Shaba II

Shaba II was a brief conflict fought in the Zairean province of Shaba (now Katanga) in 1978. The conflict broke out on 11 May 1978 after 6,500 rebels from the Congolese National Liberation Front (FNLC), a Katangese separatist militia, crossed the border from Angola into Zaire in an attempt to achieve the province's secession from the Zairian regime of Mobutu Sese Seko. The FNLC captured the important mining town of Kolwezi.[2]

Shaba II
Part of the Shaba Invasions and the Cold War

Location of Shaba in Zaire.
DateMay 11-June 1978
Location
Result Zairian victory; mutual end of support for other nations' rebel groups
Belligerents

Supported by

Front for the National Liberation of the Congo (FNLC)
Supported by

Commanders and leaders
Mobutu Sese Seko
Guy Méry
Valéry Giscard d'Estaing
Leo Tindemans
Abdelkader Loubaris
John Charles Stetson
Nathaniel Mbumba
Casualties and losses
Zaire:
311e Btn:
14 killed
8 wounded[1]
Civilian:
500 killed
France:[1]
11 killed
20 wounded
Belgium:[1]
1 killed
Morocco:[1]
1 paratrooper killed
European civilians:
120 killed[1]
United States:[1]
1 aircraft slightly damaged
1 crewman wounded
Katanga:[1]
250 killed
160 captured

The Mobutist government appealed for foreign assistance and French and Belgian military intervention beat back the invasion, just as in 1977.[3]

The US and Cuba coerced Angola and Zaire into negotiations leading to a non-aggression pact. That ended support for insurgencies in each other's countries. Zaire temporarily cut off support to the Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda (FLEC), the National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA) and the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA), and Angola forbade further activity by the Shaba separatists.[3]

The US worked with France in repelling the invaders in the first military co-operation between the two since the Vietnam War.[2] U.S. Air Force elements involved included a Combat Control Team (air traffic controllers) of the 435th Tactical Airlift Wing, the 445th Military Airlift Wing, and other airlift wings.[4]

Battle of Kolwezi

The French Foreign Legion's 2 Foreign Paratroop Regiment had 600 troops, who took back Kolwezi after a seven-day battle and airlifted 2,250 European citizens to Belgium but not before the FNLC had massacred 80 Europeans and 200 Africans. In one instance, the FNLC killed 34 European civilians who had hidden in a room. However, Pierre Yambuya claims that many of the civilian deaths were caused by Zairian armed forces, not the FLNC.[5]

The FNLC retreated to Zambia and back to Angola, vowing to return. The Zairian armed forces (Forces Armées Zaïroises) forcibly evicted civilians along Shaba's 105-kilometre-long (65 mi) border with Angola, and Mobutu ordered them to shoot on sight.[6]

gollark: Constraint calculus. Constraints in Haskell—which are the mechanism for reaching into the typeclass prolog system—are structurally typed. This gives a very simple form of subtyping relationship which lets you assemble complex constraints from simpler ones. The entire mtl library is based on this idea.
gollark: "ITWAT <@485027179286102018> Is Totally Wrong About Tau.
gollark: πIWTTπ Is Worse Than Tau.
gollark: ∆IKOAGL∆ Is Kind Of A Greek Letter
gollark: GIRAGo(lang) Is Really Awful

See also

References

  1. Ministère de la Défense. ""OPÉRATION LÉOPARD" Une intervention humanitaire Kolwezi 17 mai-16 juin 1978" (PDF). Collection « Mémoire et Citoyenneté » n° 37. Defense.gouv.fr. p. 8. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
  2. Widstrand, Carl Gösta, Timothy M. Shaw, and Douglas George Anglin. Canada, Scandinavia, and Southern Africa, 1978. Page 130.
  3. George, Edward. The Cuban Intervention in Angola, 1965-1991: From Che Guevara to Cuito Cuanavale, 2005. Page 136.
  4. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-12. Retrieved 2011-12-13.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. NDAYWELE NZIEM, ISIDORE, Histoire Générale du Congo, p.757 see https://books.google.com/books?id=U47B0mwVU_4C&pg=PA757&lpg=PA757&dq=pierre+yambuya+flnc&source=bl&ots=MkmkKQFsEw&sig=eArIJeKhBg8vppKYtpIml1Evwjo&hl=nl&sa=X&ei=zR9ST9eDGcXrObni0ZsK&ved=0CCMQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=pierre%20yambuya%20flnc&f=false
  6. Inside Kolwezi: Toll of Terror, June 5, 1978. Time magazine
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