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Archive 1Archive 2Archive 3Archive 4

Changes

There are quite a few changes and a couple of nomenclature mistakes on the rewrite--ex. Close Air Support for Combat Air Support--and addition of sources. I can add or clean those up in the next two days, just waiting to see if there might be more integration or rewriting. Virgil61 (talk) 10:01, 4 January 2008 (UTC)

What's your view on "close air support" vs "combat air support"? There's no article for the latter, while the former seems a good description for the use here? Socrates2008 (Talk) 10:31, 4 January 2008 (UTC)
I'd use 'close' for the reason you gave, I mistakenly used 'combat', which I think is used far less than the former. In my defense I was an Army guy. Virgil61 (talk) 17:28, 4 January 2008 (UTC)

Pointless Comment Removed

I removed the following from the Aftermath section of the article.

"It must be emphasized that all Cuban military service in Angola was on a voluntary basis and that for a small country such as Cuba the deployment of 50,000 troops would be the equivalent of the US deploying 1.25 million soldiers.[citation needed]"

This is an interesting statistic, although of little merit to the article. If anyone objects, please provide a reason for keeping it in the article. It appears that the editor is attempting to disprove the amount of combatants deployed by Cuba. If this is the case, please cite appropriate resources.--SAcit777 (talk) 14:03, 8 January 2008 (UTC)

Paratus

Socrates why is Paratus marked as an 'unreliable' source? It was a military journal like one which most armies produce for internal consumption. An quote by the commander of the SADF in the battle is pertinent to this article, certainly as much as one by Nelson Mandela whose views while tremendously important to this didn't participate nor has a military background. Virgil61 (talk) 15:06, 8 January 2008 (UTC)

Being the official magazine of the SADF, some people won't consider it neutral/reliable with respect to achievements of the SADF. Your point will come across stronger if it's from an independent source. Socrates2008 (Talk) 20:33, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
I disagree. Neutrality is not the same as reliability and you appear to have mistaken the context in which the source is utilised. Paratus is being used not as a reference for objective facts, but as a source for claims made by the SADF and for a quote by a senior SADF officer. In this context the publication was the vehicle in which both pieces of information were first published and, being the official journal of the SADF, it is reasonable to believe with full confidence that it accurately represented the words of the SADF and Col. Ferreira. Thus it is a reliable source and the tag should be removed. — Impi (talk) 21:03, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
OK, I can see where you're coming from, by the words "they claim" in the sentence - that leaves the statement about 3000 soldiers unreferenced though Socrates2008 (Talk) 21:13, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
Finding a source for 3,000 SADF figure should be easy enough, I've seen it referenced about a dozen times in various publications. If no one else does it I'll try and get to it as soon as possible. Virgil61 (talk) 22:42, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
Would a book by Heitmann be acceptable as a reliable source? It seems to me that the biggest difference between factual claims on the part of the MPLA/Cubans and those referring to the SADF is that there exists, in the SANDF Archives in Pretoria, comprehensive documentation of practically everything they did. It would in fact be possible to compile a totally accurate and complete list of SADF members who were there, when they arrived, where they went and when they left. Such a list could identify every single one by name, address, blood type, religious affiliation, next of kin and so on. One could even find out how much food, fuel, ammo and spare parts they used. Unfortunately it would totally destroy one of the favourite myths of the ANC and their friends in Angola and Cuba. Thats the only reason why the current SA government will not release those records. Roger (talk) 18:12, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
Do you think Cubans don't have such records? Once again the white supremacists cannot hold their tongs. Why don't all the AWB types regroup around a new Terreblanche and take your ex-country back? You won't of course, you're armchair cowards, and your "Sleg Blankes" country is no more, probably the Boers too are soon to be history. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 190.48.107.79 (talk) 05:42, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
I'm sure I don't need to tell you that your poor attitude, combined with that epic chip on your shoulder, is hardly endearing you to any of the contributors here. If you have something worthwhile to contribute, we'd be happy to take a look at it and revise the article as necessary. But throwing out ill-judged and ignorant insults just makes you look stupid and, well, racist.
For the record, it's entirely irrelevant whether or not the Cubans kept similar records, since the issue in dispute at the moment is the number of SADF soldiers in the battle, not Cuban. For this the SADF records are the most comprehensive and complete, whilst the Cuban records on the number of SADF soldiers would have been derived from imperfect intelligence estimates based on incomplete information, and are thus unreliable.
Further, the SADF archives are now under the control of a government that would delight in any information that would make the former SADF look bad and thus justify the ANC's account of the battle, yet the records relating to the battle of Cuito Cuanavale remain largely inaccessible. One can only assume that this is because the information in those personnel lists, operational orders and debriefs contradicts rather than confirms the ANC and Cuba's version of events. There's nothing racial about it, it's just politics. — Impi (talk) 16:16, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
Paratus was a generally reliable source. It is certainly more reliable than either the ANC or Cuba.

Its like if cuban goberment have created a lot of dead bodies

The first thing I saw wrong was the amount of casualties during the battle, it is incredible that in 15 years of conflict, the cubans, that lost about 2000 mans in total, have lost more in only a few months of fighting in 1987, during the Cuito Cuanavale battle. Maybe if Cuba was a country more like United States that figure was more believable, its sound like fantasy, like other user said. The point is, how many personal do you think the Cubans have in their armed forces? And keeping in mind that all the troops were volunteers, man to lose more than that... Its like the USAF shooting down 792 mig-15s in the Corean War, they shoot down all the Russian air force.--OverG (talk) 05:35, 5 March 2008 (UTC)

Look again - the official Cuban casualy number is only 14. The casualty number given (900 to 4000) is the combined total for Cubans and FAPLA, the majority of them would inevitably be FAPLA. I have not yet seen any reliable casualty figures for the Cubans alone other than the official number, which does not seem realistic at all. This battle/campaign was the biggest operation of the entire war and Cuban involvement in terms of number of personnel (and materiel) was also the highest, so it is not at all a surprise to me that most of their casualties occured during this event. It is a real pity that casualy statistics for UNITA are not known. Absence of UNITA statistics does make the "score" look more skewed than it actually was. South African casualties were kept low due to very little infantry versus infantry action on their part. The majority of the Cuban/MPLA casualties were inflicted by the South African's very long-range artillery, mainly the G5 howitzer and G6 howitzer, bombarding highly visible registered targets such as river crossings, etc. Roger (talk) 11:51, 12 March 2008 (UTC)

