Difference between revisions of "Jonas Savimbi"

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[[Jonas Malheiro Savimbi]] was the leader of the [[UNITA]] rebels during the Angolan civil war<ref>BBC Monitoring Africa - Political, [http://www.lexisnexis.com.ezproxy.stir.ac.uk/uk/nexis/results/docview/docview.do?docLinkInd=true&risb=21_T7317734512&format=GNBFI&sort=RELEVANCE&startDocNo=1&resultsUrlKey=29_T7317734515&cisb=22_T7317734514&treeMax=true&treeWidth=0&csi=10962&docNo=5 Angolan interior minister: "There will be no negotiations with Dr Savimbi"], ''BBC Worldwide Monitoring'', 23-March-2001, Accessed via NexisUK 11-September-2009</ref>.  
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[[Jonas Savimbi]] (died November 2002) was the leader of the [[UNITA]] rebels during the Angolan civil war<ref>BBC Monitoring Africa - Political, [http://www.lexisnexis.com.ezproxy.stir.ac.uk/uk/nexis/results/docview/docview.do?docLinkInd=true&risb=21_T7317734512&format=GNBFI&sort=RELEVANCE&startDocNo=1&resultsUrlKey=29_T7317734515&cisb=22_T7317734514&treeMax=true&treeWidth=0&csi=10962&docNo=5 Angolan interior minister: "There will be no negotiations with Dr Savimbi"], ''BBC Worldwide Monitoring'', 23-March-2001, Accessed via NexisUK 11-September-2009</ref>.
  
With support from the governments of the United States, South Africa, Israel,<ref>National Congress Library,[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ao0184) ''Angola: A Country Study''], ''Congress Library'', Accessed 11-September-2009</ref> several African leaders ([[Félix Houphouët-Boigny]] of the Ivory Coast and [[Mobutu Sese Seko]] of Zaire (now DR Congo),<ref><small>However, Mobutu has always personally denied this. See Blaine Harden, ''Africa: Dispatches from a Fragile Continent'', p. 51, and Sean Kelly, ''America's Tyrant: The CIA and Mobutu of Zaire'', p. 4</small></ref> [[Hassan II|King Hassan II]] of [[Morocco]] and [[Kenneth Kaunda]] of [[Zambia]]), and foreign mercenaries from [[Portugal]], [[Israel]], [[South Africa]], and [[France]],<ref name="Angola: A Country Study"/> Savimbi spent much of his life battling Angola's [[Marxist]]-inspired government, which was supported by weapons and military advisers from the [[Soviet Union]], [[Cuba]], and [[Nicaragua]] (under the [[Sandinista National Liberation Front|Sandinistas]]).<ref>''Nicaragua Betrayed'', by Anastasio Somoza and Jack Cox, backflap</ref> The war ultimately became one of the most prominent [[Third World]] conflicts of the [[Cold War]].
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With support from the governments of the United States, South Africa, Israel,<ref>National Congress Library,[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ao0184) ''Angola: A Country Study''], ''Congress Library'', Accessed 11-September-2009</ref> several African leaders including [[Félix Houphouët-Boigny]] of the Ivory Coast and [[Mobutu Sese Seko]] of Zaire(Mobutu denied helping UNITA)<ref>Blaine Harden, ''Africa: Dispatches from a Fragile Continent'', p. 51, and Sean Kelly, ''America's Tyrant: The CIA and Mobutu of Zaire'', p. 4</ref>. Savimbi spent much of his life battling Angola's Marxist-inspired government, which was supported by weapons and military advisers from the Soviet Union, Cuba, and Nicaragua Sandinistas.<ref>''Nicaragua Betrayed'', by Anastasio Somoza and Jack Cox, backflap</ref> The war ultimately became one of the most prominent Third World conflicts of the Cold War. [[Sean Cleary]] was a political advisor to Savimbi<ref>Elaine Windrich, [http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=6724 Angola's War Economy: The Role of Oil and Diamonds], ''HNet Book Reviews'', Accessed 11-September-2009</ref>.
  
