The South African Border War - Operation Savannah - the wheels start coming off.

in war •  7 years ago 

As much as fighting group Zulu had been having great success, in their over 3000 km advance to reclaim territory for UNITA, all was not totally well.

In fact the fighting groups were almost becoming victims of their own success.

The South African forces had not been involved in conventional warfare up till this stage. The past decades involvement with PLAN and SWAPO had been mostly counter insurgency operations conducted within their own borders, or relatively close to their own borders.

Any forays further afield had typically been limited to small special forces operations.

Operation savanna was steadily growing with the formation of two more fighting groups X-ray and Orange. Numbers were swelling to close to 3000 men and this excluded the UNITA infantry, in vegetable trucks, accompanying the South African light armored columns.

This was fast turning into something far different from counter insurgency and somewhat resembling a conventional war.

The MPLA and the Cubans were falling back from the far flung areas of the Country to defend the areas closer to the Capital and destroying bridges and setting up defenses at these natural obstacles to slow the South African Advance.


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Few of the logistical plans or infrastructure were in place.

This became increasingly more difficult as the SA columns extended deeper and deeper into Angola and further and further from existing lines of supply.

This entire operation had been a spur of the moment thing, brought about by the sudden pull-out of the Portuguese; and necessitated by the possibility of a Soviet backed Independent Angola, that would likely be very supportive of SWAPO and PLAN.

It was hastily put together and not expected to last as long as it did.

Some of the teenage conscripts driving the Armored vehicles for Foxbat later describe how their "couple of weeks adventure" was fast turning into a living hell.

The single set of clothing, in the form of their "secret" prison uniform, was rotting off of their bodies from the rain.

It was the wet season in Angola and as you move further northwards the more subtropical it becomes. Vehicles were constantly becoming bogged down and straying from the road was treacherous.
The stress of frequent encounters or "contact" with the enemy was taking its toll. The indiscriminate shooting at everything that moved and rapid advance was wearing minds down. Malaria was taking its toll.

From the very frequent "contacts" they had and infrequent resupplies they were often low on ammunition. Food was scarce and diarrhea was plentiful, whether due to the local water or the fact that many of the rations were years past their expiry dates.

Battle fatigue and shell shock, (now called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD) was claiming its fair share.

The human mind of most individuals is not fit to sit well with butchering fellow humans in spite of what commanding officers say.

Armored car crews were in flux with having to swap out crew members due to many of the above ailments.

It was under these circumstances and with the approaching independence day of the 11th November 1975, that some of the largest of the battles of the entire Operation were fought.

Fidel Castro was uptight, Luanda, the capital was under threat he started poring in more men and machines. Their role switched from training MPLA soldiers and advising to more actively engaging in the fighting.

Among the fresh wave of Cubans were special forces and Cuba was far more adept at conventional warfare than the MPLA guerrillas, as the Advancing South Africans and CIA backed FNLA, were soon to find out...

Other posts in this series

The piece of the cold war nobody told you about - Africa's forgotten war

The Air Battles
The SA Fighter Aircraft
The SA Bomber Aircraft
The conflicts deep roots and start
Regional Tensions
Africa's forgotten cold war - Angolan War of Independence.
Africa's forgotten cold war - Mozambican War of Independence.
Africa's forgotten cold war - Rhodesian Bush War
Africa's forgotten cold war - The Angolan War of Independence transitions to the Angolan Civil War
The South African Border War - The start of Operation Savannah and Large scale South African involvement.

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Soldiers are sacrificed all the time and subjected to suffer hell for that they long for which is what their leaders want for any reason.

@gavvet your posts are demonstrating what a sham the entire "Cold War" actually was.

It may have been cold in the US & USSR but other parts of the world payed a heavy price while those 2 fought their proxy wars with other peoples' lives.

The worst of it was the mothers at home knowing their children were there and dying for absolutely nothing at all. They say her a mother must stay on her knees to keep her children standing. Lots of mothers did but some had to say good bye to their loved ones.

Sir @gavvet Informative post man Followed you for similar post :)

Great one !! nicely narrated.