I am agree with you, it is very difficult to settle down the true above all, keeping in mind that the media is controlled and shows only what the most dominants wants. Is also hard to believe many of us because, in some cases, there is no way to prove our posts because of many reasons. For example if I say I am a Cuban or a Sudafrican would you believe me?? I know that its hard to believe that cubans only lost 14 mans in the battle, keeping in mind, like you´d say, that Cuito was the bigger battle of all the war. What I want to say is: The cubans were very carefull in the war, they planed every detail in their actions, the beginnig of the battle was when the Soviets and the FAPLA began a big scale offensive against the UNITA using an old regular war metod, moving away from their bases, hardening the logistics support and moving too far among themselves, making possible to UNITA to pass between them. from the begining the cubans warned about this but they were not heard. The cuban part in the battle was to save it and to prevent the taking of the Cuito city, so it is true that the majority of the casualties were angolans.OverG (talk) 00:19, 16 March 2008 (UTC)

I entered a large section of factual information about the battle on Friday 14 March 2007, and to my surprise it was all deleted by somebody else. That ends my interest in building public domain knowledge about this affair.... I thought that Wikipedia was about trying to write up a genuine history. For those interested, I am able to answer some of the above-asked questions - which I have done in my private memoirs entitled "Shaking Hands with Billy". The data I entered (which was then deleted) was directly from those memoirs. I was a senior intelligence officer working on strategic level operations during this whole period, including the negotiations that ended the South African engagement in Angola. Bottom line is that South Africa never entered the war to capture and hold territory. Intelligence was quite clear about the fact that the USSR was disintegrating and that Cuba was looking for a way to withraw while saving face. Cuito Cuanavale was led by a Russian General and much of the hardware was materiel withdrawn out of Afghanistan (all of this in the sections deleted by who knows who?). "Shaking Hands with Billy" is a limited edition book (only 100 numbered and signed hard copies in circulaton, mostly held by members of my former unit) but some copies have been placed in select research libraries in UK (Oxford University), the USA (George Washington University in DC and the Library of Congress) and in South Africa (Smuts House Library at Wits University, University of Free State and Samuel Pauw Library at University of North-West). Aturton (talk) 07:38, 16 March 2008 (UTC)

To save wish face? cubans wining the battle and the war were saving face? No wonder somebody erased your information here.OverG (talk) 23:31, 11 April 2008 (UTC)

wrong Jamba on map

It turns out that there are several Jamba towns or localities in Angola. The one marked on this map is jamba in Huambo province, which is not the one which played a role in this military episode. There are two localities called Jamba in Cuando Cubango province. The one closest to the Namibian border is, I think, the relevant one. Here is a link to a map, not perhaps quite suitable for this article yet, but at least it shows the location of Savimbi's headquarters, Jamba. http://www.traveljournals.net/explore/angola/map/m4009108/jamba.html Perhaps this is an object lesson in how easy it is for anyone to make a mistake by using primary sources24.226.60.29 (talk) 00:49, 4 May 2008 (UTC)

well, I think I have figured out how to fix the map. I moved Jamba to the location that seems to me to be correct, and I included Mavinga for good measure.24.226.60.29 (talk) 05:56, 4 May 2008 (UTC)
The Jamba, Angola article appears to contradict your edit. Do you have a source for the above change please? Cheers Socrates2008 (Talk) 06:49, 4 May 2008 (UTC)
After looking at various articles, I think that that article is mistaken. My sources have to be put together: a), the link I provide above shows where one of the many Jambas is located. b) some of the articles explain that SAvimbi's Jamba was in the extreme southeast of the country, near the border with Namibia, hence I picked the Jamba which seems to fit that description. Also, Gleisejes and others say that the assault on Mavinga was because mavinga was the gateway to Jamba. But the other Jambas don't fit that description. This could be better sourced, I admit, but these are real inconsistencies in the wikipedia articles24.226.60.29 (talk) 13:25, 4 May 2008 (UTC)
Would a quote from the New York Times be an acceptable cite?
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE1DE1638F934A25753C1A96E948260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all See the erratum at the end of the article. Roger (talk) 13:41, 4 May 2008 (UTC)
You're quite correct - I've found a reference that matches the location you've used. Socrates2008 (Talk) 13:54, 4 May 2008 (UTC)

I appreciate the effort two Wiki-editors put into fact-checking, especially since I clearly said "it seems to me" . But now that the fact has been checked, we do not need to source it in the article. This fact has never been seriously disputed (the contradictory wiki-article doesn't count as a "source") so I suggest omitting the reference, which seems to be to the ecology of horned herds, interesting as that is24.226.60.29 (talk) 16:10, 10 May 2008 (UTC)

Secrecy paper


a link for one of my assertions about a source i once saw somewhere is http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/ptb/wvw/wvw4/baines%20paper.pdf. It is a very interesting papere about the secrecy surrounding the invasion of Angola.24.226.60.29 (talk) 18:40, 11 May 2008 (UTC)

SADF initial intentions vis a vis Cuito Cuanavale

I do not have access to back issues of the Johannesburg Star, but P. Gleijeses, in his article on the Cuban involvement in this battle, says that By mid-January 1988, South African military sources and Western diplomats were announcing that the fall of Cuito was "imminent." and refers, in a footnote, to See the front-page coverage in The Star (Johannesburg), 21 January 1988, p. 1. If some contributor could find that text, it might be useful for this discussion.96.227.228.107 (talk) 04:37, 5 May 2008 (UTC)

The present article had two repetitions of the SADF (partisan) claim that they *never* intended to take the city. Independent analysts seem to think their initial intention was to take the city, but after a while, they decided it was not worth the cost, so that their intentions changed during the campaign. Neither reference to the SADF claim was sourced. The claim was first made in May, when the battle had wound down considerably. In the aftermath section, i added a NYTimes source for the article's assertion. in the Final Phase section, I deleted the claim since the claim wasn't made until May and the final phase is about Jan-March. Besides, to me it seems like point of view pushing to give so much prominence to this claim. The NYTimes reporter does not give it much credence, just reports that the claim was made in parliament. In the Aftermath section, perhaps we should add an independent source for the counter-claim that UNITA and the SADF did initially intend to take CC and use it as a UNITA base from which to declare a provisional governement. (NYTimes).24.226.60.29 (talk) 19:08, 11 May 2008 (UTC)

Casualties vs. deaths

What about my suggestion that we change the heading in the box from Casualties and losses to deaths? The figures therein are for deaths and do not include hepatitis, desertions, wounds, etc. The article as it stands is extremely misleading in this regard.24.226.60.29 (talk) 19:52, 11 May 2008 (UTC)

USMC paper on SADF

An interesting paper from the 'Small Wars' center of the USMC with an amount of information on the SADF during the Angolan Wars. It's 170-some pages.

http://www.smallwars.quantico.usmc.mil/search/Papers/morris.pdf Virgil61 (talk) 07:00, 14 May 2008 (UTC)

¿Why quotes in the footnotes?