==Early years==
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==2002: Killed in combat==
Jonas Savimbi was born on August 3, 1934 in Munhango, a small
 
town on the [[Benguela Railway]] and raised in Angola's central province of [[Bié Province|Bié]], which together with [[Huambo]] later served as his power base during the civil war. Savimbi's father, Lote, was a stationmaster on Angola's [[Benguela railway]] line and a [[Protestantism|Protestant]] preacher.  Both of his parents were members of the [[Ovimbundu]] tribe, which later served as Savimbi's major political base.<ref name="query.nytimes.com">[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE7D6103EF930A15751C0A9649C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=1 "Jonas Savimbi, 67, Rebel of Charisma and Tenacity," ''The New York Times'', February 23, 2003.]</ref>
 
 
 
Savimbi was an unusually bright student and was accepted to a [[Portugal|Portuguese]] high school, where he graduated at the top of his class.  In 1958, he was accepted to [[medical school]] in [[Lisbon]].  In Lisbon, Savimbi began his political involvement, calling for an end to Portuguese colonialism in Angola.  His opposition drew the ire of the Portuguese secret police, which tried to get Savimbi to reveal the names of those in Angola who shared his view.  Under this pressure, Savimbi fled Portugal for [[Lausanne]], [[Switzerland]].  In Lausanne, Savimbi abandoned the study of medicine for that of politics, ultimately obtaining his doctorate in 1965 from the [[University of Lausanne]], where his courses were taught in [[French language|French]].<ref name="query.nytimes.com"/>
 
 
 
Following Angola's independence in 1975, Savimbi gradually drew the intrigue of powerful [[People's Republic of China|Chinese]] and, ultimately, [[United States|American]] policymakers and intellectuals.  Trained in [[China]] during the 1960s, Savimbi was a highly successful [[guerrilla]] fighter schooled in classic [[Maoist]] approaches to warfare, including baiting his enemies with multiple military fronts, some of which attacked and some of which consciously retreated. Like the Chinese [[Red Army]] of [[Mao Zedong]], Savimbi mobilized large segments of the rural peasantry as part of his military tactics. From a military strategy standpoint, he is generally considered one of the most effective guerrilla leaders of the 20th century.
 
 
 
While Savimbi originally sought a leadership position in the Marxist [[MPLA]], he later denounced Marxism and joined forces with the [[FNLA]] in 1964. The same year he conceived [[UNITA]] with [[Antonio da Costa Fernandes]]. Savimbi went to China for help and was promised arms and military training. Upon returning to Angola in 1966 he formally launched UNITA and began his career as an anti-Portuguese guerrilla fighter, but also fought the FNLA and MPLA, as the three resistance movements tried to position themselves to lead a post-colonial Angola. Portugal would later release [[PIDE]] archives revealing that Savimbi in fact signed a collaboration pact with Portuguese colonial authorities to fight the MPLA.<ref>[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3821/is_200610/ai_n17195875 Contested Power in Angola: 1840s to the Present | Journal of Third World Studies | Find Articles at BNET.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> <ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4362364,00.html Guardian Unlimited | Archive Search<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
 
 
 
Complementing his military skills, Savimbi also impressed many with his intellectual qualities.  He fluently spoke seven languages, including four European languages and three African languages.  In visits with foreign diplomats and in speeches before American audiences, he often cited classical Western political and social philosophy, ultimately becoming one of the most vocal anti-communists of the Third World.
 
 
 
Some dismiss this intellectualism as nothing more than careful handling by his politically savvy American supporters, who sought to present Savimbi as a clear alternative to Angola's regime.  But others saw it as genuine and a product of the guerrilla leader's raw intelligence.  Savimbi's biography describes him as "...an incredible linguist. He spoke four European languages, including English although he had never lived in an English-speaking country. He was extremely well read. He was an extremely fine conversationalist and a very good listener."<ref>[http://allafrica.com/stories/200206250743.html?page=4 "Angola: Don't Simplify History, Says Savimbi's Biographer," ''AllAfrica.com'', [[Johannesburg]], June 22, 2002.]</ref>
 
 
 
These contrasting images of Savimbi would play out throughout his life, with his enemies calling him a power-hungry warmonger, and his American and other allies calling him a critical figure in the West's bid to win the Cold War.
 
 
 
==Savimbi's Washington allies==
 
Savimbi's war against Angola's Marxist government became a sub-plot to the Cold War, with both [[Moscow]] and Washington viewing the conflict as important to the global balance of power. In 1985, with the backing of the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] administration, [[Jack Abramoff]] and other U.S. conservatives organized the [[Democratic International]] in Savimbi's base in [[Jamba, Cuando Cubango|Jamba]], in [[Cuando Cubango Province]] in southeastern Angola.<ref>[http://dir.salon.com/story/ent/feature/2005/08/17/abramoff/index.html The tale of "Red Scorpion" - Salon.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The meeting included most of the anti-communist guerrilla leaders of the Third World, including Savimbi, Nicaraguan [[contras|contra]] leader [[Adolfo Calero]], and [[Abdul Rahim Wardak]], then leader of [[Afghanistan]]'s [[mujahideen]] who now serves as Afghanistan's Defense Minister.
 
