was based on his conversations with Rhodesian exiles in London in the 1970s, men who seem to be telling him stories, which he then rewrote as “facts presented in the language of fiction.” Rhodesians insisted that in 1966 there were sixty guerrillas training in China, and fourteen in the USSR. Special Branch HQ, Salisbury, “Military Training of African Nationalists,” 7 Mar. 1966, RAA/ 2001/086/1050/1001; Provincial Special Branch Officer, Salisbury to Mashonaland Provinces and PSBO, Matabeleland, “Chinese Aid to Terrorist Organizations,” 18 Aug. 1970, RAA/2001/086/102/141.
42 “Terrorist Training Camps, Tanzania, 7 May 1974: Interrogation of Captured ZANLA Terrorist Maxwell Mushonga (Code Name Evermore Nyasha),” RAA 2001/086/009/143; Raeburn, We Are Everywhere, 41; Martin and Johnson, Struggle for Zimbabwe, 84; Chinodya, Shimmer, Harvest of Thorns (Oxford: Heinemann, 1989), 114–15Google Scholar.
43 Tippette, Mercenaries, 225–26; Trew, Anthony, Towards the Tamarind Trees (London, Collins, 1970), 31–32Google Scholar, 107; Armstrong, Peter, Operation Zambezi. The Raid into Zambia (Salisbury, Welston Press, 1979), 230–31Google Scholar; Smith, Sylvia Bond, Ginette (Bulawayo: Black Eagle Press, 1980), 79–80Google Scholar. For Cubans training ZANLA in explosives only, see Dibb, C. E., Spotted Soldiers (Salisbury: Leo Publications, 1978), 32Google Scholar.
44 Only a “handful” of recruits were trained with sophisticated weapons or surface-to-air missiles: “If we were going to train everybody on such a gun … [then] who would be fighting, because it is going to take some time for one to know the technicalities of such guns.” Lovemore Chabata, Harare, 7 Aug. 1987, NAZ/ORAL/264.
45 Mazorodze, I. V., Silent Journey from the East (Harare: Zimbabwe Publishing House, 1987), 131Google Scholar; Samupindi, Charles, Pawns (Harare: Baobab, 1992), 86Google Scholar; Chinodya, Harvest of Thorns, 115–16; author's field notes, Harare, 6 Aug. 2006. Women in the camps in Mozambique were lectured when they were issued guns: “A gun is not an object for you to use as an instrument of showing off, neither is it a certificate that you are equal to men comrades. A gun is only for killing the fascist soldiers … and the eradication of racial discrimination….” African Freedom Fighters Speak for Themselves: ZANLA Cadre's Experience, ZANLA Women's Detachment, pamphlet (Toogaloo, MS: Freedom Information Service, 1975), 11, Africana Collection 605/23/426, Sterling Memorial Library, Yale University.
46 Notes on briefing by Assistant Commander Mike Edden O/C SB, Operation Hurricane, 3 Nov. 1976, Michael Holman materials, Borthwick Historical Institute, University of York, RSF 1; Mazorodze, Silent Journey, 137.
47 Military Intelligence Directorate, Salisbury, Tembe Training Camp, Target Dossier, 14 Nov. 1977, RAA 2001/086/042/290; Early, Time of Madness, 103; Raynor, Day of Chaminuka, 33–34; Kanengoni, Alexander, Echoing Silences (Harare: Baobab, 1997), 21Google Scholar; Hotz, Muzukuru, 171–72; Cocks, Fireforce, 141; author's field notes, Harare, 6 Aug. 2006.
48 “Rhodesia I: More Trouble Inside ZANU,” Africa Confidential 19, 7 (31 Mar. 1978): 1.
49 Gumbo, Mafuranhunzi [Inus Daneel], Guerrilla Snuff (Harare: Baobab, 1995), 33Google Scholar.
50 Kanengoni, Echoing Silences, 32–33.
51 Liberation Support Movement (LSM) Information Center, Zimbabwe ZAPU. Interviews in Depth, 2. George Silundika, (Richmond, B.C.: LSM Press, 1974), 4–5.
