South Africa, Apartheid and Terror
excerpted from the book
State Terrorism and the United
States
From Counterinsurgency to the
War on Terrorism
by Frederick H. Gareau
Clarity Press, 2004, paper
p109
Apartheid
... the Republic of South Africa in 1949,
the year the Nationalist Party came to power and prepared to formulate
and to institute its policy of apartheid. The term itself means
"separateness" in Afrikaans. It sought to impose extremes
in segregation to an already segregated and racist society. Apartheid
aspired to create a total pigmentocracy created by, and combined
with, massive oppression and exploitation.
p109
The Nationalists came to power in South Africa in 1949 with great
expectations to institutionalize white domination of blacks, but
without having spelled out just how apartheid was to be achieved.
With larger and larger mandates in subsequent (white-only) elections,
they pushed through progressively restrictive legislation enforcing
racial segregation in white areas for Africans, the colored, and
Asians. And they sought to establish separate Bantustans for the
separate tribal development of the Africans. Ideally, they would
force all Africans into these "homelands," each one
restricted to one of the many ethnic groups into which the Africans
at one time were divided. The Bantustan was a centerpiece of the
apartheid plan to remold and to restructure the racial architecture
of South African society.
THE TRUTH AND RECONCILIATION COMMISSION
REPORT
p112
The TRCR's investigation was limited to what it called "gross
violations of human rights" that occurred during that period.
These violations were defined by the TRCR to mean killings, abductions,
torture, and severe ill treatment of any person, or any attempt,
conspiracy, incitement, or command to commit such acts. Included
also is what this volume calls terror.
p112
Before agreeing to the death of apartheid and the birth of majority
rule, de Klerk insisted on amnesty provisions. These were written
into the new constitution. There is doubt that he would have agreed
to the new dispensation without these provisions. The political
situation of the time as well as the commission that wrote the
TRCR were subject to cross pressures, not unlike those existing
at the initiation of other truth commissions. The Africans had
the votes, but the whites had the guns and the economy. The whites
were generally unrepentant, sometimes arrogant, hidden away as
they were in their all-white neighborhoods and generally unaware
of the plight of the Africans. The possibility of a coup existed.
Whites learned from the hearings that were held of what had been
done in their name, that is, if they bothered to listen.
p113
Gross Human Rights Violations: Pretoria and the Inkatha
... the report of the commission was voluminous,
consisting of no less than 2,759 pages, distributed in five volumes.
Despite the deficiencies noted above, the commission expressed
confidence in the validity of its findings. I regard it as a fine
basis, the best I have seen, upon which to evaluate the terrorism
and the violations of human rights that occurred in South Africa
from 1960 to 1995. The commission found that "the predominate
portion of gross violations of human rights was committed by the
former state through its security and law-enforcement agencies."
This is the beginning of an answer to a central question posed
by this study: whether the terrorism committed in South Africa
was state terrorism committed by the government or private terrorism
committed by the opposition. Moreover, in the period from the
late seventies to the early nineties the state "became involved
in activities of a criminal nature," including the extra-judicial
killing of political opponents. In doing so, the Botha and de
Klerk administrations acted in collusion with other political
groupings, most notably the lnkatha Freedom Party.
The commission went on to explain that
the administrations before Botha killed opponents, but not in
the systematic way introduced by his administration. During its
first five to seven years in office, the Botha administration
implemented its "total strategy" by invading neighboring
countries and waging counterinsurgency warfare against them. This
strategy led to the deaths of some 1.5 million victims in neighboring
countries. The TRCR mentioned this slaughter only in passing.
Its estimates were confined to what had happened within the Republic
of South Africa itself. When the conflict intensified within South
Africa itself in the mid-eighties, the tactics that worked abroad
were applied domestically. A military style of opposing internal
dissent became the hallmark of the State Security Council, whose
decisions were almost always accepted by the cabinet. Actually,
all of its key members sat on the council as did the leadership
of the security forces. The South African military began to play
an increasing role in domestic security, and the military way
of destroying the enemy was transferred from the external to the
internal and became more and more common practice within the country.