I am painfully aware of the repetitions and longuers in these quotations. But this subject is so controversial, I think we serve the readers by including variations on such basic questions as when did the battle start and stop. Notice our article includes operation hooper...Lique confines it to 8 days...other authors say, Jan-march...this is important for the readers to know. I will translate the other french quote provided it doesn't get deleted in another edit war... I include two quotes since someone might reasonably worry that Maier's estimate, published in 1996, is not complete. At least Lique's is up to date.24.226.60.29 (talk) 14:06, 14 May 2008 (UTC)

Even though the Crocker quote is very long, I suggest it is a good idea to retain it at that length since it makes it clear to the reader that our estimate of 18,000 FAPLA troops includes the more than 4,000 lost on the disastrous retreat from Mavinga, so they couldn't have been at the siege of Cuito Cuanavale in January. I think this length is just one of the things we have to put up with, trying to write a balanced history of a subject so recent, so controversial, and still lacking a comprehensive scholarly account.24.226.60.29 (talk) 15:43, 14 May 2008 (UTC)

I just removed it from the "Quotes" section and left Crocker's quote in the footnotes--no need for repetition--though I don't think it needs to be quoted at length there either, a sourcing note is good enough. Virgil61 (talk) 19:51, 14 May 2008 (UTC)

Deletion of quotes

I deleted two quotes; the first was a review of a book by another scholar. A quotation of a review of a book doesn't seem to have a place here. The original book on the other hand might be a very decent source for one. A lengthy quotation in French on English Wikipedia is out of place. A translation perhaps? Virgil61 (talk) 05:50, 9 May 2008 (UTC)

I suggest the whole section is deleted as it's currently nothing more than a set of politically-loaded statements that no-one was able to integrate into the article. Socrates2008 (Talk) 12:16, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
I wouldn't necessarily disagree with that. They can always be integrated at a later date. Virgil61 (talk) 13:03, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
I restored it because, at least at present, it is the only source for Cuban troop strengths in the article. It should be translated, and integrated, not deleted, unless a better source can be found. Official Cuban sources of 1500 troops seem too low.130.15.101.140 (talk) 16:19, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
OK, I think it should be translated as soon as possible. My French is good enough to see that it compares Cuito to Verdun and Stalingrad, basically political hyperbole. Additionally it's only a web page as a source. Virgil61 (talk) 16:37, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
I know what you mean. Afrique-Express was (it is now defunct but the new web-publication has preserved its old archived articles) mainstream press, but not scholarly. So, not the *most* reliable source. I would translate it if I did not hope someone else will be inspired to find an even better source. ... maybe I'll translate it soon anyway. Also, the comparison to Stalingrad, although it matches some of the comment in the AFtermath section of this article (people have complained about both the Aftermath section and this quote section, so both will proabably be heavily revised eventually) could well be trimmed out of the quote. Maybe I'll do that too.130.15.101.140 (talk) 21:02, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
Given that it talks of 7000 SA troops I don't see how we can accept it as a source for Cuban troop numbers. Roger (talk) 21:51, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
Are you saying that you would not accept any source that disagrees with the South African official figures? Wiki-standards give us some guidance on which kinds of sources are more reliable than others, and it has to do with objective criteria such as the publisher and peer-review, not whether the author is a leftist or not. in footnote 105 of Rethinking the "Reagan Doctrine" in Angola, Michael McFaul, International Security, vol. 14, No. 3, Winter, 1989-1990, pp. 99-135, MIT press, one has "General Geldenhuys claimed that 3,000 troops were deployed; The Times (London), March 20, 1988. Angolan Foreign Minister Van Dunem estimated that 9,000 South African troops were useed; The Independent, March 19, 1988. The number most frequently cited, however, is 6,000. See Financial Times, May 5, 1988 and January 16, 1988." if 6000 is the number most frequently cited, in the judgement of this scholar, then Lique is not far off in that regard.24.226.60.29 (talk) 04:32, 10 May 2008 (UTC)

Official Cuban sources give 1500 troops of the FAR at the battle. This neutral source, Liquer, gives 5000.

Official SADF sources give 3500 or 3000 SADF troops at the battle. Most independent sources give 6000, according to McFaul. The deflation factor is about the same...we can't just present the official versions of both sides and leave it at that, after all, can we? I think most encyclopedia writers would pick middle of the road independent analysts for both sides and leave it at that. These sources place about 18000 FAPLA troops at the battle, or less (due to losses at the battle at Mavinga). There also seem to have been 15000 Cuban regulars in Angola far to the rear, guarding supply lines etc, and 40,000 or so on the second front at Calueque? which is not considered part of this battle, when defined tactically narrowly as this article does.24.226.60.29 (talk) 04:42, 10 May 2008 (UTC)


We need to decide on a figure and source for Cuban and FAPLA troop strengths before we delete this quote. At present, the SADF figures are lower than average, but official. If we use official SADF, we should use official Cuban, which is 1500. And may as well use Crocker's figure for FAPLA, which is 18000 (but according to Crocker, over 4000 of these were lost before the siege of Cuito Cuanavale even began since 4000 were lost in the battle before Mavinga and in the disastrous retreat to Cuito Cuanavale. This would make the combined forces less than 15,500.) Then the 40,000 combined cuban/FAPLA figure is impossible. Anyway, it is unsourced. I am challenging it. I will eventually remove it unless someone sources it. 24.226.60.29 (talk) 00:28, 11 May 2008 (UTC)

