Cuba’s Operation Carlota 40 Years Later
By Matt Peppe
November 05, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - After 40 years, Republic
of Guinea native Alpha Diallo still remembers the emotion he felt as
a 20-year-old college student in Cuba when he made a decision that
would change his life. The Cuban government had just decided to send
troops to Angola to fight the invading South African army, which had
crossed the border into Angola several weeks earlier on Oct. 23,
1975. Diallo, who had come from western Africa to Havana on
scholarship two years earlier to study agricultural engineering,
attended a rally of 800,000 people in the Plaza of the Revolution as
Fidel Castro announced the military mission to support the
anti-colonial Angolan movement and fight apartheid.
“I followed Fidel’s speech and it was compelling.
Among the Guineans, 15 of us decided to give up our studies to go
fight,” Diallo recalled recently in a phone interview from his home
in Washington D.C. “We were so impressed and we were excited to go.”
Diallo said that as Africans, he and the other
students felt a special obligation to help the Cubans fight for the
liberation of other African countries. Since the early 1960s, Cuba
had provided crucial support to movements throughout Africa seeking
to free themselves from colonialism.
In Guinea-Bissau, Cuba had provided military
instructors and doctors, enabling the rebels to gain their
independence from Portugal two years earlier. After the Portuguese
dictatorship fell in 1974 and Portugal prepared to grant Angola
independence on Nov. 11, 1975, three local movements fought to take
power.
The largest rebel group with the most popular
support was the People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA).
They had gained a decisive advantage internally and were poised to
take control of the government. The MPLA was providing critical
training and safe haven to other anti-colonial rebel groups opposed
to minority rule from neighboring countries such as (Nelson
Mandela’s) ANC of South Africa, SWAPO of Namibia, and FRELIMO of
Mozambique.
By early November, the South African Defence Force
(SADF) was advancing 45 miles per day toward the capital Luanda.
South Africa’s invasion jeopardized not only Angola’s revolution,
but the struggle for liberation throughout the continent. The
racists were set to install a puppet regime led by former Portuguese
collaborator Jonas Savimbi that would be amendable to white rule in
South Africa and willing to work with apartheid to crush the
liberation movements. The situation in Angola was bleak.
“The MPLA leaders, who had been prepared for a
guerilla struggle rather than a full-scale war, then understood that
only an urgent appeal for international solidarity would enable them
to rout this concerted attack by neighboring states, supported by
the most rapacious and destructive resources of imperialism,” wrote
Colombian author Gabriel García Marquez in 1977.
The Angolans had only one unlikely country they
could turn to: Cuba. The poor Caribbean country, suffering under a
vicious economic war waged on them for 15 years by the world’s most
dominant superpower, had already provided military instructors to
assist the MPLA. But they would not be nearly enough on their own.
MPLA leader Agostinho Neto would appeal to Fidel Castro on Nov. 3
for reinforcements to ward off the racists.
The answer came less than 48 hours later on Nov.
5. Yes. “The Communist Party of Cuba reached its decision without
wavering,” García Marquez wrote. He noted the date had historical
significance for Cubans: “On another such November 5, in 1843, a
slave called Black Carlota, working on the Triunvirato plantation in
the Matanzas region, had taken up her machete at the head of a slave
rebellion in which she lost her life. It was in homage to her that
the solidarity action in Angola bore her name: Operation Carlota.”
On Nov. 7, the first 82 soldiers, dressed in
civilian clothes and carrying light artillery, set off on a Cubana
Airlines flight to Luanda. Over the coming weeks and months, Cuban
troops would pour into Angola by air and by sea. By the end of the
year, they would number nearly 10,000 . More than a decade later,
before the end of apartheid, there would be as many as 36,000 troops
throughout the country.
Fidel Castro, Commander of the Cuban Revolution,
would immerse himself in the battle.
“There was not a single dot on the map of Angola
that he was unable to identify, nor any feature of the land that he
did not know by heart. His absorption in the war was so intense and
meticulous that he could quote any statistic relating to Angola as
if it were Cuba itself, and he spoke of its towns, customs and
peoples as if he had lived there all his life,” writes García
Marquez. “In the early stages of the war, when the situation was
urgent, Fidel Castro would spend up to fourteen hours at a stretch
in the command room of the general staff, at times without eating or
sleeping, as if he were on the battlefield himself. He followed the
course of battles with pins on minutely detailed wall-sized maps,
keeping in constant touch with the MPLA high command on a
battlefield where the time was six hours later.”
After landing in Angola, Cuban troops went
straight to the battlefield and proved decisive in keeping the
racist South Africans at bay. On Nov. 10, Cuban troops ambushed the
SADF’s Zulu column, inflicting heavy casualties on the apartheid
army.
