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The Mandela Revolution - A British Soldier's Inside View of His Rise to Power (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R443
Discovery Miles 4 430
You Save: R37
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The Mandela Revolution - A British Soldier's Inside View of His Rise to Power (Hardcover)
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List price R480
Loot Price R443
Discovery Miles 4 430
You Save R37 (8%)
Expected to ship within 5 - 10 working days
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On 27 April 1994 South Africa went to the polls and delivered the
first black government in the country's history. This was the
Mandela Revolution. This is not the story of how the Rainbow Nation
was formed, but it tells a story of one part of the revolution; a
vital part, that had to occur to give legitimacy to the new South
Africa both at home and abroad. It highlights the political
necessity that drove a process and the seemingly inevitable failure
that it became. Not a failure of the process itself, but a failure
that had to occur to permit acceptability; it resulted in the end
of South Africa as a hegemony. This account focusses on how the
military forces supporting the Apartheid regime and those committed
to its overthrow came together to form a new national force,
reflecting the new multi-racial, multi-faith democracy. The process
appeared unacceptable in some measure to all sides, but the
political instruction in 1994 was that there was to be the
integration of the South African Defence Force and the armed wings
of the African National Congress and the Pan Africanist Congress to
form the South African National Defence Force. Within this
revolution, there was a small detachment from the British armed
forces that were charged with assisting this transition. They were
required to oversee and assist a process that had never been done
before and often had to operate alone. It is a story of highs and
lows, of sudden death, breakdowns and ultimately of hope. This is a
personal account of three years spent in the middle of this
staggering transitional experiment. It was Security Sector Reform
and Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration (DDR) before such
processes were coined by the United Nations and arguably it was
considerably more successful than any such venture attempted by the
United Nations. It is a book that demonstrates how success and
failure can occur simultaneously.
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