by W.S. van der Waals
Pretoria: Protea Book House / Dulles, Va.: International Publishers Marketing, 2011. Pp. 320.
Illus., maps, append., biblio., index. $37.50 paper. ISBN: 1869193512
Portugal,
the first of the European powers to acquire an overseas empire, was also the
last to try keeping hold of one, leading to protracted brutal wars in
Mozambique, Guinea, and Angola, which, although rarely making headlines,
inevitably became entangled in the Cold War.
In
this volume former South African brigadier general van der Waals, a veteran of
several African wars, does a good job of sorting out the events, despite some
apparent biases in favor of the
Ancien Régime
.
He uses the conflict
in Angola, a particularly complex one, as the lens with which to examine
Portugal’s other African wars. Van der
Waals covers the background to the insurgency, the creation of the rebel forces,
their spilt into two hostile factions, which made the war both more complex
and, in some ways more violent, the political and diplomatic struggle,
organization, tactics, external intervention, and more. In the course of his examination of the wars
in Angola, van der Waals makes observations on the conflicts in Portugal’s other
colonies. This helps set the struggle in
Angola into context. In the end, of
course, neither in Angola nor any of the other colonies did the insurgents actually
win a victory in the field. Rather, it
was the ouster of the country’s long-term authoritarian regime in 1974 that brought
freed Portugal’s African colonies, but the collapse of the dictatorship was greatly
influenced by the protracted struggles in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea
Although
not the definitive treatment of the Angolan war, van der Waals' account is
certainly the most complete yet seen, and a valuable read for anyone interested
in insurgency and counter-insurgency, de-colonialization, or irregular warfare.
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