Spear of the Nation: Umkhonto weSizwe: South Africa’s Liberation Army, 1960s–1990s

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Ohio University Press, 6 ago 2012 - 156 páginas

Umkhonto weSizwe, Spear of the Nation, was arguably the last of the great liberation armies of the twentieth century—but it never got to “march triumphant into Pretoria.” MK—as it was known—was the armed wing of the African National Congress, South Africa’s liberation movement, that challenged the South African apartheid government. A small group of revolutionaries committed to the seizure of power, MK discovered its principal members engaged in negotiated settlement with the enemy and was disbanded soon after.

The history of MK is one of paradox and contradiction, of successes and failures. In this short study, which draws widely on the personal experiences of—and commentary by—MK soldiers, Janet Cherry offers a new and nuanced account of the Spear of the Nation. She presents in broad outline the various stages of MK’s thirty-year history, considers the difficult strategic and moral problems the revolutionary army faced, and argues that its operations are likely to be remembered as a just war conducted with considerable restraint.

 

Índice

Preface
7
1 Introduction
9
2 The turn to armed struggle 19603
13
3 The Wankie and Sipolilo campaigns 19678
35
4 Struggling to get home 196984
47
5 Reaping the whirlwind 19849
85
6 The end of armed struggle
113
7 A sober assessment of MK
133
Sources and further reading
145
Index
153
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Sobre el autor (2012)

Janet Cherry is a human rights activist, researcher, and academic who teaches at the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University in Port Elizabeth, South Africa. She has written and published on the history of the liberation struggle for the South African Democratic Education Trust.

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