All the sources that give numbers way in excess of 3000-3500 for SADF have one fatal flaw. They imply that all of the thousands of SADF records such as movement orders, quartermasters’ records, transport logs, payroll records, war diaries, comms logs, personnel files, sitreps, press releases, etc. were faked. Not merely individually faked but all faked to be totally consistent with each other to indicate a false lower number of troops "in country". (Such a huge conspiracy would make the various JFK Assassination conspiracy theories look like class projects for 3rd grade school kids!) Casualty figures that differ from the official number also imply that a number of SA soldiers simply disappeared without explanation - no repatriated remains, no funerals. The white SA population whose sons, brothers, cousins, were in Angola would never stand for that. Such unexplained losses would have seriously threatened the National Party's hold on power which was already under pressure from both the right as well as the left.
However, there is another quite innocent explanation: The number of ~3000 is the maximum number of SA troops who were in Angola at any given moment during the entire campaign, which consisted of 3 interlinked operations, Moduler, Hooper & Packer. Taken as a whole, over the entire period, the number of SADF troops who were involved might number 6000 or more as units were rotated in and out of Angola. Adding to the "confusion" was the SADF's practice of manning "operational units" with companies/squadrons of troops from various "#"SAI Battalions and other training/conscript units. Some operational units were formed on an ad hoc basis, for example "20 SA Brigade" existed only for the duration of their operation. The designation of the "operational unit" would not change even when its entire personnel would be switched with others from different "source" units. Heitmann criticised this practice in his book "War in Angola - The Final South African Phase"
Just another point - when was the town of Cuito Cuanavale "under siege"?
All the sources I am familiar with report that CC was only shelled sporadically by G5/G6 to disrupt the HQ and to keep the airfield unusable. If the SADF ever intended to "take and hold" CC they would surely have deployed a much larger force. A major town that deep inside enemy territory could never be held by such a small force. In terms of logistics the SAAF had a total long range transport fleet of only 7 C130s and three multi-role Boeing 707s, which at times were strained to the maximum to keep supplies (particularly 155mm ammo and spare barrels) flowing. Personnel availability was also an issue as the "2nd year conscripts all had to be discharged during December and most of the "1st year" conscripts went on leave for Christmas and New Year, leaving the SADF with only a handful of inexperienced "1st year" conscripts and a small number of generally much older "Citizen Force" (Reserve) troops. The "Permanent Force" components of the SA Army were very small and were mostly HQ personnel and instructors. Besides the logistical, and logical impossibility of such an objective, one must remember that the SADF would at that time not do anything so drastic as to ruin the "talks about talks" that were already secretly happening with the Angolans, Cubans, Soviets, SWAPO as well as the ANC. Roger (talk) 12:41, 11 May 2008 (UTC)
according to the NYTimes, official SA military press releases for deaths in the CC campaign add up to 57. No one has ever suggested that they were faked, too. I did not know that the payroll records were declassified: what is your source for this? Your interesting line of reasoning sounds like it is speculation and inference. I have read sources which imply that none of the records you talk about are available to scholars: some people point out that the declassification procedure is onerous, and others say that many top secret military records were destroyed in 1990. One source says that the entire operation was top secret, and that during this period parents were never told the circumstances of the deaths, simply that they were due to accident. This led one commentator to comment that the SADF was the most accident prone army in the world. I don't think we can rely on your line of reasoning. Anyway, in principle, official sources, whether Cuban or SADF, are partisan. A South African veteran remarks on a veteran's blog that losses due to hepatitis were 1000 (this doesn't mean deaths). he also remarks that there were 300 body bags during this campaign (but not all would be KIA). NYTimes reports very heavy shelling of CC during January and February, not sporadic. Editors ought not to rely on speculative lines of inference (also we shouldn't rely on these blogs I mention either) in order to subjectively decide that anything that disagrees with official figures is unreliable.
We have objective criteria for reliability, as laid out in the Wiki-guidelines: published by a independent publisher with an established record for fact-checking and accuracy. So, Paratus and Zebra and Ashanti and Gibraltar and official military press releases do not count as reliable. We need to find a reliable source if possible. If we cannot find one, we should say so.24.226.60.29 (talk) 15:24, 11 May 2008 (UTC)
The spirit of the rule trumps the letter of the rule as does common sense. WP:COMMON and WP:WIARM.
It's been explained to you before. Wikipedia's objective criteria you mention is not as cut and dried as you state. Wikipedia policy allows a broader inclusive version of sources than you infer. WP:VERIFIABILITY states that In general the most reliable sources are peer reviewed journals. In general here also means not exclusive. Online or even 'self published' sources are not prohibited but cautioned on; that's why we have editors. Paratus is a military journal and the SADF CDR's opinions can certainly be mentioned as an important source of information even if not used as definitive.
The scientific field is more exact and more objective, history and political journals much more subjective. If one were to make an analogy to science then diplomatic history scholars can't be relied upon to give a determinative judgment any more than a micro-biologist can be the definitive source when discussing zoology (maybe not an exact analogy). The point is that we've seen generalists or cultural or diplomatic historians here unable to understand the use of artillery to deny an area of operations. They aren't military historians and aren't writing on their area of expertise. That's one reason why Wikipedia has editors. Mindless worship of 'scholars' without acknowledging instances where they have a blatantly obvious ideological ax to grind where they are commenting out of their area of expertise is the stuff of naive pedants and sophomores. Virgil61 (talk) 16:34, 11 May 2008 (UTC)
I have not noticed any employment of caution. Operationally, what does caution in using a source consist of? I suppose it consists of double-checking with independent sources.

Perhaps we are now ready to delete the entire quote section. Ponomariov and Mandela are already in the aftermath section, and Col Ferreira's information is already sourced to more neutral sources in the body of the paper, so it serves no useful purpose anymore. Also the reference to Paratus magazine is still present in the body of the paper, so nothing will really be lost. Is there a consensus on this? 24.226.60.29 (talk) 00:20, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

Definitely Socrates2008 (Talk) 05:56, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

Reinforcements


Socrates correctly asserts that the *reinforcements* sent by Cuba at this time were 15,000. (some sources say 14000). The reader might still like to know that this brought total cuban regulars in all of Angola (most in the north and in the rear, guarding the railway lines from UNITA guerillas) to 55000. If this is so, then the reader might wonder where the 55000 subtract 15000 went. (it wasn't to cuito cuanavale). Since the active deployment of those 40,000 didn't occur until april, I move the statement about the second front involving Calueque to a better place, the "final phase". I am well aware that the editors of this article have defined the BAttle of CC itself to be: the debacle near Mavinga, the disastrous retreat to CC, and the siege and shelling of CC. A reasonable choice. But the Cuban sources define the battle of CC differently: they include what they call the south-west front. The reader will be, I think, misled unless we say, parenthetically, something about where most of the cuban troops went. I don't think all of the reinforcements went to CC, I think only some of them went there. The official sources place only 1500 cuban troops at CC.(perhaps the rest were on the lineBenguele-Menongue).24.226.60.29 (talk) 02:38, 12 May 2008 (UTC)

