CA PROPAGANDA PERSPECTIVES MARCH 1971

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CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9
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S
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76
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November 11, 2016
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August 5, 1998
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1
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Publication Date: 
March 1, 1971
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REPORT
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25X1C10b 61 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 SOVIET RELATIONS WITH THE ARAB SOCIALIST UNION The Arab Socialist Union (ASU) -- sponsored and organized by the government -- is the only political party allowed to operate in the UAR. It was founded in late 1962 as the successor to a number of earlier similar attempts designed to develop an all-inclusive one-party system controlled and directed by the government. As long as Nasser lived, the ASU had little chance of developing into a powerful organization, but remained a constitutional rubber stamp and a creature of Nasser's will. However, Nasser's sudden death deprived the UAR of a towering personality and left only a lackluster and uninspiring "collective leadership." This void caused the ASU to emerge from impotence to become, at least po- tentially, the most important power center in the political struc- ture of the United Arab Republic. Since Nasser's death the Soviet interest in the ASU, has vastly intensified, and the relations between the ASU, the CPSU and other European Communist parties have increased to the point where they could bedescribed as having entered an entirely new phase. The ASU as an Alternative to an Egyptian Communist Party In 1964 there were indications that the Soviets had recognized the wealth of possibilities that could result from cooperation with the Arab Socialist Union. In May 1964 Premier Nikita Khrushchev traveled to Egypt to inspect construction of the Aswan dam. Nasser had long.hoped to have the Soviet leader present for the ceremonies marking the diversion of the Nile waters. But Khrushchev had at first demurred saying he could not visit a country which held so many Communist party members in its jails and Nasser agreed to release the Communists. During the visit Nasser and Khrushchev agreed that the Egyptian Communists would dissolve their organiza- tion and stop their underground activity. In exchange Nasser would lift the restrictions on them, allow them to join the ASU, and assume important posts in the Union. At the same time Pravda published a strong article urging Arab Communists to cooperate with Nasser and his socialist system. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 By April 1965, the two principal factions of the Egyptian Communist Party had officially dissolved themselves and instructed their members to join the ASU. The dissolution of the Egyptian Communist Party, engineered by Khrushchev in Soviet interests, was a masterstroke. The party as such was weak and ineffectual and its "official" dissolution was no loss to the Soviets. On the contrary, the Khrushchev-Nasser agreement resulted in the release from jail. of all leading Communists and they, as well as other pro-Soviet leftists, became free to infiltrate the ASU and assume important positions in it. Under the new favorable climate Communists (now called Marxists or leftists since the party was dissolved) and other leftists proceeded to infiltrate the ASU. Within a short period, they had managed to occupy many. sensitive positions, not only in various levels of the ASU, but also in the universities and the youth organizations. The press, which is technically owned by the ASU, came almost completely under their control with the exception of al-Ahram which remained outside their influence. Popularizers of Communist thought, such as Khalid Muhyi al-Din and Ahmad Lutfi al- Khuli, became regular contributors to the World Marxist Review -- the Soviet-controlled monthly organ of the internationaT Communist movement. By late 1965 Nasser apparently became seriously concerned about leftist domination of the press. He removed Khalid Muhyi al-Din from his strategic position as chairman of Akhbar al-Yawm House and removed several other leftists from key positions in other publications. After this initial setback, leftist influence was strengthened by the appointment in October 1965 of Ali Sabri as Secretary-general of the ASU. Sabri, who is known for his extreme leftist views and for his strong pro-Soviet sympathies, is usually described as "Moscow's man in Cairo." In the middle of 1966 Sabri launched a purge of "rightist" elements in the ASU, apparently in an attempt to establish for himself and his leftist colleagues a politcal power base in that organization. At the same time, the Communists concentrated on the development of an elite "vanguard organization" within the ASU which was to lead the five to six million ASU membership. Cadres of this elite would be trained in "socialist" countries and at the Cairo Institute of Advanced Socialist Studies which was established in May 1965 for this purpose. By September. 1967 Sabri had also managed to establish Communist theory courses in the UAR lycees. Then in October 1966 Nasser launched a campaign to stem the rising tide of Communist influence in the ASU. During that month some 20 to 50 Marxist intellectuals were arrested and it was rumored that All Sabri himself was arrested for a short while, and that several Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 implicated members of the Soviet embassy in Cairo departed quietly for Moscow. Ali Sabri remained ASU secretary-general until the government- ASU shuffle which followed the June 1967 war. In January 1968 Nasser appointed Sabri again as ASU secretary-general in addition to his post as vice-president. Under the 30 March 1968 program initiated by Nasser, the ASU was reorganized, its structure liberalized and all important offices made elective. This was a "reform" which leftists as well as the Soviets had been advocating for years. and Soviet media hailed the step as a major progressive achievement. Inline with the new reforms, Sabri as well as all top ASU officials resigned their posts to stand for re-election. Pro- Soviet leftist influence and Sabri's strength in