At the Battle of Ebo on Nov. 23, Cuban soldiers
attacked the Zulu column as it approached a bridge, according to
historian Piero Gleijeses. They killed and wounded as many as 90
racist troops and knocked out seven or eight armored cars. The
victory bought Cuba time as reinforcements poured in, and Angola
received a shipment of weapons from the Soviet Union. The apartheid
army tried to advance, but were pushed back by heavy resistance. By
Dec. 27, they were ordered to fall back.
“As 1975 came to a close, the tide had turned
against Washington and Pretoria. It had turned on the battlefield,
where the Cubans had stopped the South African advance, and it had
turned on the propaganda front: the Western press had noticed that
South Africa had invaded Angola,” writes Gleijeses in Conflicting
Missions: Havana, Washington and Africa, 1959-1976. [1]
Imperialism and Apartheid Conspire Against
African Self-Determination
South Africa had tried to disguise its involvement
in the invasion of Angola by pretending that mercenaries, rather
than the regular South African army, had invaded. The Americans,
meanwhile, tried to distance themselves by claiming they had no
involvement in South Africa’s military operation. But it is clear
from the documentary record that Washington’s fingerprints were all
over South Africa’s actions.
In a June 1975 meeting of the National Security
Council, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger told President President
Ford he was not “in wild agreement” with the options presented by an
interagency task force: “The first is neutrality – stay out and let
nature take its course… As for the second course, my Department
agrees, but I don’t. It is recommended that we launch a diplomatic
offensive … and encourage cooperation among the groups.” The absence
of American intervention, Kissinger admitted, would lead to a
victory for the MPLA and for Neto to “gradually gain the support of
other Africans.” [2]
Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger offered:
“We might wish to encourage the disintegration of Angola. Cabinda in
the clutches of (Congolese military dictator) Mobutu would mean far
greater security of the petroleum resources.” Ford was in agreement
that the United States must prevent Angolan self-determination: “It
seems to me that doing nothing is unacceptable.” [3]
The most damning evidence, though, was admitted
publicly by apartheid South African Prime Minister P.W. Botha in the
House of Assembly in 1978. Botha declared that when the SADF invaded
Angola: “we did so with the approval and knowledge of the
Americans.” [4]
By the end of 1975, Cuban troops had routed the
apartheid army and prevented their takeover of the country. There is
no doubt that had Castro and the Cuban government declined to
confront the apartheid regime on the battlefield, the MPLA would
have fallen. A South African victory would have solidified apartheid
and devastated the decolonization movements across southern Africa.
“Without the Cuban intervention, the South
Africans would have seized Luanda before anyone reported that they
had crossed the border. The CIA covert operation in Angola would
have succeeded,” Gleijeses writes. [5]
Diallo and his fellow countrymen in Cuba would
not, in the end, join the fight against apartheid. When the Cuban
government found out that the African students wished to take part
in the military mission, they informed them through the university
that they should stay in Cuba.
Even though he had never been to South Africa,
Diallo said he understood the injustices black South Africans faced
under the apartheid system. “I was aware of that, the humiliation of
people telling you that you weren’t as good, telling you where you
could live and restricting your ability to move around,” he said.
Ridding Africa of apartheid, what Castro himself called “the most
beautiful cause,” was worth fighting for. [6]
But Diallo is glad the Cubans made it clear that
the students should serve in a civic capacity, rather than a
military one. “They told us: ‘Your country needs you. We appreciate
your offer, but let us handle this. Stay here and finish your
studies and then go back and help your own countries,’ ” Diallo
said.
Matt Peppe writes about politics, U.S. foreign
policy and Latin America on his blog.
You can follow him on twitter.
References
[1] Gleijeses, Piero. Conflicting Missions:
Havana, Washington, and Africa, 1959-1976. The University of North
Carolina Press, 2002. Kindle edition.
[2] June 27, 1975, NSC Minutes, “Angola” (Document
obtained from Gerald Ford Library, NSC Meetings File, Box 2)
http://nsarchive.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB67/gleijeses6.pdf
(pg. 3-4)
[3] Ibid. (pg. 7)
[4] as quoted in Gleijeses, 2002
[5] Gleijeses, op. cit.
[6] Instructions to the Cuban Delegation for the
London Meeting, ‘Indicaciones concretas del Comandante en Jefe que
guiarán la actuación de la delegación cubana a las conversaciones de
Luanda y las negociaciones de Londres (23-4-88)’,” April 23, 1988,
History and Public Policy Program Digital Archive, Archive of the
Cuban Armed Forces. Obtained and contributed to CWIHP by Piero
Gleijeses and included in CWIHP e-Dossier No. 44.
http://digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org/document/118134
(pg. 5)