In light of these developments
Pretoria had to decide whether it would stay in the game and bring in more
troops. In late December 1975, there were heated debates between Vorster,
foreign minister Muller, defence minister Botha, head of BOSS (South African
Bureau of State Security) van den Bergh and a number of senior officials as to
withdraw or to stay. Zaire, UNITA and the US urged South Africa to stay. But
the US would not openly endorse the South African invasion and assure
continuing military assistance in case of an escalation. On 30 December Vorster
planned to withdraw after the OAU emergency
session in Addis Ababa on 13 January to a line 50 to
80 km north of the Namibian border. "In military terms the advance
had come to a halt anyway, as all attempts by Battle-Groups Orange and X-Ray to
extend the war into the interior had been forced to turn back by destroyed
bridges." In early
January 1976 the Cubans launched a first counter-offensive driving Foxbat from
the Tongo and Medunda hills. The
OAU meeting which the South Africans had hopes for finally debated the Angola
issue and voted on 23 January 1976, condemning the South African invasion and
demandits its withdrawal. Sobered
by the Cuban's performance and by the West's cold shoulder, Pretoria chose to
fold and ordered the retreat of its troops from Angola.
The sentiment of the Pretoria government at the time was expressed
in a speech by Botha before South African parliament on 17 April 1978, in which
he charged the US with "defaulting on a promise to give them all necessary
support in their campaign to defeat the MPLA" : "Against which
neighbouring states have we taken aggressive steps? I know of only one occasion
in recent years, when we crossed a border and that was in the case of Angola
when we did so with the approval and knowledge of the Americans. But they left
us in the lurch. We are going to retell that story: the story must be told and
how we, with their knowledge, went in there and operated in Angola with their
knowledge, how they encouraged us to act and, when we had nearly reached the
climax, we were ruthlessly left in the lurch".
Once the decision was made, South Africa rapidly withdrew its
forces towards Namibia. In late January, the SADF abandoned the towns of Cela
and Novo Redondo Apart from
a few skirmishes the Cubans stayed well behind the retreating South Africans
and easily overcoming the remaining UNITA resistance. By early February 1976
the SADF had retreated to the far south of Angola, leaving behind mine fields
and blown up bridges. UNITA's capital, Nova Lisboa (Huambo) fell into FAPLA
hands on 8 February, the ports of Lobito and Benguela on 10 February. By 14
February control of the Benguala railway was complete and on 13 March UNITA
lost its last foothold in far south-eastern Angola, Gago Gouthinho (Lumbala
N'Guimbo). It is in this attack that the Cubans for the first time employed
their airforce. Four to five
thousand SADF troops kept a strip along the Namibian border up to 80 km
deep until Angola at least gave assurance that it wouldn't supply bases for
SWAPO and that it would continue to supply electricity to Namibia from the
Cunene dams. While the Cubans and
FAPLA were slowly approaching the southern border, South Africa and Angola took
up indirect negotiations about South African withdrawal brokered by the British
and Soviet governments. Neto ordered FAPLA and the Cubans to halt at a distance
to the border, forestalling a "clash that some feared might trigger an
all-out black war to 'liberate' white-ruled southern Africa". In exchange for South African
recognition he offered to guarantee the safety of South Africa's 180 million
US$ investment in the Cunene hydroelectric complex. On 25 March Botha announced the total
withdrawal of South African troops from Angola by 27 March 1976. On 27 March the last 60 military
vehicles crossed the border into Namibia.
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