I have never read the history about this before your post, @gavvet is very meaningful and very meaningful for all of us, at least we can find out a little history about countries outside. Thank you for your post, I always read your postings. continued success to you @gavvet.

as long as humans live war will never be over

politics kills everywhere

You are right @knightbird . Reason behind all wars / riots is politics . Untill now i never see any politics leader died in war.

Im from south africa so this has really struck some

This is very amazing I am very happy to see your post is very interesting Hopefully you always succeed and get a happy future achievement I also really want to get like you I must certainly work more serious here in steemit like you if you want to help me of course I am very Happy Semonga you always succeed and get what you want to .Thanks you very much for you

It's inhuman what they are doing. There are no winner in a war only victims and all those collateral damage who is going to pay that?

wow...!! great post

ghjkbj

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Not the best time to spend for a teenage conscript in savannah with one set of rotting clothes, diarrhea, malaria, physically and mentally exhausted, almost without food... Freaking wars.

@gavvet thanks for the solid write-up. But if i may asked what are the major reason for the insurgency?

Love your blog!

Good post for War
thank you.

Incredible friend very touched and motivated greetings from me @ abupasi.alachy

good

I see the consequences of armed conflict, of course, making the suffering of warring regions.
Displacement, famine, rape, the stench of corpses lying, pressure, and so on are all risks.
No one wants war, only power-hungry people and treasures that do not care about people's lives.

@gavvet nice post brother..

If you like this article then upvote it and click here to find related posts.

(Keywords: forgotten, operation, fighting, african, forces, wheels, coming, warthe, south, start, mpla, cold, war)

Nice

Resteem

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

The Cubans were known for their Guerilla warfare and their take down of Batista and it is great to see how resilient the African forces were despite the Cubans desperate full fledged attacks.
It is horrific how many losses there were but at least the Africans persevered.
Another great intriguing post @gavvet

Thanks for enlightening people on Africa.. Steem on

Très bon article qui est très bien fait de votre par

You are so right about the human mind not being able to handle the horrors or war. I know at least 3 people who are not doing well mentally from being deployed into war zones. It's really scary.

@gavvet are you a historian by birth?

Nice post

Well done post thanks for sharing

Amazing. I have always had reservations regarding Cuban military power. In fact, after being in Cuba and reading about the Castros´ revolution, it came to my mind, more and more frequently, that foraign help must have been essential for their success. Foreign help from Russia, or from the USA itself. I simply could not buy the romantic idea that a handful of civilians disembarking from the Granma yacht would be able to take down an established State. Even a militarily weak one, like the one Batista leaded.

Just some thoughts. Maybe in the future you can fork things to Cuba and elaborate a little about this strange Latin American phenomenon.

Excellent contribution friend .. I really liked your information

A very interesting story I like it, vote me too.

Loved it m8
Keep up posting. Loved reading it!
Upvoted :)))

Hectic stuff. Why does there always have to be fighting and war? So many innocent people die because of this.

Nice build-up, looking forward to the next war story!!

Wow @gavvet - your knowledge of South Africa history is pretty amazing!!
Thanks for sharing 😁

"Vehicles were constantly becoming bogged down and straying from the road was treacherous."

This is the exact kind of thing the Nazis were dealing with when trying to invade Russia. And Napoleon, for that matter.

"possibility of a Soviet backed Independent Angola"

It would seem their worries were well-funded, as the Russians likely would have had advantages in dealing with the terrain.

hghhx

Very informative and factfull post..

Try to give a factual post related with Gandhi in South Africa,,as i am persuing PhD &surely this will help me..

idols become rivals....great post

Your writing skill is just outstanding @gavvet. You are doing very well, keep it up.
Thanks for sharing awesome articles with us.

All that bloodshed... They can't be humans

Congratulations @gavvet!
Your post was mentioned in my hit parade in the following categories:

  • Upvotes - Ranked 9 with 444 upvotes
  • Pending payout - Ranked 8 with $ 279,48

the main cause of war to me is the inability to embrace each others differences as unique instead of as a problem. war will not cease because men will still have differences. it was a good read going through the post and the comments. thanks for sharing @gavvet

The main focus should be on how we treat the people .