The logic here doesn't add up. The Cubans were--and it's been promoted ad nauseum--rushed to CC's immediate area to stop the SADF which they claim were about to overrun the town. A force of 1500 is little over a battalion's worth of troops (far less infantry when you subtract support personnel) isn't going to stop the claimed SADF advance. That's military common sense if nothing else.
A feint to the south with several brigades 1. wouldn't have stopped the claimed overrun of CC & 2. wouldn't have prevented an operational flanking in the rear by the SADF if the Cubans were feinting south. The Cuban advance to Calueque may be their out on this one but it sounds suspiciously like face-saving. Be that as it may, the Cuban move south was excruciatingly slow by any standard of mechanized warfare and there's no major combat occurring on that front on the level of CC, where shockingly few Cubans were stopping the SADF back from capturing CC, which is part and parcel of their claim. Something has to give. Virgil61 (talk) 04:13, 12 May 2008 (UTC)
please avoid emotionally loaded words like ad nauseam. Cubans are very patriotic. I am not proposing to mention these Cuban claims in the article itself because the claims raise too many questions. I am mentioning that 40000 cuban troops of the line were used to open a second front for only two reasons: it is relevant context to the BAttle of cuito itself, and it addresses a natural question the reader would have about what were all those Cuban troops doing if Cuban troop strength at Cuito itself was only 1500 (if we use official sources, as seems to be the consensus) or only 5000 if we believe the French quote. (But if we believe the French quote, we need to increase SADF strenght parallel-ly.) Mentioning such claims would be more appropriate for a book than an encyclopedia article. As for the logic, lets focus on the logic of our article. It looks like we will either wind up saying Angolan side, 1500 + 18000 - 4000 losses = 15500. Rebel side: 11-12K. Or, if we go with middle-of-the-road figures, both sides larger but in the same rough proportions. The article says the result was disputed, and many readers might agree that tactically it was a stand-off or stalemate. It looks logical: the air superiority was good enough for defence, but not to actually take the heights. After a while, the SADF would certainly decide crossing the river would require greater forces and greater casualties than were desirable. This would look logical to the reader, and it also would allow some readers to conclude that both SADF and Cuban tactical objectives were achieved: the SADF might not have really intended to take the airbase, and Cuba's only tactical intention was to hold the city and break the siege of the 3 Angolan brigades at the bridgehead. FAPLA intentions were obviously not achieved. UNITA??? 24.226.60.29 (talk) 15:33, 12 May 2008 (UTC)

two small points: A) the NYTimes source which McFaulan and many others quote,

does not say the 15000 elite reinforcements ever went to Cuito itself. If the Cubans thought that building a new airstrip near the Namibian border and opening a second front would help the relief of Cuito, and they claim that in their publications, then sending 15000 reinforcements to Angola to help in the relief of cuito is consistent with : a small number going to break the siege of Cuito itself, as they claim, more going to Menongue to guard against recce ops and UNITA sabotage raids, and the bulk going from Namibe (not Benguela) on the coast towards Calueque. (You mention the exruciatingly slow advance. You will be interested to know that that slowness was a major bone of contention between Catro and Ochoa. Catro insisted on a motorised advance. But Ochoa refused because he thought it was too dangerous. According to exile sources, General Ochoa ignored Catro's orders and persuaded all the other generals to ignore them too, and the advance was made on foot, with an airstrip to support the advance being constructed as part of this process.) and B) Turner, an anti-Cuban source, uses the word siege in the long quote. (While we are still discussing the article, it seems that that quotation section is still very useful, no?) Cuban sources say that three FAPLA brigades were cut off at the bridghead and effectively besieged (due to SADF artillery control of the river crossing and destruction of the bridge) and were in serious danger of "annihilation". (November and December). Hence the Cubans had only two objectives: break the siege, and hold the city. The FAPla brigades had lost their armour and artillery and the SADF had air superiority that month, or if not quite superiority, enough. Cuban sources (and SADF too) describe massive ground attacks against this bridgehead.24.226.60.29 (talk) 15:33, 12 May 2008 (UTC)


i do not yet know how much of the following quote should be worked into the article itself. But it is very relevant to this dicussion, and a small part of it is important for the question of where those 15000 elite troops, including the battle-hardened 50th division, went. They didn't go to cuito cuanavale.


"a large detachment of fifteen thousand newly arrived cuban recruits with 270 tanks was dispatched in May 1988 directly toward the Namibian border north of Ovamboland, much further to the west than Cuito Cuanavale. The ensuing buildup of a front along 300 kilometers [sic] from the border posed a threat to South Africa...Although not realized [sic] in the world outsidethe fear of this latter possibility was emphasized [sic]

by a senior military commander later interviewed by Jaster (1990:23): "Had the cubans attacked [Namibia] they would have over-run the place. We could not have stopped them." " The Transition to Independence in Namibia, Lionel Cliffe et al., London, 1994.p. 59. The reference to Jaster is The 1988 Peace Accords and the Future of South-western Africa. Adelphi Papers 253. London: Brassey's International Institute for Strategic Studies. I have not seen this issue of the Adelphi papers yet. 24.226.60.29 (talk) 17:00, 13 May 2008 (UTC)

Read with a critical eye it boggles the mind to think that the an Army that needed only 1500 (edit replace 1400) troops and aircraft to bolster allies and supposedly stop an enemy advance at CC then--instead of bringing an elite force of 270 tanks and 15,000 troops to neutralize and destroy the major enemy concentration eliminating the threat that they easily stopped--chose instead a feint far, far away from there. Either the Keystone cops were running the show or somewhere there's a disconnect in the info and in the rationale. I don't believe the Cuba commanders were Max Sennett extras and that; "...there's something rotten in the state of Denmark".
A competent commander doesn't usually dismount troops instead of having them mechanized (motorized) unless he's got a reason; terrain, logistics, etc. The evidence seems to point to the fact the Cubans may not have had the necessary resources for an invasion of Namibia and didn't want to major confrontation with the SADF for whatever reason at CC but that Castro had his eye on bluffing at the diplomatic bargaining table rather than the battlefield something Ochoa possibly wasn't privy to. Virgil61 (talk) 17:34, 13 May 2008 (UTC)
don't get 14,000 mixed up with 1,500. (Why do you say 1,400?) The figure of 14,000 is an alternate estimate of reinforcements to all of Angola, not CC itself. The figure of 1,500 is the official figure of cuban troops

at CC. Your calling the southwest front a feint is unjustified by the sources, cuban sources regard it as the *main* counterattack and claim it succeeded in surrounding the 400 SADF troops left at CC to guard the G4 and G5 artillery. If you have a source for saying the 50th division of the FAR went to CC, produce it: I am looking for it but haven't found one yet. If what the cuban sources say is true, it makes much more sense than you suppose: a relatively cautious and costless surrounding flanking movement could well be preferred to a frontal assault on troops with Stingers, the finest howitzers in the world, entrenched on strategic heights...