the ASU soon be- came apparent when in October 1,968 Sabri was re-elected by the Central Committee as a member of the Higher Executive Committee, the highest organ of the ASU. In July 1969 Sabri again went to Moscow on what was described as a private visit, the purpose of which has never been explained. Shortly after his return, apparently due to differences on policy, he fell out of Nasser's favor. And in September 1969, Nasser removed:Sabri from the chairmanship of the Organizational Sub- Committee. Nasser also cracked down on many of Sabri's leftist supporters: Mustafa Naji, director of Sabri's private office was removed. Abd al-Majid Farid, a Sabri man, was replaced by Hassan al-Tihami (a Nasser man) as director of the ASU office. Mahmud al-'Alim, a Sabri supporter and a strong Soviet sympathizer was removed: from his important post as board chairman of Akhbar al-Yawm Publishing House which issues a daily newspaper, al-Akhbar. Sabri thereafter remained more or less in political limbo. But in July1970 Nasser again brought him back into the government and named him advisor for Air Force and Defense matters, a position requiring close liaison between the Egyptians and Soviets which gave Sabri the opportunity to travel to the USSR about every two months. After Nasser's death, Sabri emerged as an important member of the inner 'collective leadership' which rules Egypt today. He is a member of the ASU Higher Executive Committee and is now one of the two vice presidents of the UAR. Beyond the obvious conclusion that All Sabri has been a key factor in the Soviet plan to control the ASU, there is some suspicion that during a trip to the Soviet Union in 1961, Sabri was recruited as political agent by Aleksandr N. Shelepin, then the chief of the Soviet Intelligence Service. Sabri had been Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 involved with the Egyptian Communist movement since the mid-1940s. His first extensive contact with the Soviets occurred during the Egyptian-Soviet arms negotiations in 1955. By 1957, the Soviet Ambassador was calling on Sabri almost daily. Certainly by 1961 it would have been an easy matter for Shelepin to gain Sabri's full cooperation. international Conferences and Seminars The ASU has now reached the point in its development where it is regarded as one of the "fraternal parties" and ASU representatives now attend virtually every international Communist conference and seminar. One type of conference which they now regularly attend is the ideological seminar usually held in one of the Soviet Union's Asian Republics. Typical of these is the international seminar on the Relations of the October Revolution with Revolutions of National. Liberation which was held in Baku between 19-22 September 1967. Khalid Muhyi al-Din, Yusuf al-Sibai and Lutfi al-Khuli were the UAR representatives. A similar symposium, which was sponsored by the Soviet Committee for Afro-Asian Solidarity, was held in Alma Ata in October 1969 on "Lenin's Theory on National Liberation Movements and the Contemporary Stage of Social Progress of Developing Countries." Representatives from 50 African, Asian and Latin American countries participated. The Egyptian delegation was headed by Diya al-Din Daud. ASU attendance at international conferences sponsored by pro- Soviet front groups has now become a must. Of special importance in regard to such conferences are Yusuf Sibai, the Secretary-General of AAPSO (Afro-Asian Peoples Solidarity Organization), and Khalid Muhyi al-Din, the Secretary-General of the Egyptian National Peace Council which is affiliated with the pro-Soviet front, the World Peace Council (WPC). Muhyi al-Din is also a member of the WPC presidential committee. In April 1970 both were awarded Lenin Peace Prizes. Another level of ASU contacts has been with pro-Soviet East and West European Communist parties, many of which now provide training for ASU cadres. The ASU has exchanged delegations with the Italian and French Communist parties for some years. In April 1968 these parties and the Spanish and Yugoslav Communist parties all met with the ASU in the first conference of Mediterranean "progressive" parties. In recent months the tempo of these contacts has accelerated greatly. For instance in December 1970 alone some eight delegations of various Communist parties visited the ASU and held official talks Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 with it in Cairo. These included a French CP delegation, a GDR Parliamentary delegation, a Bulgarian CP delegation, and a WPC delegation. During the same month a number of ASU delegations paid official visits to many Communist parties in Eastern Europe, including those of Hungary, Yugoslavia, Poland, Bulgaria, and East Germany. Needless to say, the ASU will send a delegation (non-voting) to the 24th CPSU Congress in Moscow. The Sovietization of the ASU Egypt has now become the cornerstone of Soviet policy and strength in the Middle East and Egypt has become extremely dependent on Soviet aid,. The unexpected death of Nasser demonstrated to the Soviets the vulnerability of their position in Egypt and with this in mind,, they hope to persuade Egypt to become (a) irrevocably committed to a socialist course, and (b) to develop a strong political organization (such as the ASU) not dependent on the rule of a single man who might die, who might change his mind, or who might be over- thrown by a palace coup or a military junta. Even before Nasser's death, the Soviets began to emphasize the ASU as never before and coverage of the ASU by Soviet mass media increased almost a hundred--fold. During the past year relations between:the ASU and the CPSU have become extremely close and interaction between the two parties now reaches into the lower levels as well with the CPSU acting as the older "brother" helping and guiding the inexperienced ASU. ASU-CPSU delegations of various types and on various levels criss-crossing between Cairo and Moscow in 1970 alone numbered close to 50. Another shift of emphasis has recently taken place. Soviet media and Soviet official statements now regularly emphasize the need togo beyond state-to-state relations into the development of close ties and cooperation between the ASU and the CPSU. Joint communiques issued at the end of visits exchanged between CPSU and ASU dignitaries are beginning to affirm CPSU and the ASU determination to "continue their course to develop cooperation and friendship between the Soviet