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Rhodesian Fire Force 1966-80 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R473
Discovery Miles 4 730
You Save: R112
(19%)
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Rhodesian Fire Force 1966-80 (Paperback)
Series: Africa@War
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List price R585
Loot Price R473
Discovery Miles 4 730
You Save R112 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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On 11 November 1965, Rhodesian prime minister Ian Smith
unilaterally declared his country independent of Britain.
International sanctions were immediately instituted against the
minority white regime as Robert Mugabe's ZANLA and Joshua Nkomo's
ZIPRA armies commenced their armed struggle, the Chimurenga, the
war of liberation. As Communist-trained guerrillas flooded the
country, the beleaguered Rhodesians, hard-pressed for manpower and
military resources, were forced to devise new and innovative
methods to combat the insurgency. Fire Force was their answer. Fire
Force as a military concept dates from 1974 when the Rhodesian Air
Force (RhAF) acquired the French MG151 20mm cannon from the
Portuguese. Visionary RhAF and Rhodesian Light Infantry (RLI)
officers expanded on the idea of a 'vertical envelopment' of the
enemy, with the 20mm cannon being the principal weapon of attack,
mounted in an Alouette III K-Car ('Killer car'), supported by
ground troops deployed from G-Cars (Alouette III troop-carrying
gunships and latterly Bell 'Hueys') and parachuted from DC-3
Dakotas. In support would be a propeller-driven ground-attack
aircraft armed with front guns, pods of napalm, white phosphorus
rockets and a variety of Rhodesian-designed bombs; on call would be
Canberra bombers, Hawker Hunter and Vampire jets. In spite of the
overwhelming number of enemy pitted against them, Rhodesian Fire
Forces accounted for thousands of enemy guerrillas, with a kill
ratio exceeding 80:1. At the end of the war, ZANLA generals
admitted their army could not have survived another year in the
field-in no small part due to the ruthless efficiency of the Fire
Forces, described by Charles D. Melson, the Chief Historian of the
U.S. Marine Corps, as the ultimate "killing machine."
General
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