The public rhetoric of the cabinet and security forces as well
as their internal documents mirrored this change as they began
to be laced with terms such as "take out," "neutralize,"
"wipe out," "remove," "eliminate,"
"cause to disappear," and "destroy terrorists."
The word 'terrorist' was used constantly, but never defined. )
Botha himself called Mandela a "communist terrorist."
No distinction was drawn between activists engaged in military
operations or acts of terrorism and those who opposed apartheid
by lawful and peaceful means. All were lumped together as one
target, a single category of persons to be killed. The kill rate
perpetrated by the government increased accordingly, as did the
use of torture, abduction, arson, and sabotage. The commission
alleged that Botha, as head of the state and as chairperson of
the State Security Council, contributed to a climate in which
gross violations of human rights could and did occur. It concluded
that he was responsible for such violations.
p115
The commission returned to its principal charge against the South
African state. It used these words: "The state-in the form
of the South African government, the civil service, and its security
forces-was, in the period 1960-1994, the primary perpetrator of
gross violations of human rights in South Africa, and from 1974,
in southern Africa." It re-asserted this accusation in its
discussion of apartheid, which it characterized as a crime against
humanity. The commission
p116
Archbishop Tutu argued that Soviet communism played a pivotal
role in the politics of the apartheid era, with nations defining
themselves in terms of their relationship to communism. The communist
threat was regarded as being so serious that prominent democracies
such as the United States supported the world's worst dictatorships,
such as that of Pinochet, rather than countenance social change
on the scale that communism promised. Similarly, so the Archbishop
charged, the United States had been willing to subvert democratically
elected governments merely because the governments were communist-influenced.
And the United States did not care much about the human rights
records of their surrogates. The Archbishop concluded that the
South African government in its own crusade against communism
was far from being an exception.
p119
The Guilt of Civil Society
The commission quite wisely concluded
that civil society was also guilty, through acts of omission and
commission, of supporting an apartheid regime that committed gross
violations of human rights. Quite appropriately, the commission
introduced this subject with a quote from Major Craig Williamson
made at a commission hearing on the armed forces. He was "handled"
by General Johan Coetzee, who later became the commissioner of
the police. A member of the security forces, the major allowed
himself to be recruited by the ANC. He then set up what was ostensibly
an ANC cell, but actually it consisted entirely of members of
the security forces. A specialty of the major was to provide pamphlet
bombs to the ANC. This procedure led to entrapment operations
in which ANC operatives were caught and killed. At the hearings
the major said:
It is therefore not only the task of
the security forces to examine themselves and their deeds. It
is for every member of the society which we served to do so. Our
weapons, ammunition, uniforms, vehicles, radios, and other equipment
were all developed and provided by industry. Our finances and
banking were done by bankers who even gave us covert credit cards
for covert operations. Our chaplains prayed for our victory, and
our universities educated us in war. Our propaganda was carried
by the media, and our political masters were voted back in power
time after time with ever-increasing majorities.
The commission granted that the sectors
of civil society generally were not directly involved in the gross
violations, but they were structurally part of a system that was.
At the broadest level, the white electorate gave the National
Party the mandate to do what it did, and this party's popularity
increased after the 1948 elections as it embarked upon its program.
Singled out for specific blame and mention were the health sector,
organized religion, business, the media, and the judiciary. The
media and organized religion exerted immense influence on the
formation of ideas and moral codes, as did professional bodies
of doctors and lawyers who were often seen as the custodians of
scientific knowledge and impartiality. Although there was little
evidence of direct involvement of health professionals in gross
violations, they failed, among other things, to provide adequate
health care for black South Africans and to draw attention to
the negative health effects of apartheid, torture, and solitary
confinement. The commission took f health religion to task for
promoting the ideology of apartheid in a range of different ways
that included biblical and theological teachings. The churches
provided chaplains who wore the uniforms of the police and armed
forces, enjoyed the ranks of armed personnel, and some even carried
side arms. On occasion they accompanied the troops engaged in
internal conflicts or invasions of bordering countries.