people and the UAR poeple in all fields." State occasions also provide opportunities for the exchange of visitsM Immediately following Nasser's death a whole stream of high powered Soviet personalities and delegations visited the UAR, partly to bolster the morale of the Cairo regime, and partly to in- sure that the Soviet investment would be safe. Premier Kosygin was one of the dignitaries attending Nasser's funeral. Between September 29 and October 5, he had numerous discussions with virtually Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 every important leader in Egypt. Western sources agreed at-the time that Kosygin probably refrained from making any suggestion as to who should succeed Nasser. However, he stressed the view that stability in Egypt was the primary concern of Moscow. He also cautioned against allowing the army to gain a controlling influence and urged strongly that immediate steps be taken to strengthen the ASU and its political activities. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 25X1C1Ob Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 TO COMRADE ALEXEI N. KOSYGIN CHAIRMAN OF THE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS OF THE SOVIET UNION AND COMRADE LEONID I. BREZHNEV GENERAL SECRETARY OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE SOVIET UNION FROM A COMMANDER OF THE ANYA NYA YOUR EXCELLENCIES, Many Black Africans have returned from the Soviet Union with vivid descriptions of the persecution of Black Africans by the Soviet people. They have described numerous brutal beatings of Africans at the hands of Soviet mobs while the police stood idly by and watched. They have given detailed accounts of the murders of Africans. We know of the Ghanians - Ogyana Koranteng from Woraware, who was stabbed to death while traveling from Sochi, and Edmund Asarc-Addo, beaten to death near the Khovrino Railroad Station just outside Moscow; of the Nigerian - Sigismund Abiodun Sanni, found dead in 1969 in the river near Kiev University; and of the Kenyan - James Gakio of Fort Hall, who was slain in Kiev on November 6, 1969. The generally hostile attitude of the Soviet people toward Black Africans may be summed up in the phrase that the Soviet people use most frequently in describing the Africans - "chorni obezyani" which means "black monkeys." It is not difficult to understand the attitude of crude and boorish Soviet mobs toward someone they do not understand. There arc few Blacks in the Soviet Union and contact with those that are there must be it new and strange experience for the average uncultured Soviet citizen, and it may be presumed that the actions of the mob were not officially endorsed by the Soviet government. During the period 1962-1967 the Egyptians were engaged in a campaign' to subdue the people of Yemen and to annex that nation to the UAR. Unable to defeat the courageous Yemeni by their own efforts, the Egyptians called in the Soviet Union to support the war. The Soviet govern- ment responded with alacrity, first supplying armaments and then the skilled technicians who were required to replace the inept Egyptians in order to Approved~ir~'t'~e~~P~1~9~''I~FF-~~h0'~J4'~C~O$li~1`330~~1-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Soviet technicians performed their jobs proficiently, bombing, strafing and napalming the defenceless Yemeni peasants and nomads, and according to the International Red Cross, even resorting to the dispersion of poison gas by aerial bombing when the Yemeni refused to surrender to more conventional bombing attacks. Even though these Soviet activities against Yemen were under- taken with the (till approval and commitment of the Soviet government, they too can be understood within the context of the traditional desire of the Russian Tsarists and subsequently the Soviet Union to acquire naval bases in warm water seas such as the Mediterranean, the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf. And certainly gaining the Yemen port of Hudaydah as a Soviet warm water naval base was worth the risk of being censured by world opinion for engaging in genocide against the Yemeni. Moreover, the unyielding hatred of the godless Soviet Union for Islam provided addi- tional incentive for Soviet slaughter of Yemeni. During 1970 the Soviet government undertook a new and ap- parently quite callous initiative: it raised the unofficial persecution of Black Africans in the Soviet Union to the level of an official campaign in sup- port of the genocide against the Black population of the Southern Sudan currently being practised by the Sudan Government. Thus the Soviet gov- ernment undertook an effort along lines paralleling the earlier Soviet sup- port of Egyptian genocide in Yemen. Why was the Soviet government willing to risk whatever good will it had been able to achieve in Black Africa in a racist war 'designed to destroy the Blacks in the Southern Sudan? What were the Soviet political and strategic objectives in taking a course of action which ultimately could only frighten and provoke the independent nations of Black Africa? As in the parallel example of Soviet support of Egyptian genocide in Yemen, the Soviet government came to the rescue of a client state, the Sudan, which was unable to fight its own war of suppression against its own nationals in its southern reaches. The old iron chain of requirements is in evidence here: first, the supply of armaments in exchange for political and strategic advantages; then the provision of military technicians as ad- visors to forestall inept and recalcitrant troops from displaying the weapons that they received in a bad light through mishandling; finally, all-in Soviet , shoring,up of the military arm of the client state through the use of Soviet troops in. direct combat with the adversary of the client state. In return for this direct support, the Soviet government extracts compensation from the client state in the form of political support but, more tangibly, warm water naval bases - in this instance, Port Sudan and Suakin on the Red Sea - and air bases at Wadi Saidna and Juba. The latter base thrusts deep into East Africa, outflanking Ethiopia and Kenya and within easy bombing range of Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia and much of Congo Kinshasa, the site of an earlier Soviet-sponsored revolt against the Congolese government of General 'Mobutu. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Rellm ,l X9$ /08%Wcs( 9A D1r'(D 44l94ADOMOVF30bf01-9 illusion that you could quietly and secretly engage in the total annihilation of five million Blacks in the Southern Sudan without this genocide coming before world public opinion. After all, half a million of these unfortunate Black Southern Sudanese have already been slaughtered with not a word of protest by the United Nations, the Organisation of African Unity and other world bodies. Or perhaps you, Comrades Kosygin and Brezhnev, were so eager to achieve your political and strategic objectives that you did not really give a damn about what world opinion would think or do in response to your foul support, of genocide in the Southern Sudan. Well, Comrades Kosygin and Brezhnev, we Black Southern Su- danese, who are earmarked for extinction by the Soviet army and air force in fulfillment of some Soviet vested interest, do care about what you are doing to us. We do care about our people being slaughtered; our. homes, schools, churches and mosques being destroyed; and our women and daught- ers being raped by your Sudanese allies. We care because, contrary to your views of us, we are not "chorni obezyani" - "black monkeys" but MEN. Men' of flesh and blood and feelings such as courage and a will to live. And we tell you here and now that whatever world opinion does or does not do, we shall die taking your men and planes and helicopters and tanks with us (as we have already done many times) rather than waiting about for you to conclude your genocide against us on your terms. We are well aware of your successful genocide against various Moslem peoples in the Soviet Union including the 500,000 Chechen-Ingush whom you have uprooted from their ancestral home in the Caucasus and destroyed as a people. We know you also wiped out the entire ethnic groups of 200,000 Crimean Tartars and 150,000 Kalmucks. We tell you we Black Southern Sudanese are not Chechen-Ingush, Crimean Tartars or even Kalmucks; we are MEN. And, if you wish to destroy us, you must first defeat us as men. We know of your genocide in Yemen and we say tp you, Comrades Kosygin and Brezhnev, we are not Yemen, we are MEN. Respectfully, GENOCIbE IN: SUDAN Cnel. Joseph Lagu on behalf of the Anya Nya AEGIS Committee Approve d cRe sieri999 002 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Comrade Leonid I Brezhnev AFRICANS FOR ENDING Approved For Releas 9 , /,Q;?,, CI ], ;01 194A000300130001-9 TO HIS EXCELLENCY KENNETH KAUNDA PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF ZAMBIA CHAIRMAN OF THE ORGANISATION OF AFRICAN UNITY FROM A COMMANDER OF THE ANYA, NYA YOUR EXCELLENCY, We Southern Sudanese, living under extreme repression in our homeland or as refugees in friendly African countries appeal to Your Ex- cellency to become aware of our plight and raise your benevolent voice in our behalf. We turn to Your Excellency as a true friend of the oppressed to speak out for us in international councils. Will not Your Excellency, who. has spoken for peoples under the colonial yoke throughout Africa, place before the world our story - a story of shame and misery, a .story of a people who have suffered half a million deaths because their skin and their culture is different from their northern compatriots. The comparison though vile must be made: we have endured many times more deaths through murder, repression and disease than all the African freedom move- ments combined. And yet the Organisation of African Unity will not even allow our story to be heard in its councils. Our Gethsemane, cruel though it has been, was made infinitely more painful by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, which have under- taken to assist and direct our Sudanese and Egyptian tormentors in the genocide being conducted at our expense. Even as we write to you, Soviet tanks with Russian drivers are rumbling through our villages, killing and maiming our defenceless people and our livestock with their cannon and machineguns, burning our homes, churches, mosques, and schools with their flamethrowers and crushing our garden plots under their bogies. MIG-21 jets with Soviet pilots overhead smash our bodies and our buildings with their bombs, searing our flesh and our souls with their napalm. MI-8 helicopters with Soviet pilots, navigators and gunners strafe and rocket our men ands boys and, when they are dead, leave our women and girls to be raped and mutilated by the Sudanese soldiers. cBesides being killed by Soviet arms daily, -thousands die from disease and famine. Nearly six newly born babies out of ten die from malaria and a host each year from malnutrition as a result of shortages in vitamin giving foods. Thousands perish from exposure to bad weather. Hospitals and schools have been either destroyed, closed or turned into military barracks. The entire population is a dying one, their conditions are pathetic. They have no permanent shelter, but hide under mosquito- infested trees and in caves. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For ReI fAse J~r9?/p Og-q&4-A7A-Q1jJ %4#;Q-0Q30aM001-9 as refugees in neighbouring countries, the Sudanese troops under the tute- lage of their Soviet masters, well-experienced in suppression of peoples' uprisings, cross the international borders and massacre our people on non-Sudanese soil. Aside from the bestial inhumanity these acts reveal, they are affronts to international law and morality. And the world does not seem to know or care that these criminal acts have been going on for 15 years and are still continuing. The only difference now is that the Russians are aiding and abetting this Sudanese genocide. Your Excellency may well ask how we know the, Russians are in the Southern Sudan helping the government and their Egyptian allies. We have seen them moving about in the streets of Juba where they are based, flying the MI-8 helicopters and firing at us the rockets and guns of these helicopters. We have heard them communicating with each other in their tanks and in their planes. We have heard the screams of wounded Russian pilots. We have buried the bodies of Russian airmen who perished with their helicopters. Our poor land does not have the oil of Angola, the chrome of Zimbawe or the diamonds of Namibia. No imperialists, covet our meagre' resources. All we ask of life is to be allowed to live it. We do not seek foreign arms, money or men. All we beg from the rest of Africa and the world is the recognition that we are human beings, not animals, and the right to live as human