 
 
Equally important, Savimbi also was strongly supported by the influential, conservative [[Heritage Foundation]].  Heritage Foundation foreign policy analyst [[Michael Johns (executive)|Michael Johns]] and other conservatives visited regularly with Savimbi in his clandestine camps in Jamba and provided the rebel leader with ongoing political and military guidance in his war against the Angolan government. Savimbi's U.S.-based supporters ultimately proved successful in convincing the [[Central Intelligence Agency]] to channel covert weapons and recruit guerrillas for Savimbi's war against Angola's Marxist government, which greatly intensified and prolonged the conflict.
 
 
 
During a visit to [[Washington, D.C.]] in 1986, Reagan invited Savimbi to meet with him at the [[White House]]. Following the meeting, Reagan spoke of UNITA winning "a victory that electrifies the world."
 
  
Two years later, with the Angolan Civil War intensifying, Savimbi returned to Washington, where he was filled with gratitude and praise for the Heritage Foundation's work on UNITA's behalf"When we come to the Heritage Foundation", Savimbi said during a June 30, 1988 speech at the foundation, "it is like coming back home. We know that our success here in Washington in repealing the Clark Amendment and obtaining American assistance for our cause is very much associated with your efforts. This foundation has been a source of great support. The UNITA leadership knows this, and it is also known in Angola."<ref>[http://www.heritage.org/Research/Africa/HL217.cfm The Coming Winds of Democracy in Angola<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
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After surviving more than a dozen assassination attempts, Savimbi was killed on February 22, 2002, in a battle with Angolan government troops - and, reportedly, South African mercenaries and Israeli special forces<ref>Fred Bridgland in Johannesburg and Michael Evans, [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2299853,00.html 'Dogs of War' ban will rob British Army of vital frontline soldiers], ''The Times'', 05-August-2006, Accessed 11-September-2009</ref> - along riverbanks in the province of Moxico, his birthplaceIn the firefight, Savimbi sustained 15 machine gun bullets to his head, throat, upper body and legs. While Savimbi returned gun fire, the blows proved immediately fatal.<ref>BBC News,[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/1839252.stm "Savimbi 'died with gun in hand'"], ''BBC News'', February 25, 2002.</ref>
  
==Savimbi's military success==
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==The Cold War and the Heritage Foundation==
  
As U.S. support began to flow liberally and leading U.S. conservatives championed his cause, Savimbi won major strategic battles in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and Moscow and [[Havana]] began to reevaluate their engagement in Angola, as Soviet and [[Cubans|Cuban]] fatalities mounted and Savimbi's ground control increased. At the height of his military success, Savimbi controlled nearly half the country and was beginning, in 1989 and 1990, to launch attacks on government and military targets in and around the country's capital, [[Luanda]]. Observers felt that the strategic balance in Angola had shifted and that Savimbi was positioning UNITA for a possible military victory.<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE1DE123BF932A1575BC0A96F948260 "Angola says rebels are launching new attacks, jeopardizing accord," ''The New York Times'', August 21, 1989.]</ref>
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Savimbi's war against Angola's Marxist government became a sub-plot to the Cold War, with both Moscow and Washington viewing the conflict as important to the global balance of power. In 1985, with the backing of the [[Ronald Reagan]] administration, [[Jack Abramoff]] and other U.S. conservatives organized the [[Democratic International]] in Savimbi's base in Jamba, Cuando, in Cuando Cubango Province in southeastern Angola.<ref>James Verini, [http://dir.salon.com/story/ent/feature/2005/08/17/abramoff/index.html The tale of "Red Scorpion"], Salon, 17-August-2005, Accessed 11-September-2009</ref> The meeting included most of the anti-communist guerrilla leaders of the Third World, including Savimbi, Nicaraguan contras leader [[Adolfo Calero]], and [[Abdul Rahim Wardak]], then leader of Afghanistan's mujahideen who went on to become Afghanistan's Defense Minister.
  
