Half a minute of video, French troops secure Central African Republic airport (0:35)
Regards
Mike
Half a minute of video, French troops secure Central African Republic airport (0:35)
Regards
Mike
Must have been a hell of a time for SANDF. Did they get out? I haven't seen anything since then about them actually leaving successfully.
Hat tip to Zenpundit for Eeben Barlow's commentary 'Failing to Listen', which talks about the difficulties in getting intelligence accepted and touches upon what happened in the CAR:http://eebenbarlowsmilitaryandsecuri...to-listen.html
A taster:...not only was the overall SANDF strategy flawed but that the strategy had its foundation resting on poor intelligence – and no strategy can succeed if it is developed off assumptions and rumours.
davidbfpo
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-22003412South Africa's President Jacob Zuma has paid tribute to 13 soldiers killed in the recent rebellion in the Central African Republic (CAR). At the memorial service, he said they died in CAR's capital Bangui defending South Africa's commitment to promoting peace and stability in Africa. The soldiers were killed as rebels seized power more than a week ago.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/...8f1_story.htmlDemocratic Alliance leader Helen Zille’s announcement that her party will present a motion in parliament Tuesday to demand the withdrawal of South African troops, comes amid increasingly angry debate over why the soldiers were deployed to Central African Republic at all, and suggestions they were sent to protect mining interests of South Africa’s governing African National Congress. The ANC denies it has any business in the country rich in diamonds, uranium and other resources.
http://www.dw.de/south-africa-bids-f...ers/a-16715108A South African newspaper, the Mail & Guardian, widened the division by alleging that the soldiers were sent to CAR to protect the business interests of the ruling African National Congress (ANC). The ANC has dismissed the allegations as unfounded.
"We reject any insinuation that these soldiers were sent to CAR for any reason other than in the pursuit of national interests and the interests of the African continent," President Zuma said.
Also
http://www.theworld.org/2013/04/outr...ican-republic/
A scrimmage in a Border Station
A canter down some dark defile
Two thousand pounds of education
Drops to a ten-rupee jezail
http://i.imgur.com/IPT1uLH.jpg
TV-PressPass asked two days ago:This BBC report states the SANDF are to leave, although very little detail:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-22025593Must have been a hell of a time for SANDF. Did they get out? I haven't seen anything since then about them actually leaving successfully.
Those killed had a military funeral yesterday in Pretoria and the furore over the mission remain. It is noticeable how little reporting there is from CAR, for example no footage of the SANDF or even a map showing were the clash happened, which of course might show this was not a training mission.
I suspect South Africa has had to talk to the new regime in CAR, much against its inclination, then negotiate an exit and rely on the French at the Bangui airport.
The "smoke & mirrors" aspects are covered in this:http://mg.co.za/article/2013-03-28-0...diers-died-for and an opposition South African newspaper Mail & Guardian has extensive coverage:http://mg.co.za/report/the-battle-of-bangui
Last edited by davidbfpo; 04-04-2013 at 12:34 PM.
davidbfpo
In a BBC report on CAR this phrase:This is odd, no strange.South Africa, which lost at least 13 troops during the rebel takeover, has said it is pulling its forces out of CAR.
Others are going in:Link:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-22197108The Central African Republic's neighbours have agreed to send an extra 2,000 troops to help restore security following last month's rebel takeover.
davidbfpo
The following passage is from a Reuters article on Chad's emergence as a regional power:Link:http://mobile.reuters.com/article/id...30508?irpc=932In Central African Republic, Chad's decisive role in the change of government exposed South Africa's pretension of acting as a continental superpower. Pretoria had sent a contingent of some 400 troops to prop up President Francois Bozize.
Deby, who had helped Bozize seize power in a 2003 coup, had tired of Bozize's refusal to share power with the opposition which was stirring up a revolt along Chad's southern border.
The final straw came when Bozize disbanded his Chadian bodyguard and turned to South Africa for military aid. Deby ordered Chad's peacekeepers to step aside and Seleka rebel forces stormed the capital, as France made good on its promise not to intervene militarily.
South Africa's involvement ended with 13 of its soldiers killed, showing Pretoria lacked the regional knowledge and military resources to play a decisive role in Deby's backyard.
davidbfpo
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