Having pointed out that South African
society was divided not only on racial lines, but on class lines
as well, the commission argued that business was central to the
economy that sustained apartheid. Most businesses benefited from
operating in a racially structured context-those especially favored
were mining, white agriculture, and the industry that supplied
the military. The commission noted in its hearings that the business
sector failed to accept responsibility for its involvement in
state security initiatives. More than 100 laws were passed to
restrict the media, their impact after 1985 amounting to pre-publication
censorship of information about state-sanctioned violations. The
commission found that the racism that permeated white society
permeated the media as well. Moreover, mainstream English-language
media adopted "a policy of appeasement towards the state,
ensuring a large measure of self-censorship." With rare exceptions,
the Afrikaans media provided direct support for apartheid and
the activities of the security forces.
The commission criticized the judiciary
for its collusion with the police regarding the torture of detainees
and its collaboration in producing the highest capital punishment
rate in the" Western world," an execution rate that
overwhelmingly impacted poor black males. It found both the judiciary
and the organized legal profession "locked into an overwhelmingly
passive mind set" in the face of the injustices of apartheid.
They had a choice of opposing such injustice, or taking the honorable
way out by resigning.
p126
Despite changes in administrations Washington supported a racist
Pretoria from 1960 to the late 1980's.
p126
Washington provided military support ... In this period, the South
African military bought arms in the United States as a matter
of course. Such a deal in October 1952 provided for a purchase
of $112 million in weapons, and the contract specifically noted
that the weapons could be used for internal security. In a visit
to the United States in 1950, the South African finance minister
failed to get the full amount of a projected $70 million loan
he sought. But after the two countries and Britain agreed to the
development of South African uranium production, the financing
was forthcoming from the World Bank and other sources. The 1950
agreement on the development of South African uranium was followed
by years of nuclear cooperation between the African country and
the West. In 1976 Dr. Roux, President of the South African Atomic
Energy Board, ascribed "our" degree of nuclear advancement
"in large measure to the training and assistance so willingly
provided by the USA during the earlier years of our nuclear programme."
With help from the West, Pretoria did develop a nuclear bomb...
p127
White rule in South Africa was preferred not only because it was
adamantly anti-communist, but also because it brought stability
to the country. This was good for business and trade, and investments
in South Africa grew apace. Moreover, South Africa was strategically
located, and had sizeable uranium deposits. In an address to a
branch of the African National Congress in 1953, Nelson Mandela
reminded his fellow party members that "there is no easy
walk to freedom anywhere."
p131
... all of the administrations from Truman to and including that
of Carter provided support for a racist Pretoria and for other
racist and colonial regimes in southern Africa. This support increased
during the Reagan years.
... Soon after taking office, President
Reagan strongly endorsed friendship with South Africa on nationwide
TV. He initiated a policy that his administration called "constructive
engagement."
p131
Archbishop Tutu declared that this was a period in which Washington
enthusiastically supported any government however shabby its human
rights record was so long as it declared itself to be anti-communist.
"Thus the apartheid government benefited hugely from President
Ronald Reagan's notorious 'constructive engagement' policy."
While paying lip service to anti-apartheid sentiment, the Reagan
administration said that it could more likely bring about change
by maintaining relations with Pretoria than by isolating it. After
receiving the Nobel Prize for peace in 1984, the archbishop engaged
in some private diplomacy in Washington and London. He tried to
get both Reagan and Thatcher to impose economic sanctions on South
Africa. He met with Reagan and his cabinet, but to no avail. The
president was a bit shocked when the archbishop showed him his
travel document. He was not allowed a regular South African passport.
The shock was caused by the entry in the space for nationality.
The entry read "Undeterminable at present."
p134
Violent demonstrations in South Africa escalated to the level
of civil war. Human rights groups estimated that between September
1984 and mid 1986, 2,500 were killed, nearly all Africans. At
least 30,000 were detained, including 300 youngsters under eighteen.
These demonstrations were triggered by a new constitution that
provided for Indian and colored representation, but not for African
representation and by a defiant speech delivered by Botha. The
violent street reaction in South Africa was matched in the United
States by peaceful demonstrations instigated by African Americans,
students, churches, and others. Some six thousand protestors were
arrested picketing the South African embassy and its consulates,
including eighteen members of congress, one being a Senator (Senator
Weicker). Pressure was put on universities, local government,
and businesses resulting in divestiture and the refusal of banks
to role over loans for South Africa. More than half of the American
firms with direct investments in South Africa withdrew them between
1984 and the end of 1986. The value of the rand plunged. A declining
economy and a volatile political situation induced South African
business to pressure the government for change.
