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Southern Africa: Détente?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
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In a speech to the South African Senate on 23 October Prime Minister Vorster declared that the situation in Southern Africa had reached a point at which a choice had to be made between peaceful negotiation on the one hand, or escalating strife on the other. He offered Africa ‘the way of peace’. Within three days President Kaunda responded favourably. In a graduation day speech at the University of Zambia, he described Vorster's overture as ‘the voice of reason for which Africa and the world have been waiting for many years’. Without hesitation policy-makers and the press in South Africa fastened upon the term détente, hoisted it from another context, and applied it to describe both the atmosphere and substance of ensuing interstate relations in Southern Africa.
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References
page 107 note 1 For a useful background to the early period of negotiation, see Barratt, John, ‘Detente in Southern Africa’, in The World Today (London), 31, 3, 03 1975, pp. 120–130;Google Scholar and von der Ropp, Klaus, ‘The New Interplay of Forces in Southern Africa’, in Aussen Politik (Hamburg), XXVI, I, 1975, pp. 60–77.Google Scholar
page 108 note 1 Elliott, Florence, A Dictionary of Politics (Harmondsworth, 1973), p. 127.Google Scholar
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page 112 note 1 See William P. Bundy's plea for the acceptance of complexity in foreign policy as a fact of life — ‘International Security Today’, in Foreign Affairs, 53, I, 10 1974, p. 24 in particular; also Shulman, loc. cit. p. 36.
page 112 note 2 Clemens, loc. cit.
page 113 note 1 See Bowman, Larry, ‘The Subordinate State System of Southern Africa’, in International Studies Quarterly (Beverly Hills), XII, 3, 09 1968, pp. 231–61;Google Scholar and Potholm, Christian P., ‘Toward the Millennium’, in Potholm, Christian P. and Dale, Richard (eds.), Southern Africa in Perspective: essays in regional politics (New York, 1972), pp. 321–31.Google Scholar
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page 121 note 1 Barratt, loc. cit. p. 124.
page 122 note 1 Cantori, Louis J. and Spiegel, Steven L., The International Politics of Regions: a comparative approach (Englewood Cliffs, 1970).Google Scholar The authors distinguish equilibrium from a stalemate, where ‘one or both sides would change conditions if they could and are seeking means of doing so’, pp. 18–19.
page 124 note 1 See the Rand Daily Mail (Johannesburg), 15 march 1975, p. 9, for Vorster's interview with Gbolabo Ogunsanwo.
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