Signaling the concern that the former Soviet Union was placing on Savimbi's advance in Angola, former Soviet leader [[Mikhail Gorbachev]] raised the Angolan war with Reagan during numerous U.S.-Soviet summits. In addition to meeting with Reagan, Savimbi also met with Reagan's successor, [[George H. W. Bush]], who promised Savimbi "all appropriate and effective assistance."<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE5DC103EF931A25752C0A96F948260 "Bush pledges Angola rebel aid," ''The New York Times'', January 1989.]</ref>
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Equally important, Savimbi also was strongly supported by the influential, conservative [[Heritage Foundation]].  Heritage Foundation foreign policy analyst [[Michael Johns]] and other conservatives visited regularly with Savimbi in his clandestine camps in Jamba and provided the rebel leader with ongoing political and military guidance in his war against the Angolan government. Savimbi's U.S.-based supporters ultimately proved successful in convincing the [[CIA]] to channel covert weapons and recruit guerrillas for Savimbi's war against Angola's Marxist government, which greatly intensified and prolonged the conflict.
  
In January 1990 and again in February 1990, Savimbi was wounded in armed conflict with Angolan government troops. But the injuries did not prevent him from again returning to Washington, D.C., where he met with his American supporters and President George H. W. Bush in an effort to further increase U.S. military assistance to UNITA.<ref name=savwound>Alao (1994). p. XX.</ref>  Savimbi's supporters warned that continued Soviet support for the MPLA was threatening broader global collaboration between Gorbachev and the U.S.<ref>[http://www.heritage.org/dataconvert/pdf/em0259.pdf "Angola: Testing Gorbachev's 'New Thinking', Heritage Foundation Executive Memorandum #259, by Michael Johns, February 5, 1990.]</ref>
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During a visit to Washington in 1986, Reagan invited Savimbi to meet with him at the White House. Following the meeting, Reagan spoke of UNITA winning "a victory that electrifies the world."
  
Under military pressure from UNITA, the Angolan government negotiated a cease-fire with Savimbi, and Savimbi ran for president in the national elections of 1992Foreign monitors claimed the election to be fair.  But because neither Savimbi nor Angolan President [[José Eduardo dos Santos]] obtained the 50 percent necessary to prevail, a run-off election was scheduled.<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE3DA1539F935A25753C1A964958260&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/People/S/Savimbi,%20Jonas "Runoff Now Expected in Angola as Leader Falls Short," ''The New York Times'', October 16, 1992.]</ref>
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Two years later, with the Angolan Civil War intensifying, Savimbi returned to Washington, where he was filled with gratitude and praise for the Heritage Foundation's work on UNITA's behalf"When we come to the Heritage Foundation", Savimbi said during a June 30, 1988 speech at the foundation, "it is like coming back home. We know that our success here in Washington in repealing the Clark Amendment and obtaining American assistance for our cause is very much associated with your efforts. This foundation has been a source of great support. The UNITA leadership knows this, and it is also known in Angola."<ref>Jonas Savimbi,[http://www.heritage.org/Research/Africa/HL217.cfm The Coming Winds of Democracy in Angola], The Heritage Foundation, 30-June-1988, Accessed 11-September-2009</ref>.
  
In late October 1992, Savimbi dispatched UNITA Vice President [[Jeremias Chitunda]] and UNITA senior advisor [[Elias Salupeto Pena]] to Luanda to negotiate the details of the run-off election.  But on November 2, 1992 in Luanda, Chitunda and Pena's convoy was attacked by government forces and they were both pulled from their car and shot dead.  Their bodies were confiscated by government authorities and never seen again.<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE4DA1630F937A35752C1A964958260 "Rebels in Angola suffer a setback," ''The New York Times'', November 4, 1992.]</ref>  The offensive against Chitunda, Pena and other UNITA officials has come to be known as the [[Halloween Massacre (Angola)|Halloween Massacre]].
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==Reception amongst the US right==
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Thomas Frank gives the following account of the reception given to Savimbi by the US right:
  
Alleging governmental electoral fraud and questioning the government's commitment to peace, Savimbi withdrew from the run-off election and resumed fighting, mostly with foreign funds. UNITA again quickly advanced militarily, encircling the nation's capital of Luanda.<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE5D9133CF937A15753C1A964958260 "Luanda is encircled by former guerrillas," ''The New York Times'', October 24, 1992.]</ref>
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:The peerless darling of the freedom-fighter fan club was Jonas Savimbi, the charismatic Angolan guerrilla leader whose every utterance seemed to strike young Eighties conservatives as a timeless profundity. Angola had been one of the very last countries in Africa to be freed from colonial domination, but, unlike seemingly every other “national liberator” in the preceding decades, Savimbi was not a communist. In Angola, the communists were the ones who grabbed power in the capital as soon as the Europeans left; Savimbi, who fought them with the backing of the apartheid government in South Africa, supposedly believed in free enterprise and balanced budgets.
  