52 “ZIPRA Tactic Papers,” 23 May 1977, RAA 2001/086/101/869. Among the available guns were a dozen Thompson sub-machine guns; see “Summaries of Operation Turmoil,” Mar. 1978, RAA 2001/086/002/856; “Main ZAPU Weapons Armoury,” July 1977, RAA 2001/086/050/101; Alexander, Jocelyn, McGregor, JoAnn, and Ranger, Terence, Violence and Memory: One Hundred Years in the ‘Dark Forests’ of Matabeleland (Oxford: James Currey, 2000), 146Google Scholar.
53 Author's field notes, Harare, 3 Aug. 2006; African National Council of Zimbabwe, ZPRA Combat Diary, May-Dec. 1976, mimeo (London, 1977). Terence Ranger Papers, ZIPRA/ZIPA, Rhodes House, Oxford; Moorcraft, Peter L., A Short Thousand Years: The End of Rhodesia's Rebellion (Salisbury: Galaxie, 1979), 168Google Scholar.
54 Armstrong, Peter, Operation Zambezi: The Raid into Zambia (Salisbury: Welston Press, 1979), 44–45Google Scholar; Scully, Pat, Exit Rhodesia: From UDI to Marxism (Ladysmith, South Africa: Cotswold Press, 1984), 118Google Scholar; Flint, Lane, God's Miracles versus Marxist Terrorists: The Epic True Stories of the Men and Victims who Fought the Rhodesian and South West African Wars (Ladybrand, South Africa: Masterplan Publishers, 1985), 200–4Google Scholar.
55 Sibanda, Eliakim, The Zimbabwe African People's Union: A Political History of Insurgency in Southern Rhodesia (Trenton: Red Sea Press, 2005), 191–92Google Scholar.
56 Caute, Under the Skin, 275–76; Nkomo, My Life, 167; Nyathi, Tomorrow Is Built, 33. A few months later Nkomo admitted in a BBC interview with David Frost that ZIPRA shot the plane down. Alexandre Binda with Brig. Heppenstall, David, Masoja: The History of the Rhodesian African Rifles and Its Forerunner, the Rhodesian Native Regiment (Johannesburg: 30° South), 352 nGoogle Scholar.
57 Brickhill, Jeremy, “Daring to Storm the Heavens: The Military Strategy of ZAPU, 1976–1979,” in Bhebe, N. and Ranger, T., eds., Soldiers in Zimbabwe's Liberation War, v. 1 (Harare: University of Zimbabwe Press, 1995), 48–72Google Scholar. For weapons, see Kempton, Soviet Strategy, 106.
58 Alexander and McGregor, “War Stories,” 91, 93–94; see also Hotz, Muzukuru, 234–35.
59 Hotz, Muzukuru, 89.
60 Merridale, Catherine, Ivan's War: Life and Death in the Red Army, 1939–1945 (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2006), 66–67Google Scholar; author's field notes, Harare, 6 Aug. 2006.
61 Author's field notes, Harare, 16 July 2001, and 6 Aug. 2006; Parker, Assignment Selous Scouts, 133.
62 Author's field notes, Harare, 2 Aug. 2006.
63 Lemon, David, Never Quite A Soldier: A Policeman's War 1971–1983 (Stroud: Albida Books, 2000), 132Google Scholar; Maj. G. R. Turner to Secretary of Defence, Salisbury, 31 Dec. 1975, RAA 2001/086/029/1112; R. W. Tait, Secretary of Defence, Salisbury, to Army HQ, re: procurement, 14 July 1978, RAA 2001/086/016/1101. By 1978 there was a shortage of guns. Several branches of the security forces, including police, had too few weapons for a full intake of national servicemen. They could not use captured weapons for training because infantry and counterinsurgency units were given all the AKs the Rhodesian Army had. Many other AKs, and Tokarevs, were “unaccounted for,” taken as souvenirs or, some insisted, sold back to guerrillas. See Army HQ to Comops HQ, “Weapons Re-allocation,” 18 May 1978; M. D. York, Sup., BSAP to Comops, Salisbury, “Terrorist Arms and Equipment: Training Aids,” 5 Jan. 1979, RAA 2001/086/024/925; Ron Reid-Daly, as told to Stiff, Peter, Selous Scouts: Top Secret War (Alberton: Galago, 1982), 421Google Scholar; author's field notes, Pretoria, 29 July 2004.