Washington finally imposed sanctions on
South Africa in 1985 and 1986.
p136
The Republican platform for the 1988 election reaffirmed its support
for the Reagan administration's policies in South Africa and opposed
sanctions. In contrast to this, the Democratic platform called
for comprehensive sanctions and named South Africa a "terrorist
state."
In 1989 T.W. de Klerk replaced P.W. Botha
as head of the ruling party in South Africa and as head of the
government. The Botha government had waged a war on the home front
and one abroad as well. It invaded neighboring countries, pillaging
and terrorizing their civilian populations. On the home front,
Africans had become more and more militant, and were in open rebellion.
The government declared martial law and states of emergency, detained
prisoners without trial and tortured them, censored the press,
banned political meetings, committed political murders, and organized
death squads. Domestic support for apartheid was dwindling, and
the Reagan administration, despite its own feelings and policies,
was forced by Congress to impose meaningful economic sanctions.
One of the last straws occurred when the Dutch Reformed Church,
a beacon of moral leadership for most Afrikaners, switched theological
positions on apartheid. Whereas before the church argued that
apartheid had been mandated by the Bible, after the switch the
church declared apartheid to be immoral. It was in this context
that apartheid legislation was repealed and Africans and other
nonwhites were allowed to vote.
De Klerk released top African leaders
from prison, including Nelson Mandela, the head of the African
National Congress. He then initiated negotiations with the former
"saboteur," "terrorist," and prison inmate,
to lay the groundwork for a democratic regime. Mandela had served
some 28 years of a life sentence under the Suppression of Communism
Act for involvement in sabotage. Just four years and two months
after his release from jail, he became the president of South
Africa.
p138
... the general impact of Pretoria's total strategy upon neighboring
countries. Both were commissioned by United Nations agencies.
The first is named South African Destabilization: The Economic
Cost of the Frontline Resistance to Apartheid. Initiated by an
economic task force appointed by the Secretary General, its purpose
was to determine the impact of South Africa's total strategy on
the prospects for development of the region. The second source
is entitled Children on the Frontline: the Impact of Apartheid,
Destabilization and Warfare on the Children of Southern Africa.
It was commissioned by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).
Its publication resulted from a decision made by UNICEF's executive
board in 1986 to assess the impact of military and political activities
in the region upon women and children. It has four authors. They
are Reg Green, a fellow at the Institute of Development Studies
of the University of Sussex; a UNICEF staff member; a UNICEF project
officer; and the UNICEF representative for Mozambique and Swaziland.
The preface to the report enlarged upon the reason for the initiation
and publishing of the report. It alleged that apartheid itself
and South Africa's incursions into surrounding countries have
been universally condemned. But it went on to say:
But the extent to which South Africa's
policies of apartheid, economic disruption and de-stabilization
have seriously affected the lives, health, and welfare of children
in other countries of southern Africa has been hardly reported
upon, and almost certainly too little appreciated. To help remedy
this situation, UNICEF has commissioned this paper.
The above quote singles out children as
the victims of these massacres since UNICEF's mandate is with
these innocents. Obviously, the massacres affected adults as well,
and their fate was not widely advertised either. The ignoring
and minimizing of the massacres and terror committed by Pretoria
against neighboring African populations is an extremely significant
point. Despite my longstanding interest in Africa, I was unaware
of its extent. But these phenomena of minimizing and being ignorant
of abuse have come up again and again in connection with other
massacres and terror described in this volume. The report returned
to this subject a few pages later, but from a new angle. Its reference
shifted from the exclusive concern with the welfare of children,
the chief human victims of the total strategy, to reflect on the
general situation in Angola and Mozambique, the chief territorial
victims of the strategy. The report declared:
Since independence Angola and Mozambique
have been beset by internal fighting and external attacks from
South Africa. Hardly a week has been passed in peace.