One of Savimbi's largest sources of financial support was the [[De Beers]] Corporation, which bought between $500 and $800 million worth of illegally mined [[diamonds]] in 1992-1993. In 1994, UNITA signed a new peace accord, but Savimbi declined the vice-presidency that was offered to him and again renewed fighting in 1998.
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:Conservatives were smitten with this self-titled general who struggled for free markets in his remote land. They fell for Savimbi as romantically, and as guilelessly, as Sixties radicals once did for Che, Ho, and Huey. Savimbi was “one of the few authentic heroes of our time,” roared [[Jeane Kirkpatrick]], queen of the neocons, when she introduced him at the 1986 [[Conservative Political Action Conference]]. [[Grover Norquist]] followed the great man around his camp in Angola, preparing magazine articles for Savimbi’s signature. [[Jack Abramoff]] made a movie about Savimbi, depicting him as a tougher, African version of Gandhi. Even Savimbi’s capital—the remote camp called “Jamba”—was described in conservative literature with elevated language such as “Savimbi’s Kingdom.
  
Savimbi also purportedly purged some of those within UNITA who he may have seen as threats to his leadership or questioned his strategic course.  Savimbi's  foreign secretary, [[Tito Chingunji]] and his family, were executed in 1991 after Savimbi suspected that Chingunji had been in secret, unapproved negotiations with the Angolan government during Chingunji's various diplomatic assignments in Europe and the United States.  Savimbi denied his involvement in the Chingunji killing and blamed it on two UNITA dissidents.<ref>[http://allafrica.com/stories/200206250743.html allAfrica.com: Angola: Don't Simplify History, Says Savimbi's Biographer (Page 1 of 4)<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
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:In truth, Savimbi’s main achievement was to keep going, for nearly thirty years, a civil war that made Angola one of the worst places on earth—its population impoverished, its railroads and highways and dams in ruins, its countryside strewn with land mines by the millions, even its elephant herds wiped out, their tusks hacked off to raise funds for his army.
  
==2002: Killed in combat==
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:This was the man the rebel right chose for the starring role in one of the strangest spectacles in American political history, a media event designed to cement conservatism’s identification with revolution. The organizer was Jack Abramoff; the place was Jamba; the model, I am told, was Woodstock—only a right-wing version, with guerrillas instead of rock bands. Every kind of freedom fighter was there, joining hands in territory liberated by arms from a Soviet client regime. There were Nicaraguan Contras, some Afghan mujahedeen, an American tycoon—and they all got together at Savimbi’s hideout.
  
After surviving more than a dozen assassination attempts, Savimbi was killed on February 22, 2002, in a battle with Angolan government troops - and, reportedly, South African mercenaries and Israeli special forces<ref>[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2299853,00.html 'Dogs of War' ban will rob British Army of vital frontline soldiers - Times Online<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> - along riverbanks in the province of [[Moxico (province)|Moxico]], his birthplace.  In the firefight, Savimbi sustained 15 machine gun bullets to his head, throat, upper body and legs. While Savimbi returned gun fire, the blows proved immediately fatal.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/1839252.stm "Savimbi 'died with gun in hand'"], BBC News, February 25, 2002.</ref>
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:This “rumble in the jungle,” as skeptics called it, came to pass in June of 1985. Of course, bringing it off required considerable assistance from Savimbi’s South African patrons. Nobody else even knew how to find Jamba.
  
Savimbi's somewhat mystical reputation for eluding the Angolan military and their Soviet and Cuban military advisors led many Angolans to question the validity of reports of his 2002 death. Not until pictures of his bloodied and bullet-ridden body appeared on Angolan state television, and the [[United States Department of State|United States State Department]] subsequently confirmed it, did the reports of Savimbi's death in combat gain credence in the country.
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:Since these freedom fighters had no actual issues to discuss—no trade agreements or mutual-defense plans or anything—they signed the Jamba Declaration, a bit of high-flown folderol written by [[Grover Norquist]] that aimed for solemnity but sounded more like the work of a fifth-grader who has been forced to memorize the Gettysburg Address and the Declaration of Independence and has got them all jumbled up somehow.
  
