The War for Africa: Twelve Months that Transformed a Continent

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Casemate Publishers, Jun 19, 2017 - History - 360 pages
A “gripping” story of the Angolan Civil War and how it evolved into a Cold War struggle between superpowers (New York Journal of Books).
 
Lasting over a quarter of a century, from 1975 to 2002, the Angolan Civil War began as a power struggle between two former liberation movements, the MPLA and UNITA—but became a Cold War struggle with involvement from the Soviet Union, Cuba, South Africa, and the United States.
 
This book examines the height of the Cuban-South African fighting in Angola in 1987–88, when three thousand South African soldiers and about eight thousand UNITA guerrilla fighters fought in alliance against the Cubans and the armed forces of the Marxist MPLA government, a force of over fifty thousand men. Fred Bridgland pieced together the course of the war, fought in one of the world’s most remote and wild terrains, by interviewing the South Africans who fought it, and many of their stories are woven into the narrative. This classic account of a Cold War struggle and its momentous consequences for the participants and the continent now includes a new preface and epilogue.
 
“Highlights just how much political and social considerations dictate the outcome of war . . . A highly detailed work of military history, The War for Africa can tell us a lot about the nature of counter-insurgency warfare and how small states can become contested battlegrounds between superpowers.” —New York Journal of Books
 

Contents

Preface
Prologue
GENERAL SHAGANOVITCHS OFFENSIVE
THE DEFENCE
THE STING
THE STALEMATE
THE COUNTEROFFENSIVE
THE SIDESHOW
THE THREE BATTLES FOR THE TUMPO TRIANGLE
THE DENOUEMENT
Epilogue
UNITA
Timeline
Glossary
Select Bibliography
Acknowledgements

INTO 1988 OPERATION HOOPER THE COUNTEROFFENSIVE CONTINUED
THE SIDESHOW CONTINUED

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About the author (2017)

Fred Bridgland, a graduate of St Andrew’s University, is a British veteran foreign correspondent and author. He has reported on wars in India, Pakistan, the Middle East and Africa. In 1975 his discovery of South Africa’s secret US-engineered invasion of Angola uncovered the CIA’s involvement in one of Africa’s longest wars, and was a world scoop. He has written a number of books, including Jonas Savimbi: A Key to Africa, and is currently writing a biography of Winnie Mandela.

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