The widespread and continuing conflict
in these two countries has been virtually ignored as most of the
world has concentrated its attention on events within South Africa
and Namibia. It is necessary to outline here its instruments,
its economic and social costs to the region and, above all, the
human costs in the lives of the region's children.
Tom Brennan, a consultant to the U.S.
Committee for Refugees, complained of the lack of coverage of
the violence in the American media. He registered this complaint
in a publication written in 1986, affirming that the crisis had
been ongoing for eleven years and had steadily grown more violent.
He asserted that human suffering and human displacements were
truly massive in scale in the entire southern third of the African
continent and that there existed a potential for catastrophe.
He continued:
Until very recently, however, little
has appeared in the American media regarding the domestic situations
in Mozambique or of the other nations in southern Africa, or regarding
their relationships with each other and with the South African
government. Even less has appeared on the impact that the existing
and potential armed conflicts in the region--stemming from ideological
as well as ethnic and racial differences-are likely to have on
the civilian populations of the area as the struggle to eliminate
apartheid gains momentum.
The UNICEF report indicated that Mozambique
and Angola had the highest infant and children mortality rates
in the world. This is ironic since these two countries gave priority
in the post independence period to public health measures designed
to improve the health of the population, especially infants and
children. Their governments created networks of health centers
and posts, thousands of health workers were trained, and mass
vaccination programs were implemented. The groundwork for this
ambitious public health program was laid in the immediate post
colonial period. It took root and blossomed in 1979 and 1980,
only to be poisoned after that. It is no accident that this setback
occurred at the very time that Pretoria started seriously to apply
its total strategy. The UNICEF report charged that the war and
the destabilization campaign (total strategy) chose health and
educational facilities as targets. It offered as examples the
718 health posts and centers destroyed in Mozambique since 1981
and the schools for 300,000 primary school children. The destruction
of the health posts and centers deprived two million people of
health care. In areas of southern Angola and in much of rural
Mozambique vaccinations were no longer given because of lack of
security. Many health workers were maimed, wounded, kidnapped,
or killed. The result was that easily preventable diseases and
curable illnesses "are now taking a hideous and rising toll
on the vulnerable age group of infants and children under five."
In 1986 one hundred and forty thousand
children under the age of five in these two countries lost their
lives because of South Africa's "war and destabilization"
campaign, what we refer to as its "total strategy."
The number of deaths was expected to increase in 1987. But it
was not merely the state of the children in these countries that
"is grave and getting worse." All fifteen million children
in the region whose countries border South Africa were considered
to be in the same perilous situation. They were caught up in the
throes of an external civil conflict and an economic de-stabilization
campaign (total strategy). While the report set forth a number
of conditions responsible for undermining the health of children
in these two countries and the others in southern Africa, war
and de-stabilization were identified as the major causes. And
the report concluded that all countries in the region suffered
economic losses either directly from South African aggression
or from its destabilization campaign or indirectly by having to
spend more on defense. Mozambique spent 42 percent of its budget
on defense, one of the highest percentages in the world. This
diminished the revenue left over for social services, for example,
for children. The dislocation of the population also contributed
to malnutrition and starvation. This was particularly evident
in the case of Angola and Mozambique where 9 million people became
refugees at one time or another. After 1981 sabotage units were
particularly active. The principal targets were transportation
and power infrastructure, but major production units came under
the gun as well, especially those earning foreign exchange. The
destruction of the transportation systems of neighboring countries
made these countries more dependent on South Africa's system for
the export of their commodities.
The UNICEF report argued that what is
called here Pretoria's "total strategy" went beyond
seeking merely to destroy military and economic targets to include
those that sustain the very social fabric of nations. The report
gave as examples of the fruit of this objective the destruction
of health and educational facilities, the dislocation of communities,
the loss of food production, and the reduction of the health and
water budgets because of expenditures for defense. In another
section, some of this type of destruction appeared again, but
as the result of mass terrorism:
One of the deadliest weapons of the war
is the mass terrorism carried out by forces which have burned
crops and farm houses, pillaged and destroyed schools, clinics,
churches, mosques, stores and villages, poisoned wells by throwing
bodies down them, and attacked the transport system which is a
vital part of rural life. Members of religious orders, mainly
South Africa, Catholics, have been murdered and kidnapped. So
too have foreign aid workers from both West and East. In Angola
and Mozambique teachers, nurses, agricultural technicians, engineers,
and geologists have also been killed and kidnapped, maimed and
mutilated.