Savimbi was interred in [[Luena, Moxico Province]], in east central Angola.  In January 2008, his gravesite was vandalized by MPLA party activists, two of whom were arrested.<ref>[http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-01-23-jonas-savimbis-tomb-vandalised-says-unita "Jonas Savimbi's tomb vandalised, says UNITA"], ''[[Mail and Guardian]]'', January 23, 2008.</ref>
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:Jamba was meant as a celebration of freedom, a word revered by Americans generally and a term of enormous significance to conservatives in particular. Yet as freedom’s embodiment Abramoff had chosen a terrorist: [[Jonas Savimbi]], the leader of an armed cult. To fill the main supporting role in this great freedom-fest, meanwhile, the organizers turned to apartheid South Africa, a place where only a small, correctly complexioned percentage of the population possessed even the most basic democratic rights. .”<ref>Thomas Frank ‘The wrecking crew: How a gang of right-wing con men destroyed Washington and made a killing’, Harpers Magazine, August 2008
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</ref>
  
==UNITA after Savimbi==
 
  
Savimbi was succeeded by [[António Dembo]], who assumed UNITA's leadership on an interim basis in February 2002.  But Dembo had sustained wounds in the same attack that killed Savimbi, and he ended up dying from them ten days later.  Dembo was succeeded by [[Paulo Lukamba]].  In 2003, Lukamba was succeeded by [[Isaías Samakuva]], who served as UNITA's ambassador to Europe under Savimbi and has headed UNITA ever since.
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==Affiliations==
  
Six weeks following Savimbi's death, a ceasefire between UNITA and the [[MPLA]] was signed, but Angola remains deeply divided politically between MPLA and UNITA supporters. [[Angolan legislative election, 2008|Parliamentary elections in September 2008]] resulted in an overwhelming majority for the MPLA, but their legitimacy was questioned by international observers. [[Angolan_presidential_election,_2009|Presidential elections]] are planned for 2009.
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[[UNITA]] | [[Heritage Foundation]]
  
==Quotes==
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==Resources==  
[[Image:Flag of Unita.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Flag of [[UNITA]].]]
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* Siler, Michael J. ''Strategic Security Issues in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Comprehensive Annotated Bibliography'', 2004. Page 311.
*"I am not communist because it serves no purpose. Nor am I a capitalist. Socialism in this country is the only answer. Those who led the country to independence cannot become the exploiters of the people. We want a socialist system, but which? There is the orthodox one and the extremist one. We want the democratic one, [[social democracy]]." - Savimbi on his ideology<ref name="socdem">[http://www.aliciapatterson.org/APF001975/Wright/Wright15/Wright15.html Men at War: Angola's Liberation Leaders], December 12, 1975. Alicia Patterson Foundation.</ref>
 
*"I am against nationalization; it is a disease which saps the strength of a national economy. The real question is the renegotiation of allowable profits. Foreign companies need their profits, they would not invest without them. But the people of Angola need their share. When Angola is independent the investors must know that the people will have a greater share."<ref name="socdem"/>
 
*"We support completely the atmosphere of [[détente]]. There is a need to live together peacefully in this area, that is a must. That is why we back completely the initiatives of Presidents [[Kenneth Kaunda|Kaunda]], [[Julius Nyerere|Nyerere]] and [[Seretse Khama]]. Prime Minister [[B.J. Vorster|Vorster]] is an intelligent leader and he must know that the independence of Angola will have an effect on South Africa. I hope the future leader of this country will be realistic. We have a dam at [[Cunene (province)|Cunene]]. We have investments involving South Africa. Should we ostracize them? I hope that a leader here will be realistic enough to cooperate with any country despite differences in political systems."<ref name="socdem"/>
 
*"Only elections — free elections — under [[Organisation of African Unity|OAU]] control can provide a final solution. But first there will have to be a short period of transitional government in which both sides would be represented. But in the end, the ballot must decide, not bullets."<ref name="socdem"/>
 
 
 
==Books==
 
*''The War Against Soviet Colonialism: The Strategy and Tactics of Anti-Communist Resistance'', Winter 1986. ''[[Policy Review]]'', Volume 35.<ref name="stratandtac">Siler, Michael J. ''Strategic Security Issues in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Comprehensive Annotated Bibliography'', 2004. Page 311.</ref>
 
 
 
==Further reading==
 
 
*Bridgland, Fred. ''Jonas Savimbi: A Key to Africa''. Hodder & Stoughton General Division. ISBN 0340422181
 
*Bridgland, Fred. ''Jonas Savimbi: A Key to Africa''. Hodder & Stoughton General Division. ISBN 0340422181
 
*Christine Messiant, "Les Eglises et la dernière guerre en Angola. Les voies difficiles de l'engagement pour une paix juste", LFM. Social sciences & missions, No.13, Oct. 2003, pp.75-117
 
*Christine Messiant, "Les Eglises et la dernière guerre en Angola. Les voies difficiles de l'engagement pour une paix juste", LFM. Social sciences & missions, No.13, Oct. 2003, pp.75-117
 
==External links==
 
*[http://www.nndb.com/people/243/000112904/ Jonas Savimbi at the Notable Names Database].
 