beings. Is this an unjust demand? Your Excellency, who is a peaceful man, may question why we do not surrender our arms and cooperate with the Sudanese govern- ment. We have attempted to do so many times. William Deng, an illustrious scholar and statesman, chose the path of cooperation. He was shot dead by the Sudanese army shortly after his election in Tonj Central Con- stituency. His name is but one of scores of the most talented southerners whose choice of cooperation resulted in their murder, or incarceration. Among the ordinary people, many have tried to cooperate. They have been repaid by being slaughtered in their homes and in their churches and mosques. One example among thousands may be cited from a recent book, Sudan? An African Tragedy, by a Norwegian journalist. Discussing a massacre of a group of communicants in a church, the author described what he saw as "the burned chapel, the wounded, the burned bones and skulls of ithe 50 innocent civilians, including children, murdered in cold blood:" This incident took place within the last six months. The Sudanese government and its army frequently announce so-called "amnesties" under which the 500,000 Southern Sudanese refugees in neighbouring states are invited to return to the Sudan. Those who have responded to these amnesties have been massacred. The Sudanese government and its Egyptian and Soviet masters Approved iR le> e19G9/09103tOrCiAtFJ?F r Ja19, iPQQA4Jl1 9 O1-9 Sudan by saying that the Southern problem is one of religion. This is Appro ed6orrR.eleaseh499EM/O2 dC4A EW79m0$1 0#k0WQ440001-9 together against a single problem: the genocide of the Africans in the Sudan. Among the foremost guerilla generals in the Southern Sudan are the Mos- lems, Abdel Rahman Suli and Paul All Gbatala. For what crime then are we condemned to annihilation? What- ever the crime it must be heinous, -because we have paid the full measure of five hundred thousand lives for this crime. Is it because we were born black? Because we do not wish to be slaves? Because we dare to assert we are men? Will Africa and the world forever look away in the hope that we will all quietly die out and relieve the conscience of those who pretend we do not exist? Or, even worse, those who recognise our existence, but pretend we do not suffer and die? Will no one speak out in our behalf? If but one African leader or statesman raised his voice for us, surely others would follow. But no one will be first. Therefore we must suffer in a backwash of human misery, relegated to limbo of despair, until every African man, woman and child in the.Southern Sudan, no matter what his tribe or religion, is dead. Dead from the machines of war or the concomitant horrors of, starvation and disease. Is there no ? statesman to tell our story to the world? Not one just man? Do not forsake us, Excellency. Bring our case before the OAU and the world. LET US BUT LIVE. In the name of God and humanism, treat us like men. FOR WE ARE MEN. Respectfully, AFRICANS FOR ENDING GENOCIDE IN SUDAN Cnel. Joseph Lagu on behalf of the Anya Nya AEGIS Committee His Excellency President, Kenneth Kaunda Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 199 :4 &4000300130001-9 TO HIS EXCELLENCY U THANT SECRETARY GENERAL OF THE UNITED NATIONS FROM A COMMANDER OF THE ANYA NYA YOUR EXCELLENCY, In 1956 the Southern Sudan problem was an embarrassment to the United Nations. Now 15 years and one million deaths later the Southern Sudan is still an embarrassment to the United Nations. It is also an embarrassment to the Organisation of African Unity; to the Govern- ment of the Democratic Republic of Sudan; to Sudan's senior partner, Egypt; and ' to Egypt's puppeteer, the Soviet Union. Of course, the Southern Sudan problem is also embarrassing to us Southern Sudanese; for genocide gen- erally is most embarrassing to its victims. We realise the reluctance of the United Nations to take sides in an internal dispute, in this instance between the Government of the Democratic Republic of Sudan and the Black Africans who live in the three southernmost provinces of Sudan. We are not asking Your Excellency or the United Nations to take sides, we are merely asking you to recognise the existence of the awful fact of the genocide of Black Southern Sudanese and to bring this fact before world public opinion. Perhaps then an in- formed opinion will exert sufficient moral pressure on the Sudanese Govern- ment and its Egyptian and Soviet masters to end the awesome genocide. The Sudanese Government do not- acknowledge the existence of genocide against the Black Southern Sudanese. The Sudan Government, as the oppressor, have the prerogative of refusing such acknowledgement. As the victims of genocide, we have no such prerogative. We must speak out in the hope that Your Excellency, the United Nations and the World will. listen, or we must suffer our extermination. United Nations statistics estimate one million dead Black South- ern Sudanese and 500,000 exiles in the neighbouring states of Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Congo and Central African Republic. Perhaps one million deaths and 500,000 exiles out of four million Southern Sudanese do not tconstitute< genocide., Would a total of three million dead and one million exiles be, considered genocide? At the present accelerated rate of slaughter by the Sudanese troops with their new Soviet tanks, aircraft and helicopters; their Egyptian pilots who drop bombs and napalm on the Southern villages; and their Soviet tactical support advisors who fly the helicopters and man the guns directed at the Black Southern Sudanese people, we should achieve three million dead and one million exiles within the next several years. Or perhaps six million is the total dead that must be achieved before a proper definition of genocide can be made. When all the Black Southern Sudanese have been 'liquidated, to achieve the total of six million, it will then only Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 pp iQbe necessary for e Sudanese Government and its E measFQr & t1 et4.9UlQ,Wlac X-RP - Jjt~ anQ ;('` AJ A r ~ I 30001-9 other West African Moslem pilgrims who settled in the Sudan. Will six million dead and exiled Black Sudanese constitute genocide? If six million is the total to gain the acceptance of world public opinion that the Sudanese Government is practising genocide, such acceptance will have to come too late to be meaningful to our people; our bombed out schools, churches, and