The carnage has been indiscriminate, with
infants and children not exempted. The results are clear and tragic:
death for many, and for the survivors fear and flight, destruction
and displacement. About 8.5 million Angolans and Mozambicans__.
roughly half the rural population of the two countries-have been
displaced or are internal refugees in their own countries.
The costs of the war are cumulative,
have been escalating since 1981, and are likely to continue to
do so.
South African Destabilization, a report
initiated by a task force appointed by the Secretary General of
the United Nations, provides an estimate of the total economic
and demographic cost to the victims in neighboring countries of
the implementation of South Africa's total strategy. Its purpose
was to provide a synthesis of the impact of South Africa's total
strategy upon neighboring countries. It concluded that the cost
to these countries from 1980 to 1988 was over $60 billion at 1988
prices, reflecting the loss in gross domestic product attributed
to the implementation of this strategy by South Africa and its
accomplices. The report added that the losses promise to extend
beyond 1988. The report indicated that Pretoria's strategy killed
the inhabitants of neighboring countries in three ways.
The first was directly by war or terrorism,
the victims being military personnel or civilians. The second
was through a combination of malnutrition, disease, and the destruction
of rural health networks. Those killed by this method were usually
infants and young children. The third consisted of famine-related
deaths as a result of the lack of food caused by drought in combination
with general insecurity. The report concluded that by the end
of 1988, 1.5 million had been killed in these three ways. Over
half of the fatalities were infants or children under five. The
report estimated that almost half of the populations of Angola
and Mozambique had been driven from their homes at least once,
usually with the loss of possessions. It calculated that at the
time of the writing, 1.5 million were refugees abroad and 6.1
million were displaced internally.
The estimate of the task force that 1.5
million were killed can be compared with a 1988 study commissioned
by the U.S. State Department that concluded that the guerrilla
group, the Mozambican National Resistance (RENAMO), alone killed
100,000 civilians in Mozambique. By the time of the study Washington
was supportive of the Mozambican government, rather than opposing
it as before. This guerrilla group was established by Southern
Rhodesia's intelligence organization around 1975, and after that
colony became African-governing in 1980, the South African Army
adopted it. Until the middle of 1979, it had little more than
nuisance value. But with South African supplies and support it
witnessed a marked improvement in its destructive power. It became
active in all parts of Mozambique and, besides its propensity
to kill, it was responsible for much of the damage to the country's
transportation system. RENAMO carried on guerrilla operations
differently from the way the Front for the Liberation of Mozambique
(FREIJMO) did when it was leading the fight against Portuguese
rule. FRELIMO sought only to disrupt economic activity and used
a selective targeting system for civilians. In contrast, RENAMO
"has often completely destroyed economic infrastructure and
has been generally )_discriminate in its attacks on the civilian
population."
p142
WASHINGTON, SOUTH AFRICA AND WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION
Chemical and Bacteriological Weapons
The commission discovered that the apartheid
governments developed a chemical and bacteriological warfare (CBW)
capability. The TRCR based its investigation of the CBW program
on more than 150 documents, affidavits, amnesty applications,
and interviews. Given the code name Project Coast, this program
was under the general management of the chief of staff of the
defense force, the chief of staff of intelligence, the surgeon
general of the army, and Dr. Wouter Basson, the project director.
Its goals included the manufacture of cholera, botulism, anthrax,
chemical poisoning, drugs of abuse allegedly for crowd control,
lethal microorganisms for use against individuals, and "applicators"
(murder weapons) developed for their administration. As examples,
anthrax was "applied" in cigarettes, botulism in milk,
and paraoxon in whiskey. A company was enlisted secretly to act
as a front for the project. The commission concluded that toxins
had been used by the security forces against anti-apartheid activists.
Although the production of a thousand kilograms of methaqualone
(mandrax) was started, its production was stopped in 1988, because
its ability to incapacitate was found to be too slow to act as
an efficient agent for crowd control. Work on its analogues continued.