*[http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x4cpfb_savimbi_politics French interview of Jonas Savimbi, 1978].
 
*[http://www.reagan.utexas.edu/archives/speeches/1988/063088a.htm "White House Statement on the President's Meeting with Jonas Savimbi"], June 30, 1988.
 
 
*[http://www.heritage.org/Research/Africa/HL217.cfm "The Coming Winds of Democracy in Angola"], Jonas Savimbi speech to the [[Heritage Foundation]], October 5, 1989.
 
*[http://www.heritage.org/Research/Africa/HL217.cfm "The Coming Winds of Democracy in Angola"], Jonas Savimbi speech to the [[Heritage Foundation]], October 5, 1989.
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqcNdVc2bJw Jonas Savimbi speaks in Angolan capital of Luanda, 1991].
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*[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1554/is_n1_v19/ai_13571831/ On the town with Jonas Savimbi - huge U.S. lobbying expenditures by Angola] Common Cause Magazine, Spring, 1993 by Steve Burkholder
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20020627223414/http://verdade.no.sapo.pt/soares_e.html "Genocide of Christians in Angola, UN and the resistance of UNITA"], Webarchive, 2000.
 
*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/1846238.stm "Angola Rebels Demand Death Probe"], [[BBC News]], February 28, 2002.
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Latest revision as of 16:26, 9 December 2009

Jonas Savimbi (died November 2002) was the leader of the UNITA rebels during the Angolan civil war[1].

With support from the governments of the United States, South Africa, Israel,[2] several African leaders including Félix Houphouët-Boigny of the Ivory Coast and Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire(Mobutu denied helping UNITA)[3]. Savimbi spent much of his life battling Angola's Marxist-inspired government, which was supported by weapons and military advisers from the Soviet Union, Cuba, and Nicaragua Sandinistas.[4] The war ultimately became one of the most prominent Third World conflicts of the Cold War. Sean Cleary was a political advisor to Savimbi[5].

2002: Killed in combat

After surviving more than a dozen assassination attempts, Savimbi was killed on February 22, 2002, in a battle with Angolan government troops - and, reportedly, South African mercenaries and Israeli special forces[6] - along riverbanks in the province of Moxico, his birthplace. In the firefight, Savimbi sustained 15 machine gun bullets to his head, throat, upper body and legs. While Savimbi returned gun fire, the blows proved immediately fatal.[7]

The Cold War and the Heritage Foundation

Savimbi's war against Angola's Marxist government became a sub-plot to the Cold War, with both Moscow and Washington viewing the conflict as important to the global balance of power. In 1985, with the backing of the Ronald Reagan administration, Jack Abramoff and other U.S. conservatives organized the Democratic International in Savimbi's base in Jamba, Cuando, in Cuando Cubango Province in southeastern Angola.[8] The meeting included most of the anti-communist guerrilla leaders of the Third World, including Savimbi, Nicaraguan contras leader Adolfo Calero, and Abdul Rahim Wardak, then leader of Afghanistan's mujahideen who went on to become Afghanistan's Defense Minister.

Equally important, Savimbi also was strongly supported by the influential, conservative Heritage Foundation. Heritage Foundation foreign policy analyst Michael Johns and other conservatives visited regularly with Savimbi in his clandestine camps in Jamba and provided the rebel leader with ongoing political and military guidance in his war against the Angolan government. Savimbi's U.S.-based supporters ultimately proved successful in convincing the CIA to channel covert weapons and recruit guerrillas for Savimbi's war against Angola's Marxist government, which greatly intensified and prolonged the conflict.

During a visit to Washington in 1986, Reagan invited Savimbi to meet with him at the White House. Following the meeting, Reagan spoke of UNITA winning "a victory that electrifies the world."

Two years later, with the Angolan Civil War intensifying, Savimbi returned to Washington, where he was filled with gratitude and praise for the Heritage Foundation's work on UNITA's behalf. "When we come to the Heritage Foundation", Savimbi said during a June 30, 1988 speech at the foundation, "it is like coming back home. We know that our success here in Washington in repealing the Clark Amendment and obtaining American assistance for our cause is very much associated with your efforts. This foundation has been a source of great support. The UNITA leadership knows this, and it is also known in Angola."[9].