mosques; our sequestered livestock; our burned down grain fields; our way of life. The Sudanese Government troops have not been content to de- stroy all our villages and kill all our people in the Sudan, they have crossed international boundaries to continue the slaughter in the Republic of the Congo and in Uganda. In the most recent of such incidents during December 23 and 24, 1970, Sudanese Government troops engaged in several firefights with Ugandan army and police, killing and wounding Ugandan soldiers and suffering casualties themselves. Sudanese troops are currently poised to cross Ethiopian boundaries to slay our people in their Ethiopian camps. Several journalists from both West and East who have been escorted to Juba by the Sudanese Government have reported that there are no traces of genocide in the Southern Sudan and that Southern Sudanese refugees are returning to the Sudan in large numbers from neighbouring states. This news would be most welcome to us if it were true. To prove the veracity of such claims, we implore Your Excellency and the United Nations to negotiate with the Sudanese Government to have them authorise a United Nations Commission to tour the three Southern Sudanese provinces which have been and are the sites of depredation, pillage and slaughter by Sudanese Government troops. For our part., we promise safe conduct to such a United Nations observation group. If the Sudanese Government will not permit a trip into Southern Sudan, the United Nations Commission could visit the Southern Sudanese refugee camps in the neighbouring coun- tries and ascertain for themselves whether refugees are leaving the Sudan to enter the camps or returning to the Sudan from the camps. The huge number of additions to the rolls of those who must accept aid from the few international organisations feeding the Sudanese refugees speaks for itself. 'Finally the Government of , the Democratic Republic of Sudan charge that we Black Southern Sudanese are imperialist stooges and colonial tools for, not allowing ourselves to be exterminated in silence and for fight- ing back We shall agree that we are imperialist stooges when we are supported by several hundred Russian advisors, driving Soviet tanks for us and flying late model MIG-21 fighter planes and TU-16 medium bombers' in support of our infantry divisions. We shall admit to being colonial tools when the Soviet artillery fires against Sudanese troops on our behalf and when Soviet helicopter gunships with Russian pilots and gunners strafe and napalm Sudanese villages, schools, churches and mosques. The Sudanese Government can more easily prove their charges of Black Southern Sudanese imperialism when they shoot down ten of our Soviet helicopter Or elease 1t9ya9b6782of t81X- ~i~t el0ip1 gr4.A000300130001-9 ApproN Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 In short, we are our own men, fighting not for the supremacy of Communism or Pan-Arabism or Arab Socialism but for our own SURVIVAL. WE WANT TO LIVE AS HUMAN BEINGS. WON'T YOUR EX- CELLENCY AND THE UNITED NATIONS HELP US TO SURVIVE? Respectfully, CPYRGHT AFRICANS FOR ENDING GENOCIDE IN SUDAN His Excellency U Thant TI-ffs. GUAI;JIAN OF LIBERTY, London .:.t-Sept. - Oct. 1970 bombs. )10117 J,_ __~eCL P t Col. Joseph Lagu on behalf of the Anya Nya CPYRGHT ignore the civil war, in. the southern Sudan - the bitter racial conflict between Arabs and Africans which has been raging in remote bush-country for the past 15 years. It was therefore timely that DIE PRESSE, neutral Austria's foremost independent news- paper, recently examined the background to the war in a long article based partly on interviews with leading `Sudanese refugees living in East Africa. The world's press continues e u an African National Union (SANU) was established abroad and has since fought its cause through many appeals and petitions to international organisations. The activity abroad of the southern Sudanese politicians, the Presse article says, led to in- creased repression at home. Villages were burned down and plundered, and their in- habitants - men, women and children - were murdered. These horrors led to the founding of a m vement called Anya'nya in 1963. This is th name of a deadly venom obtained by gr riding the dried head of a cobra to a fine p der. he guerrillas who had been in existence si 1955 were reorganised by Anya'nya -into a ore efficient fighting fores. 1964, General Abboud's 'military regime fel , and the general secretary of SANU, W Iliam Deng, who was murdered last year in Khartoum, returned to the central govern- m it along with other exiled politicians. is marked the beginning of deep splits wi in the ranks of the African opposition. I 1965, Joseph Oduha unified various rival gr ups of southern Sudanese politicians in the An a'nya Liberation Front (ALF). But in 1967 0 o-called "provisional government" was fo nded :in the southern Sudan without the co peration of the ALF, and in 1968 it began col in itself the "N.ite Provisional Govern- met". A proW66 IFfsR*ieals*h&S9Q1M02oiviClA- DP '1j9*A,0OO O4 3A-Q?'b 9Dduha. .1 ~ --- IWA1.11311 agu, rigs rigs leader in in the South, it was immediately opposed by atonal Province, soon assembled a d:is- The war began yin 1955 with a local uprising r by African southerners against their Arab rulers. The southerners, says the article, have nothir?g to -losebut their Fives, for the South has always,beerA neglected by successive pre- dominantly Arab' governments in Khartoum. The Africans' plight became even worse in 1958 when General Abboud seized power as' President of the Sudan in a bloodless coup d'etat. His military r6gime pursued a strict policy of Arabisation,.and Islamisation. Christian missionaries were expelled, Arabic was,made the sole national language, and 1,500,000 Arabs are settled in the predominantly African South. newspaper, almost a million people have been killed in the war. It is David and Goliath who are fighting here", the article sycis. The Africans of the South, dressed in rags and sacking and armed with pangas, spears, bows and arrows - few have firearms -fight against jet aircraft and CPYRGHT find traces of African settlements, they burn evnrv fnn o Tme around , Since the'h'the movement to set up an This is why so many southern Sudanese have At. ,can State in the southern Sudan has been fled their homeland. Many more have died of di id d i t t i h N P v e n wo ma o n groups: t ro e e il- hunger. visional Government