Cuba's first informal contacts with the MPLA dated back to the
late 1950s. MPLA guerrillas received their first training from Cubans inAlgiers starting in 1963 and Guevara met MPLA-leader Agostinho Neto for the first high-level
talks on 5 January 1965 in Brazzaville where Cuba was establishing a two-year
military mission. This mission had the primary purpose to act as a strategic
reserve for the Cuban operation in eastern Congo. It also was to provide
assistance to the Alphonse Massemba-Débat government in Brazzaville and, at Neto's
request, to the MPLA with its operations against the Portuguese in Cabinda and
in northern Angola where its major foe was the FNLA. This co-operation marked
the beginning of the Cuban-Angolan alliance which was to last 26 years. The MPLA-Cuban operations in Cabinda and
northern Angola were met with very little success and the Cubans ended the
mission to Brazzaville as planned in July 1966. The MPLA moved its headquarters
to Lusaka in early 1968. A few MPLA guerrillas continued to receive military
training in Cuba but else contacts between Cuba and the MPLA cooled as Havana
turned its attention to the liberation struggle in Guiné (Guinea-Bissau). Following Castro's tour of African countries in May 1972 Cuba
stepped up its internationalist operations in Africa starting a training
mission in Sierra Leone and smaller technical
missions in Equatorial Guinea, Somalia, Algeria and Tanzania.
In a memorandum of 22 November 1972 by Cuban Major Manuel Piñeiro
Lozada to Major Raúl Castro it says: "For some
time now we have discussed the possibility of entering Angola and Mozambique
with the objective of getting to know the revolutionary movements in those
countries. These movements have been a mystery even for those socialist
countries that give them considerable aid. This research would help us give
more focused aid to those movements. I don't consider it necessary to delineate
the strategic importance of these countries, it takes only pointing out that a
change in the course of events of the wars that are developing in both
countries could signify a change in all the forces in the African continent.
For the first time two independent countries in Africa from which a bigger war
could be waged would have common borders with the region with the principle
investment and the strongest political-military knot of Imperialism in Africa
exist: South Africa, Rhodesia, Zaire, and the Portuguese colonies.
Our comrades in the MPLA solicited us this May for the following:
·
a) That we train 10 men
in Cuba in guerrilla warfare ….
·
c) They want to send a
high level delegation to Cuba ….
… Both movements will coordinate with the governments of Tanzania and Zambia for safe passage of our comrades through their
territories".
These considerations in 1972 bore no fruit and Cuba's attentions
remained focused on Guinea-Bissau. It was only after the Portuguese Revolution
that an MPLA delegation brought a request for economic aid, military training
and arms to Cuba on 26 July 1974. In early October Cuba received another
request, this time more urgent, for 5 Cuban military officers to help organize
the MPLA army, FAPLA. In December 1974 / January 1975 Cuba sent Major Alfonso
Perez Morales and Carlos Cadelo on a fact finding mission to Angola to assess
the situation. In a letter of 26
January 1975, handed to Cadelo and Morales, Neto listed what the MPLA wanted
from Cuba:
"1. The establishment, organization, and maintenance of a
military school for cadres. We urgently need to create a company of security
personnel, and we need to train military staff. 2. A ship to transport the war materiel that we have in Dar-es-Salaam to Angola. The delivery in Angola,
if it were in a Cuban ship, could take place outside of territorial waters. 3.
Weapons and transportation for the Rapid Deployment Unit (Brigada de
Intervencion) that we are planning to organize, as well as light weapons for
some infantry battalions. 4. Transmitters and receivers to resolve
communication problems of widely dispersed military units. 5. Uniforms and
military equipment for 10,000 men. 6. Two pilots and one flight mechanic. 7. Assistance
in training trade union leaders. 8. Assistance in organizing schools to teach
Marxism… 9. Publications dealing with political and military subjects,
especially instruction manuals. 10. Financial assistance while we are
establishing and organizing ourselves."
Although Cuba was considering the establishment of a military
mission (military training) in Angola, again there was no official response to
this request. It was only reiterated by the MPLA in May 1975 when Cuban
commander Flavio Bravo met Neto in Brazzaville while the Portuguese were
preparing to withdraw from their African colonies.[45] The MPLA's hopes for aid
were turned to the eastern Bloc countries from where not enough help
materialised according to their wishes. Neto is quoted in a Cuban report
complaining about Moscow's lacklustre support. He also expressed hope that the
war in Angola would become "a vital issue in the fight against imperialism
and socialism". But neither the USSR nor the MPLA itself expected a major
war to break out before independence. In March 1975 the MPLA sent ca. 100 members for training in the
Soviet Union and the requested financial assistance (100,000US$) it received
from Yugoslavia.
No comments:
Post a Comment