64 Doke, First Born, 34–35; Trew, Tamarind Trees, 86–87; Wylie, Dan, Dead Leaves: Two Years in the Rhodesian Army (Pietermaritzburg: University of Natal Press, 2002), 10Google Scholar.
65 Stiff, Rain Goddess, 149–50, 156. On poor guerrilla shooting, see Fuller, Alexandra, Scribbling the Cat: Travels with an African Soldier (New York, Penguin, 2004), 146Google Scholar.
66 Heppenstall, Masoja, 226; Contact reports: Operation Repulse, A2 Coy, 8RR, Nov. 1979, RAA 2001/086/035/1341. See also Wylie, Dead Leaves, 148–49.
67 Moorcraft and McLaughlin, Chimurenga!, 45–46; Bond, Geoffrey, The Incredibles: The Story of the First Battalion, the Rhodesian Light Infantry (Salisbury: Sarum Imprint, 1977), 22–35Google Scholar; White, Luise, “Civic Virtue, National Service and the Family: Conscription in Rhodesia,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 37, 1 (2004): 103–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Zoe Flood, Brothers-in-Arms? White and Black Soldiers in the Rhodesian Army: The Attitudes of White Soldiers towards their Black Comrades in the 1970s Guerrilla War in Rhodesia. B.A. thesis, Oxford University, 2005, 9–11; author's field notes, Harare, 2 Aug. 2006.
68 Author's field notes, Barton-on-Sea, England, 31 July 2003; Flood, Brothers-in-Arms?, 35.
69 Mark Edward Dawson, London, 1983, NAZ/ORAL/232.
70 Author's field notes, Pretoria, 28 and 29 July 2004; Durban, 21 July 2006; Harare, 2 Aug. 2006.
71 Heppenstall, Masoja, 219, 227.
72 Contact reports: Operation Repulse, C Coy, 2RR, Aug. 1977, RAA 2001/086/181/1400; Operation Thrasher, 6 (Indep) Coy RAR, June 1978, Jan. 1979, RAA 2001/086/008/1339.
73 Contact reports: Operation Repulse, Sp Cdo, 4 (Indep) Coy, RAR; C Coy, 2RAR, Jan. 1978, Sept. 1978, RAA 2001/086/181/1400; Operation Tangent, 1 (Indep) Coy, RAR, Dec. 1978, Sept. 1978, RAA 2001/086/142/1336; Operation Hurricane, C2 Coy, 1RR, June 1978, RAA, 2001/086/027/1337; Operation Thrasher, A Coy, 4RR, Nov. 1978, RAA 2001/096/008/1339.
74 Thrush, Alan, Of Land and Spirits (Guernsey: Transition Publishing, 1997), 318Google Scholar; Wood, J.R.T., The War Diaries of Andre Dennison (Gibraltar: Ashanti Publishing, 1989), 194, 210, 243Google Scholar.
75 Contact report: Operation Hurricane, A Coy 1RR, Aug. 1978; A Coy, 1RAR, Sept. 1978, RAA 2001/086/027/1337; Contact report: Operation Repulse, Fire Force Chiredzu, 2RAR, Aug. 1976, RAA 2001/086/213/1139; Contact report: Operation Repulse, Sp Coy, 2RAR, Aug. 1978, RAA 2001/086/142/1336. A few years earlier, the Rhodesian Army had similar praise for FRELIMO. Contact reports: Operation Hurricane, 1Cdo 1RLI, Aug. 1973; SAS, Feb. 1974, RAA 2001/086/213/1139.
76 Wood, War Diaries, 35, 146, 299; Parker, Assignment Selous Scouts, 143, 188, 193; Cocks, Fireforce, 162, 216; Gledhill, Richard, One Commando: Rhodesia's Last Years; The Guerrilla War (Weltevreden Park: Covos-Day, 2001 [1998]), 82, 117Google Scholar; Taylor, Stu, Lost in Africa (Johannesburg: 30° South, 2007), 93Google Scholar.