and the ANO. A third L ll., there. is racial discrimination in ega group, the United Sudanese African Liberation the Sudan. However, according to the Austrian Front, was formed in Congo-Kinshasa in March, newspaper article, the Arabs, who have been 1970. It aims at achieving an African-ruled the ruling class for generations and in the provinces of the southern Sudan independent rnn4P-t nut'. of Khartoum and called them the 'Nile Re- ? Military aid, says the newspaper article, public". Its ,,parliament" meets in a mud but flows in freely from Moscow to the Arab deep in forest country. So for it has not been authorities in Khartoum. Russian MiG aircraft discovered by the Arabs. The most secret bombard southern Sudanese villages, and the parliament in the world sounds like a tragi- Sudanese army gets special 'training from comedy, but the actors are in deadly earnest, Soviet military advisers. says the Presse article. Spokesmen for the Nile Government and the Anya'nya National Armed Forces (ANAF). Presse article in East Africa recently. The other main group, the ANO, has no Stephen Lamm, of the Nile Government, civilian organisation. It is purely military and said. "Does not God say that all men are is critical of members of the Nile Government. born free and equal? But the Arabs will never The territory of the southern Sudan is recognise us as equal beings. They will never twice the size of the German. Federal Republic. give the South a chance to develop economi- It is mostly a malaria-infested, humid country cally; socially and educationally. For our part, For us there is nothing less than full in- The small towns in the South, which are dependence'. strongly fortified against Anya'nya attack, are Joseph Oduha spoke for ANO: "We shall now inhabited only by Arabs, the Africans . carry on fighting a guerrilla war until some- having fled for fear of further persecution. thing decisive happens in the political arenas area is too big and too unwieldy for the Arab Lasse Jensen, Africa correspondent of Den- government troops to be able to control it mark's national radio station, recently visited entirely. For their part, the Africans are too the Sudan and wrote about that country in an weak, too under-nourished and too ill-equipped article published by the Stockholm Dagens in arms to be able to fight Khartoum on their Nyheter. This Liberal daily newspaper, founded own for independence. Their efforts have had over a hundred years ago, is one of neutral But they do keep a professional army of year (the one which brought Major-General more than 10,000 men 'pinned down by Nimeiri to power at the head of a left-wing guerrilla harrassment. This includes blowing regime) the number of Egyptian advisers, ex- up bridges and roads, attacking road convoys perts, diplomats and soldiers has increased of advisers in Sudan's finance Ministry were k tok b o ac e rities inhartovm s The auth , course. "They (the Arabs) usually come in the thought to have planned the -recent nationalisa- arians had helped train d Bul ti g on measure, an grey dawn, surround a village, and throw Sudanese ~mv th e Oduha. "The inhabitants flee in panic from Kecent Soviet. old to the Sudanese forces ft i rcra this burning hell straight into the hands of included the supply of MiG-21 fighter a the Arabs, who torture, rape and murder this suitable for anti-iguerrilla operations in the The men usually live in the bush, fighting torn by racial conflicts involving Arabs. The or trainina to fiaht, and they leave farming Libyan Government is assisting a small group which Appmoeidift w eaee 4,999/09/02: CIA- 7d9d0a49!4A0MM9-3 Ota -Je Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Your Excellency, In-1956 the Southern Sudan problem was an embarrassment to the United Nations. Now 15 years and one million deaths later the Southern Sudan is still an embarrassment to the United Nations. It is also an embarrassment to the Organisation of African Unity; to the Government of the Democratic Republic of Sudan; to Sudan's senior partner, Egypt; and to Egypt's puppeteer, the Soviet Union. Of course, the Southern Sudan problem is also embarrassing to us Southern Sudanese; for genocide generally is host embarrassing to its victims. We realise the reluctance of the Organisation of African Unity to take sides in an internal dispute, in this instance between the Government of the Democratic Pupublic of Sudan and the Black Africans who.live in the three southernmost provinces of Sudan. We are not asking Your Excellency or the OAU to take sides, we are merely asking you to recognise the existence of the awful fact of the genocide of Black Southern Sudanese and to bring this fact before world public opinion. Perhaps then an informed opinion will exert sufficient moral pressure on the Sudanese Government and its Egyptian and Soviet masters to end the awesome genocide. United Nations statistics estimate one million dead Black Southern Sudanese and 500,000 exiles in the neighbouring states of Ethiopa, Uganda, Kenya, Congo and Central African Republic. Perhaps one million deaths and 500,000 exiles out of four million Southern Sudanese do not constitute genocide. Would a total of three million dead and one million exiles be considered genocide? At the present accelerated rate of slaughter by the Sudanese troops with their new Soviet tanks, aircraft and helicopters; their Egyptian pilots who drop bombs and napalm on the. Southern villages; and their Soviet tactical support advisors who fly the helicopters and-man the guns directed at the Black Southern Sudanese people, we should achieve three million dead and one million exiles within the next several years. or perhaps six million is the total dead that must be achieved before a proper definition of genocide can be made. When all the Black Southern Sudanese have been liquidated, to achieve the total of six million, it will then only be necessary for the Sudanese Government and its Egyptian and Soviet mentors to slaughter two million Black Nubas, Fur and Nigerians and other West African Moslem pilgrims who settled in the Sudan. Will six million dead and exiled Black Sudanese constitute genocide? If six million is the total to gain the acceptance of world public opinion that the Sudanese Government is practising genocide, such acceptance will have to come too late to be meaningful to our people; our bombed out schools, churches,rand mosques; our sequestered livestock; our burned down grain fields; our way of