A British scientist alleged that South African troops used a chemical
agent against guerrillas from Mozambique in a military encounter
along the South African-Mozambican border in January 1992. Other
investigators, including the United Nations, could not verify
the charge. The commission concluded that the matter remained
unresolved.
The commission concluded that "without
some level of foreign assistance, the (CBW) programme would not
have been possible." The assistance was forthcoming from
Belgium, Israel, the United Kingdom, and the United States. In
the early eighties, Dr. Basson attended a conference on the subject
held in San Antonio. "Other documents reveal links between
the surgeon general (of the South African army) and Americans
who were part of the United States CBW programme, and demonstrate
their willingness to assist South Africans." Dr. Basson visited
the United States in 1981, and later Dr. Knobel, the surgeon general,
had contact with scientists who were part of the American CBW
program. As 1993 drew to a close and the ANC seemed closer to
taking over the government, both the Unites States and the British
governments expressed concern lest a government under the control
of the African National Congress take over the program. At a hearing
of the commission both Dr. Basson and Dr, Knobel testified that
these governments told them that they did not want this to happen.
p142
Nuclear Weapons
Much earlier Washington helped Pretoria
develop a nuclear capability. In 1957 Washington signed a 50-year
agreement for nuclear cooperation with Pretoria, and the latter
has received "extensive assistance in the nuclear field"
from the United States. In 1961 South Africa purchased a Safari
1 research reactor from the United States. There has been some
variation between administrations in the intensity of the collaboration.
The Carter administration sought to impose more restrictive parameters
on the sale of nuclear technology than the Reaganites. They approved
the sale of vital equipment that could be used, for example, to
simulate nuclear explosions and to test warheads and re-entry
equipment. A study by the General Accounting Office found that
in 1981 South Africa was the second leading country purchasing
"dual-purpose, nuclear related" equipment from the United
States. In 1984 a substantial number of the licenses issued by
the Commerce Department for export to South Africa were for material
that could be used in producing or testing nuclear weapons despite
the fact that Pretoria had refused to sign the Nuclear Non-proliferation
Treaty. Britain, West Germany, France, and more recently Israel
were heavily involved in assisting as well. When challenged, the
political elites of each country insisted that their collaboration
was for peaceful purposes only. The General Assembly of the United
Nations on numerous occasions called for a stop to such collaboration,
but it continued. Efforts to exclude South Africa from the International
Atomic Energy Agency failed, because of the opposition to exclusion
by the Western nations. There was evidence that Pretoria conducted
nuclear tests in 1979, 1981, and 1987. Despite strong evidence
to the contrary, Washington claimed that there was no "corroborating
evidence" for the first test or that the evidence was "inconclusive".
In like manner, it shrugged oft the other reported tests as well.
Western collaboration with South Africa
continued, and "it paid off." In August 1988 Foreign
Minister PK Botha announced that South Africa had a nuclear capability,
and in March 1993 President de Klerk acknowledged that the apartheid
state had produced six nuclear bombs in 1989.
p144
South African society under apartheid was not only structured
by race, but also by class. Africans were not only discriminated
against socially and generally humiliated, they were found at
the bottom of the national pay scale. At the other end was the
business class, which benefited from the low wages that existed
in the racist society. Especially favored were mining, white agriculture,
and the defense industry. Besides criticizing business, the TRCR
singled out for dishonorable mention organized religion, the health
sector, the media, and the judiciary. The judiciary was charged
with collusion with the police in the torturing of prisoners;
the media with self-censorship or support for apartheid or repression;
the health sector for not calling attention to the negative health
effects of apartheid, torture, and solitary confinement; and organized
religion for promoting the ideology of apartheid. Churches provided
chaplains for the military and police forces, and sometimes the
chaplains were armed.
One reason given for the establishment
of a truth commission in South Africa was to inform the white
population as to what had happened. Safely tucked away in their
all-white segregated sections of the cities, the whites were unaware
of what was happening in the African townships. I was reminded
of the public in the United States separated by distance and propaganda
from knowing that its government was helping rightwing governments
commit state terrorism. In the case of South Africa, this help
extended so far as to aid in the development of weapons of mass
destruction.
State
Terrorism and the United States
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