You completely misunderstood my statement (though I meant 1500 not 1400 at CC). Reread it. Virgil61 (talk) 06:14, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
In general it is not a good idea to disregard one side of the controversy simply because you can elaborate a long string of speculative argumenst against it.
Thanks for the lecture; Again, you misread my statement. In general accepting spoon-fed theories without critical thought isn't a good idea either. Virgil61 (talk) 06:14, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
Other analysts (such as journalists for le Monde and researchers at the London, establishment, Institute of Security Studies) have come up with arguments against the SADF claims, too.
Well Le Monde isn't world renown for its military analysis. Virgil61 (talk) 06:14, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
If we are really going to descend, in this article, into the claims of both sides, our task is merely to present them fairly, not to analyse them. I have already suggested we leave out of this article both the SADF claim and the cuban claim.24.226.60.29 (talk) 02:40, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
You're off base on this (Sundar1?). No one said anything about not presenting them fairly, that's your inference not my position. I've not squabbled about inclusion of both sides but rather the slanted and repeated efforts by the pro-Cuban side to make this a white-wash. Remember this is the talk page not the article, pointing out something walks like a duck and quacks like a duck when someone calls it a moose is fine. I think we're done here. Virgil61 (talk) 06:14, 14 May 2008 (UTC)

I still can't figure out where the 50th division of the FAR went after disembarking at Namibe. The sources I have looked at are vague and contradictory. It might be a nice touch to include the fact, if it is a fact, that at CC the 50th FAR, Castro's personal division faced Botha's personal division (I forget off hand which it was, but I have it's number somewhere) and that Botha personally visitied the war zone during the battle. Now, what are we to do with the Cuban claim, supported by two independent military analysts (or at least one military analyst and one scholar and one anonymous source) that those 4-500 SADF troops had their retreat cut off for two months and were only saved by the August cease-fire?24.226.60.29 (talk) 12:25, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

Independence and Reliability of References


Not one of the references, cited sources, or added literature counts, by Wiki-standards, as acceptable for an encyclopedia article to rely on. The only reliable publishing house in the bunch is Norton, but that book, Crocker's memoirs, falls into the category of participants' memoirs, which Wiki-guidelines explicitly say must be used with caution by editors. The guidelines go on to say that individual scholarly contributions...Crocker of course is not even a scholar...can best be evaluated for reliability by looking for reviews of their work in the reputable mainstream press. If one looks at the Foreign Policy Review of Crocker's memoirs, the reviewer calls it a spin job. Can this article be salvaged? I believe it could be... —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.226.60.29 (talk) 03:25, 2 May 2008 (UTC)

Crocker isn't a scholar? I hate to break this one to you. He was a prof at Georgetown and American U and now teaches at Georgetown again. Ironically for our purposes, he has a PhD from the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins. That would be the same school that Piero Gleijeses now teaches. Virgil61 (talk) 12:57, 4 May 2008 (UTC)
this was written before I added a representative sample Literature Section24.226.60.29 (talk) 01:39, 4 May 2008 (UTC)
And one 'scholar' who has been quoted in the article has been a friend of Castro and the Cuban revolution. Wikipedia does not advocate elimination of memoirs or recollections, only asks we proceed with caution. Virgil61 (talk) 04:25, 3 May 2008 (UTC)

For convenience, some of the relevant excerpts from Wiki-guidelines and policies:

For 'convenience sake' post links. Virgil61 (talk) 04:25, 3 May 2008 (UTC)

On many historical topics there are memoirs and oral histories that specialists consult with caution, for they are filled with stories that people wish to remember — and usually recall without going back to the original documentation. Editors should use them with caution.

This isn't a rule not to use memoirs or oral histories, it is merely a warning to use them with caution. Not the same thing. Virgil61 (talk) 04:25, 3 May 2008 (UTC)

Scholars doing research publish their results in books and journal articles. The books are usually published by university presses or by commercial houses like W.W. Norton and Greenwood which emulate the university press standards. Reputable history books and journal articles always include footnotes and bibliographies giving the sources used in great detail. Most journals contain book reviews by scholars that evaluate the quality of new books, n general, the most reliable sources are peer-reviewed journals and books published in university presses; university-level textbooks; magazines, journals, and books published by respected publishing houses; and mainstream newspapers.

You are of course confused when it comes to historical analysis. "Reputable" history books do include sources such as memoirs and these memoirs are often assigned in undergrad/graduate history courses. In a social science like history some journals, such as the the Radical History Review are completely at odds with other 'reputable' historical journals published by the same university press. Wikipedia (as most encyclopedias) is replete with use of memoirs and other sourcing not under the umbrella of that definition. Why you choose to stop here and issue your edict on sourcing rather than go elsewhere on Wikipedia remains a question. Virgil61 (talk) 12:57, 4 May 2008 (UTC)

Material that has been vetted by the scholarly community is regarded as reliable; this means published in peer-reviewed sources, and reviewed and judged acceptable scholarship by the academic journals. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.226.60.29 (talk) 03:35, 2 May 2008 (UTC)

Wikipedia is clear that none of this precludes inclusion of memoirs, recollections or military journals. See above. Virgil61 (talk) 04:25, 3 May 2008 (UTC)
I am not talking about inclusion. I am talking about relying on. 24.226.60.29 (talk) 01:39, 4 May 2008 (UTC)
I'm talking about including them 'in the article'. History is not an exact science such as mathematics or physics. Scholars vehemently disagree, have axes to grind, points of view, etc., based on political, social and emotional stances. You're talking about 'relying on', I'm talking about including them in an encyclopedic article, noting the source and even the slant if necessary. In a battle such as Cuito, drastic POVs on the aftermath are part and parcel of the story. Virgil61 (talk) 05:43, 4 May 2008 (UTC)

The reference to Ponomariov (his nem is toataly missprellled) is a) a good quote to have in the article, b) totally violates Wike standards. The original quote must be in Russki, da-nyet? obviously the editor has not seen the original, so this reference has to be directly to the second-hand source, and say, "as quoted in".

ETc. This is going to be difficult to fix24.226.60.29 (talk) 16:47, 12 May 2008 (UTC)

I worked in St Pete's, Moscow and Kiev for a couple of years, now work in the int'l trade field with the RF and Ukraine and know enough Russian. This cyrillic to English translation of a last name is passable enough that I didn't worry about it. Red Army has a site online with archives, I have access to back issues and I have a friend who teaches at St Petersburg St.(edit I should know better) checking won't be that difficult. Nice try. Virgil61 (talk) 17:32, 12 May 2008 (UTC)
Thankyou for your attention to this matter. It is a very useful quote to have and bringing it up to Wiki standards will be great. The Times of London standard (unless I am getting it mixed up with Die Zeit...) is to represent the difference between ye and yo. Remember that the diaresis is not always printed in russian texts, but will be in a biographical encyclopedia. I "feel sure" it's ponomarioff, not ponomarieff. 24.226.60.29 (talk) 17:09, 13 May 2008 (UTC)


A Russian friend claims she is certain it's probably Ponomariev. Virgil61 (talk) 17:41, 13 May 2008 (UTC)