Reception amongst the US right

Thomas Frank gives the following account of the reception given to Savimbi by the US right:

The peerless darling of the freedom-fighter fan club was Jonas Savimbi, the charismatic Angolan guerrilla leader whose every utterance seemed to strike young Eighties conservatives as a timeless profundity. Angola had been one of the very last countries in Africa to be freed from colonial domination, but, unlike seemingly every other “national liberator” in the preceding decades, Savimbi was not a communist. In Angola, the communists were the ones who grabbed power in the capital as soon as the Europeans left; Savimbi, who fought them with the backing of the apartheid government in South Africa, supposedly believed in free enterprise and balanced budgets.
Conservatives were smitten with this self-titled general who struggled for free markets in his remote land. They fell for Savimbi as romantically, and as guilelessly, as Sixties radicals once did for Che, Ho, and Huey. Savimbi was “one of the few authentic heroes of our time,” roared Jeane Kirkpatrick, queen of the neocons, when she introduced him at the 1986 Conservative Political Action Conference. Grover Norquist followed the great man around his camp in Angola, preparing magazine articles for Savimbi’s signature. Jack Abramoff made a movie about Savimbi, depicting him as a tougher, African version of Gandhi. Even Savimbi’s capital—the remote camp called “Jamba”—was described in conservative literature with elevated language such as “Savimbi’s Kingdom.”
In truth, Savimbi’s main achievement was to keep going, for nearly thirty years, a civil war that made Angola one of the worst places on earth—its population impoverished, its railroads and highways and dams in ruins, its countryside strewn with land mines by the millions, even its elephant herds wiped out, their tusks hacked off to raise funds for his army.
This was the man the rebel right chose for the starring role in one of the strangest spectacles in American political history, a media event designed to cement conservatism’s identification with revolution. The organizer was Jack Abramoff; the place was Jamba; the model, I am told, was Woodstock—only a right-wing version, with guerrillas instead of rock bands. Every kind of freedom fighter was there, joining hands in territory liberated by arms from a Soviet client regime. There were Nicaraguan Contras, some Afghan mujahedeen, an American tycoon—and they all got together at Savimbi’s hideout.
This “rumble in the jungle,” as skeptics called it, came to pass in June of 1985. Of course, bringing it off required considerable assistance from Savimbi’s South African patrons. Nobody else even knew how to find Jamba.
Since these freedom fighters had no actual issues to discuss—no trade agreements or mutual-defense plans or anything—they signed the Jamba Declaration, a bit of high-flown folderol written by Grover Norquist that aimed for solemnity but sounded more like the work of a fifth-grader who has been forced to memorize the Gettysburg Address and the Declaration of Independence and has got them all jumbled up somehow.
Jamba was meant as a celebration of freedom, a word revered by Americans generally and a term of enormous significance to conservatives in particular. Yet as freedom’s embodiment Abramoff had chosen a terrorist: Jonas Savimbi, the leader of an armed cult. To fill the main supporting role in this great freedom-fest, meanwhile, the organizers turned to apartheid South Africa, a place where only a small, correctly complexioned percentage of the population possessed even the most basic democratic rights. .”[10]


Affiliations

UNITA | Heritage Foundation

Resources

Notes

  1. BBC Monitoring Africa - Political, Angolan interior minister: "There will be no negotiations with Dr Savimbi", BBC Worldwide Monitoring, 23-March-2001, Accessed via NexisUK 11-September-2009
  2. National Congress Library,Angola: A Country Study, Congress Library, Accessed 11-September-2009
  3. Blaine Harden, Africa: Dispatches from a Fragile Continent, p. 51, and Sean Kelly, America's Tyrant: The CIA and Mobutu of Zaire, p. 4
  4. Nicaragua Betrayed, by Anastasio Somoza and Jack Cox, backflap
  5. Elaine Windrich, Angola's War Economy: The Role of Oil and Diamonds, HNet Book Reviews, Accessed 11-September-2009
  6. Fred Bridgland in Johannesburg and Michael Evans, 'Dogs of War' ban will rob British Army of vital frontline soldiers, The Times, 05-August-2006, Accessed 11-September-2009
  7. BBC News,"Savimbi 'died with gun in hand'", BBC News, February 25, 2002.
  8. James Verini, The tale of "Red Scorpion", Salon, 17-August-2005, Accessed 11-September-2009
  9. Jonas Savimbi,The Coming Winds of Democracy in Angola, The Heritage Foundation, 30-June-1988, Accessed 11-September-2009
  10. Thomas Frank ‘The wrecking crew: How a gang of right-wing con men destroyed Washington and made a killing’, Harpers Magazine, August 2008