77 Reid-Daly, Selous Scouts, 68–69. Fletchas (‘Arrows’) were Portuguese pseudo-gangs, originally recruited in Angola in the 1960s and formed in Mozambique in 1972. By 1974 many sought refuge in Rhodesia where they were considered an ideal group with which to start the Mozambique National Resistance Movement. Flower, Ken, Serving Secretly: Rhodesia's CIO Chief on Record (Alberton: Galago, 1987), 300–2Google Scholar; Operating Coordinating Committee Minutes, 19 June 1974, 2 July 1974, RAA2001/086/237/143.
78 Flood, Brothers-in-Arms?, 35.
79 Cutlack, Meredith, Blood Running South (London: Collins, 1972), 175Google Scholar. This book was banned in Rhodesia. See Chennells, “Rhodesian Discourse,” 118.
80 Contact report: Operation Trasher, 4 (Indep) Coy RAR, July 1978, RAA 2001/086/008/1339.
81 Caute, Under the Skin, 190.
82 Thursh, Of Land and Spirits, 156–57.
83 Reid-Daly, Selous Scouts, 74. In a revised and expanded version of this memoir, Reid-Daly amended the wording: the African “already was one, as was the enemy.” Lt. Col. Reid-Daly, Ron, Pamwwe Chete: The Legend of the Selous Scouts (Weltevreden Park: Covos-Day, 1999), 68Google Scholar.
84 Dower, John W., War without Mercy: Race and Power in the Pacific War (New York: Pantheon, 1986), 99–103Google Scholar; Bourke, Joanna, An Intimate History of Killing; Face to Face Killing in Twentieth-Century Warfare (London: Basic Books, 1999), 106–7Google Scholar.
85 Headrick, The Tentacles of Progress.
86 Contact reports: Operation Sable, 3 Trp, SAS, Sept. 1972; 1Cdo, 1RLI, Oct. 1972, Operation Hurricane; 1Cdo, 1RLI, May 1974; 3Cdo, 1RLI, Sept. 1975, RAA 2001/086/213/1139; Operation Hurricane, 1Cdo 1RLI, Mar. 1978, RAA 2001/086/027/1337; Operation Repulse, Sp Cdo 1RLI, Oct. 1977, RAA 2001/086/181/1400; Operation Thrasher, 1Coy, 4RR, Dec. 1978, Apr. 1979, RAA 2001/096/008/1339; Operation Repulse, A2 Coy, 8RR, Nov. 1979, RAA 2001/086/035/1341. See also Wylie, Dead Leaves, 148–49.
87 Chapman, Infiltrators, 47; Stiff, Rain Goddess, 131; Smith, Ivan, Come Break a Spear (Bulawayo: Black Eagle Press, 1980), 157–58Google Scholar.
88 Reid-Daly liked to boast that he commanded soldiers who had not only trained in Rhodesia but “in Russia, Cuba, China, and Bulgaria as well”; Selous Scouts, 180.
89 Warren, Going Down of the Sun, 231–32; author's field notes, Harare, 2 Aug. 2006.
90 Alexander and McGregor, “War Stories,” 87.
91 A recent popular history of the AK argues precisely that, that it is the local street price of the weapon, not its transnational genealogy, which marks the degree of social order in a country. Kahaner, Larry, AK-47: The Weapon that Changed the Face of War (New York: John Wiley, 2007), 193Google Scholar.
92 See Fussell, Paul, The Great War and Modern Memory (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1975)Google Scholar; Adas, Michael, Machines as the Measure of Men: Science, Technology, and Ideologies of Western Dominance (Ithaca: Cornell University Place, 1989), 345–401Google Scholar; Habeck, Mary, “Technology in the First World War: The View from Below,” in Winter, Jay, Parker, Geoffrey, and Habeck, Mary, eds., The Great War and the Twentieth Century (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2000), 99–131Google Scholar; Smith, Embattled Self, 43–55.
93 Huggins, Derek, Stained Earth (Harare: Weaver Press, 2004), 93Google Scholar.
94 Hotz, Muzukuru, 264; Gumbo, Guerrilla Snuff, 32–33; Chinodya, Harvest of Thorns, 116.
- 13
- Cited by