What is the policy on external links? The external link to Richard All port's website is to a disgraceful treatment of the battle of CC which totally omits all battle actions in 1988. This man is the maintainer of the website and the author of the treatment. Also, he writes this on his homepage: "The first volume of two books written by Gerrit Mes in South Africa in the 1960s in which he developed a new theory that explains the difference between the races of mankinf, not only in terms of IQ, but in regard to their ability to predict or "look into" the future and act accordingly in the present. The Bantu of Africa has a very short future-sense and the White man of Western Europe a medium future-sense. PDF file. " isnt' there some policy against links to crank web pages? and to the treatment, it being his own and totally unverifiable? This website seems to be the universal, global source for the treatment, which is widely disseminated on the web but is copyright by this man. 130.15.101.140 (talk) 18:27, 16 May 2008 (UTC)

Since you're also posting from Kinston, ON (Queens University) are you the same poster as 24.226.60.29 who posts from there as well or not? This is getting confusing. Are you three different posters (you, Sundar1 and 24.226.60.29) or two or one? See WP:SOCKS and WP:MEAT for guidance on sockpuppets and meatpuppets. Virgil61 (talk) 20:29, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
His treatment uses a listed bibliography of references to Crocker, Brigdland, Steenkamp and Heitman--all you needed to have done was to have read it, you'd have seen it. Not crank writers but not pro-Cuban flag wavers. I don't like the inference of his web page's intro to Gerrit Mes' book--it does give pause. On the other hand I don't particularly like Gleijeses and many of the pro-Cuban faction's support of a totalitarian communist regime that jails, tortures and executes opponents. It does encompass meaningful and relevant information--you yourself admitted to its popularity and use--so its inclusion in favor of allowing relevant information outweighs the concern I think. Anyone else? Virgil61 (talk) 20:29, 16 May 2008 (UTC)

Problems with the numbers, still.

Since I made changes, the controversy flag has gone up, so I have not made any more substantive changes. But the numbers I put up, to replace the unsourced (and mistaken) estimate still have serious problems. Crocker makes clear that FAPLA began with 18,000 and lost more than 4,000 even before the battle of cuito cuanavale even started. I even saw a source which said, 2,000 deaths plus `twice as many' wounded, lost, deserted, etc. 18K-6K leaves 12K for the battle itself. Plus 1,500 cubans. But worse: the estimate of the journalist there (and others) is 10,000 FAPLA plus Cuban. I propose we say combined estimate of 10,000 and 1,500 official cuban, and use Crocker as a source for 18,000 FAPLA and their losses in the mavinga campaign. This means using Maier as a source. Or we may find another source for the number of FAPLA at Cuito. I do not propose we perform the subtraction ourselves and list that, I don't think that's allowed.24.226.60.29 (talk) 21:45, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

The other problem is the discrepancy between 3,500 official SADF and other estimates of 6,000 South AFrican. It occurred to me there is an obvious explanation: S.W.A.T.F. was there, but was neither UNITA nor SADF. WE need to either include it in the SADF or put up another participant. Also, it is possible that the official figures exclude the 32 Battalion (the black battalion) of the SADF. So I hope we can see our way to this: present official SADF (3-4K). Present estimated combined SADF + SWATF(6K). Present est. UNITA (8K). combine all three. (17-18K) It seems to me reasonable, this was, in the early stages, a siege, and normally the besiegers are more nummerous than the besieged. Also, UNITA losses were very light in the ops modular and hooper, but very heavy in the assaults on the bridgehead east of the Cuito river. This requires discussion24.226.60.29 (talk) 21:45, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

I have watched this unfolding discussion on these pages with interest, as I feel that healthy debate over historical events can only help us understand them better. But I have grown concerned over some of the aspects of it, in particular your conduct. First, I think your refusal to sign up and adopt a user-name, even after all this time, is discourteous. It is far, far easier to carry out discussions with a name than it is with a number, and having a permanent user-name with a known history allows for trust to be built between editors. It does require only five minutes of your time. Secondly, I think you have begun to lose track somewhat and have become too lost in trying to incorporate your sources rather than pursuing what's true. Your previous comment is an example: In attempting to reconcile the disparity between the numbers quoted by various sources for SADF forces at Cuito, you blithely assume (entirely incorrectly) that there must have been SWATF forces present as well. Yet this is sheer nonsense; no record official or otherwise makes a mention of such a SWATF presence at Cuito and none of the soldiers present at the battle have said anything similar. Indeed, it is exceedingly unlikely that the SWATF was ever deployed in significant numbers on such long-range expeditionary strikes into Angola, since their role was that of a territorial force intended to free the SADF up from local patrol and garrison duties.
The correct approach to take here is not to assume that the answer 'is somewhere in between', but to analyse the sources and figure out how and why they came to such numbers. For instance, although it was not common knowledge until after the war, SADF units were often composite in nature and under-strength to some extent. An author, more accustomed to the armour-heavy formations of the Northern hemisphere with their massive logistical tails, may have assumed that the units at Cuito were the same. In reality, they were not; they were almost perilously light and at the end of a long and tenuous logistical supply line. Further, few of these authors would have had access to either the official records of the SAAF or the personal insight of the commanders involved. As such, they would be operating on limited information and forced to rely on estimates, usually being educated guesses at best and possibly including UNITA numbers in error. In contrast, the figure of 3000 - 3500 SADF troops is not a claim, it is hard information that has come from the official military records of the SADF, now under the control of a political party and government absolutely opposed to the old SADF and those in it. As far as primary sources for military actions go, it does not get any better than that. In fact, these records should have you questioning the inflated figures of your other sources, which are not based on hard primary information. Indeed, the key issue regarding Cuito and the entirety of SA's involvement in Angola is that it is only the SADF's records which are truly open and available. Both Cuba and Angola are still controlled by the same political groups which controlled them in the 1980s, with the result that they still have an incentive to selectively release information and cover up embarrassing figures or other information. But in South Africa, it is the ANC which is now in control and, as they have made clear, they are entirely on the side of the Cubans and Angolans in this. Any information proving that SADF numbers were higher than those claimed, that losses were astronomical, that the SADF was fearful of defeat and so on would be jumped on with alacrity by those now in charge. Fact is, this one small detail (often overlooked or ignored) makes the SADF's claims and records far more reliable than any other sources around this battle. I don't believe you have quite grasped this distinction.
All in all though, I do think you have a valuable role to play in this article, particularly with regard to the Cuban involvement which I believe remains inadequately represented. But you should be more careful in your use of sources and in your assumptions, particularly when actually changing the article itself. And above all, remember that our goal is not to promote any particular side, but to represent the objective truth as best as is humanly possible, which is our real responsibility as editors. The war has already been fought, there is no need to re-fight it virtually. — Impi (talk) 23:04, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
independent scholarly sources assert that the SWATF was there.24.226.60.29 (talk) 13:56, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
The SADF records are not open and available, Gleijeses was denied access to them when he went to SA. I was mentioning this yesterday to a South African, and she said the ANC would never be in favour of declassifying those records since if they did that, they would also have to declassify the records about their own atrocities (torture and killing of suspected "spies") and they just don't want to do that. Sadly, I believe her....Besides, the records might have beren destroyed by the SADF before the transition. (The documents about the six atomic bombs were destroyed at that timme.)24.226.60.29 (talk) 13:56, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
The job of encyclopedia-article writers is to faithfully represent the different verifiable points of view according to their importance. Your point of view is a minority pov in the reliable sources. The standard of inclusion in Wiki is verifiability, not truth.24.226.60.29 (talk) 13:56, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
You're absolutely correct about verifiability. This article would benefit considerably from more reliable sources and less interpretation by editors such as yourself. For example, your assumption that the destruction of documents about the atomic bombs was an SADF cover up reflects your own personal incorrect interpretation of the compliance that was mandated by the International Atomic Energy Agency when the programme was dismantled. The troop numbers is a futher example: It is not up to the editors here to make deductions about troop strengths at CC based on assumuptions on how many troops were in Angola, especially subtracting x troops from y to conclude z troops at this battle. The ONLY thing you can do here is cite a reliable source that explicitly states the point/number, otherwise your edit is original research. Lastly, Gleijeses is not the ultimate authority on this battle - indeed his material is particularly biased towards one faction and should therefore be carefully balanced by other sources. Socrates2008 (Talk) 03:06, 17 May 2008 (UTC)
I wrote that I thought we were not allowed to do the subtraction. You confirm this, thankyou. Also, I did not use the words cover-up or even suggest it. So please don't "interpret" me. But Crocker explicitly says that the 18,000 FAPLA troops were at Mavinga (or Lomba) and so we cannot really use Crocker as a source for the number of FAPLA troops at CC. We have to find a source that explicitly talks about FAPLA at CC. And what about the SWATF? The S.W.A.T.F was there. We have an official figure for SADF. We have a reliable estimate for UNITA. Who, may I ask, put the combined troop strenght up without checking on SWATF?24.226.60.29 (talk) 05:55, 17 May 2008 (UTC)
What I meant, which is clear from the context the wording was in, was that there was not a significant SWATF presence, least of all one large enough to make up the disparity between 3500 and 6000. In fact, the only SWATF troops present at CC were two motorised infantry companies from 101 Battalion, which are included in the SADF figures. In general, from my experience this is common practice whenever SWATF units were combined with SADF units and under the command of the latter. What I take exception to is your 'fill in the gaps' reasoning, in which you note the disparity and being unwilling to cast doubt on the veracity on some of your sources you simply assume that the disparity means that there were 2500 SWATF troops present who aren't being counted. This is neither logical nor particularly encyclopaedic. Socrates is correct, we do not have the authority to make the kind of deductions you are engaged in now. We are permitted only to cite a reliable source, of which the SADF records (or books using them as their primary reference) appear at the moment to be the most reliable. Contrary to Gleijeses's experience, these records have increasingly been made available and continue to trickle out. Furthermore, your claim about the destruction of records does not make any sense. First of all, the records surrounding SA's nuclear weapons program were never destroyed, a fact the IAEA verified after months of patient investigation. Secondly, there are no indications that any of the important SADF records from Operations Modular, Hooper and Packer were destroyed; what with other authors having gained access to them over the years. On what basis do you make the claim? In sum, your claims about the SWATF are unfounded, your judgement of sources is suspect and you still have not bothered to sign up for a user-name. Unfortunately, that makes it harder than it should be to take you seriously. — Impi (talk) 10:17, 17 May 2008 (UTC)

At least I make my mistakes on the talk pages, not in the article. ;-) Looking over my notes, I see a source of the highest reliability for troop strengths. Jaster, a politico-military analyst who has taught even at Annapolis, associated with the establishment and "authouritative" blah blah blah, see refferences, gives these figures: (it bears out some of what Impi was saying) p. 19: est. 4K SADF and SWATF, 8K UNITA, 10K FAPLA,

"backed up by several thousand Cuban reinforcements who at first only assumed defensive positions around the town". Next: I did not used to believe the official cuban figure, as cited in Gleijeses, of 1.5K. On these talk pages I even wondered if it was a misprint! But I added a reference to Gen. Geldenhuys of the SADF who estimated a mere one thousand. So I think we can accept the official Cuban figure as certain. Both references, to Geldenhuys and Cuban official figures, are in the article. How about we change the FAPLA figure, using Jaster as a reference, and give Jaster as the reference for the unsourced SADF/UNITA figures? (I still like the Crocker quote a lot and suggest we move it as a reference to something)24.226.60.29 (talk) 15:11, 17 May 2008 (UTC)

date of SADF withdrawal and cease fire

The statement in the article about the Dec. 22 agreement is factually inaccurate. on Aug. 8 SA agreed to withdraw all SADF troops from Angola, in exchange for an immediate cease-fire. Cuba agreed to an immediate cease fire but did not agree to withdraw any of its troops from Angola. All SADF troops had left Angola by Sept.1, as agreed. O'Neill and Munslow, Third World Quarterly, vol. 12 No. 3/4 (1990-1991) "Ending the Cold War in Southern Africa", p. 84. What was agreed to in Dec. 22 was the removal of SADF troops from Namibia in exchange for Cuban withdrawal from Angola. This is an important distinction. Anyway, I suggest putting in the dates of the cease-fire and the date of SADF withdrawal from Angola, and correction of the phrase about the Dec. 22 agreeement.24.226.60.29 (talk) 23:50, 21 May 2008 (UTC)

dates of battle

According to the standard historical dictionary of Angola, there are two different battles, the Battle of Mavinga II, and afterwards, the Battle of Cuito Cuanavale. The dates of the ' battle of Cuito Cuanavale are given as Dec1987-March1988. The Cuban army did not really arrive until January of 1988. So I changed the dates to conform with standard usage, for example Reagan referred to the UNITA victors at Mavinga as "the heroes of the Lomba River." (Journalists also give these dates for the Battle of Cuito Cuanavale.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.57.20.76 (talk) 22:29, 16 June 2008 (UTC)

Terminology

Artillery never provides "close air support" -- it provides fire support, etc. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 63.226.104.225 (talk) 22:23, 30 September 2008 (UTC)