life." The Sudanese Government have reported that there are no traces of-genocide in the southern Sudan and that Southern Sudanese refugees are returning to the Sudan to dothet OAUthrnegoti- in large numbers from neighbouring states. Will You Excellen and ate with the Sudanesp Government to authorise an southern Sudanese provinces which have been and are the sitesof depredation, pillage and slaughter by Sudanese Government troops. For our part, we-can arrange safe con- duct to such an OAU observation group. If the Sudanese Government will not permit Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 the trip, the OAU Ccmmi.ssion could visit the Southern Sudanese refugee camps in the neighbouring countries and ascertain for themselves whether refugees are leaving the Sudan to enter the camps or returning to the Sudan from the camps. The huge number of additions to the rolls of those who must accept aid from the few international organisations feeding the Sudanese refugees speaks for itself. Finally the Government of the Democratic Republic of Sudan charges that we Black Southern Sudanese are imperialist stooges and colonial tools for not allowing ourselves to be exterminated in silence and for fighting back. We shall agree that we are imperialist stooges when we are supported by several hundred Russian advisors, driving Soviet tanks for us and flying late model MIG-21 fighter planes and TU-16 medium bombers in support of our infantry divisions. We shall admit to being colonial tools when the Soviet artillery fires against Sudanese troops on our behalf and when Soviet helicopter gun- ships with Russian pilots and gunners strafe and napalm Sudanese villages, schools, churches and mosques. The Sudanese Government can more easily prove their charges of Black Southern Sudanese imperialism when they shoot down ten of our Soviet helicopters as we have shot down ten of their Soviet helicopters. In short, we are our own men, fighting not for the supremacy of Commu- nism or Pan-Arabism or Arab Socialism but for. our own SURVIVAL. WE WANT TO LIVE AS HUMAN BEINGS. WON'T YOUR EXCELLENCY AND THE ORGANISATION OF AFRICAN UNITY HELP US TO SURVIVE. Respectfully, 1 President, Union of Southern Sudanese Students Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 12 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A00035wT1T9 LE COURRIER DE LA LI 3Ea`i b ? Tananarive, Oct-Nov 1970 of d9~..ti ea~i'e"~ nubh ee a M1r'gUw err ^ . W11110111 5C.-W, NO --- La presse continue d'oublier la guerre b Khartoum, retaurno dons Is gouvernement civile qui se poursuit dons to Soudan du duet d'autres politiciens exiles. Sud -- un conflit racial entre Afrieains Ceci marqua de debut de profondes diver- ot Arabes qui ;fall rage depuis 15 ans. gences dons los tangs do roppos{tioet ofricalne. Cost done a propos quo Is principal En 1965, Joseph Odvha rfirunit les Proupo$ journal independant de la neutre Aut- rivoux des politicians cW Soudon du Sud sous riche, DIE PRESSE, a examin6 r6cem- .i Efgide du Front de Lib6raiion de I'Anya'nya. mart los conditions do cello guerre daps (FLA). Mais, on 1967, un soi-aisant Rgouverno? un long article fond6 ep's pantie sun des mart provisoire' fut fond6 dons le Soudan du interviews accordes parade; didgeants Sud sons d'oide du VIA, et, an 1968, it corn- soudanais r6fugi6s on AfFique orientalo. menco b s'oppeler le ?Gouverrrement Provisoire du Nil*. Oduha s oppasa violemment 6. ce elon to journal viennois, pr6s d'un mil mouvement. Avec d'aide de Joseph Lagu, chef Scion de personnes ont d6jb 6t6 Was du FLA dons da province 6quatoriale, ils rau- lans cells guerre. eC'est Is combat de David ninent une force disciplin6e qu'.ids appel6rent et de Gotiath?, dit to journal. 'ales Africains i'Organisation Nationale do d'Anya'nya (ONA). du Sud, v@tvs do guerrillas et anm6s de lances, Depuis Bars, les mouvements voulont cr6er. d'aras at do 11166es - peu dentre eux ont un Etat ofricain dons de Sud du Soudan se des ormes 6 feu - duifent contre des chasseur sont. divis6s an deux groupes principaux: Is b r6action at des bombes. Gouvernement Provisoire du Nil at i'ONA. La guerre a commenc6 en 1955 par un Un irotsi6me groupe, Is Front Uni do Libdra- soulbvement dotal, organis6 par des Africains lion du Soudan Afriaain fut cr66 an mars 1970 centre leurs dirigeants arabes. Cos Africains, ou Congo-Kinshasa. Son but est de r6a4iser vivant dons de sud, Wont Tien b perdre, hors un Soudan gouvern6 par les Africains at no' leur vie, car de Surd a toujours 06 n6glig6 par subissant plus d'influence arabe. les differents gouvernements de Khartoum, b Le president du Gouvernement Provisoire predominance arabe. du Nil est Gordon Mayen, ancien ministre do Le sort des Africains empira encore an 1958 Travail b Khartoum. Ce gouvernement a d6alar6 quand le general Abboud s'empara du pouvoir I'ind6pendance des trois provinces du Sud du par un coup d'Etat sans effusion do sang at Soudan of tes a appel6es to xRdpublique du devint President du Soudan. Son ?rdgime mili- Nile. Son aparlementy siege dons une butte ire ", poursuivit une stride politiquo d'arobi- de terre, an plein'e foret. Jusqu'ici, it n'a pa strtiorh et d'islamisation. Les rnissionaires chr4- 6t6 d6couvert par des Arabes: Le pureement Is ti . s furertib expulsbs, I'arabe devint to seule plus secret Cu monde, celb a fair dune tragi ldngup nationals at 1.500.000 Arabes s'6tabli- com6d'ie, mais des acteurs sont terriblemen rent' daps le Sud b predominance africaine. sdrieux, dit l'art.iole de Presse. Les Force .Q4ond ce plan de colonisation fut connue' Arm6es Nationades de d'Anya-nya ?repr6senten don's to Sud, des Africains s'y oppose rent. En ('organisation militaire du Gouvernement d 1962, I'Union Nationale du Soudan Afrioain Nil. (u1' .) s'6tablit b d'btranger at depuis, else L'auhre groupe principal, d'ONA, n'a ?pa a 1 t)e pour so cause or des appels at des d'organisation civile. II est purement militair pe)j x.'2ns aux organisations, i?ntemationales. at se Tmontre tre s critique envers tes membre ~ du Gouvernement du Nil. 6t4 rvi#6 des j josses sdanais b P Le territoire du Soudan du Sud 6quivaut #. ' er, o+joute Die e j'ressy o ca tausd une r6- deux fais celui de to Republique Federal Pea ion accrue din Is pays. Des villages Allemande. Cest un pays de for6ts humides ilurent br016s et -pines, at deurs habitants infest6 par la malaria, et dons sequel le hommes, femmes at enfants - assassin6s. serpents at des animaux souvages abondent. Ces horreurs eurent pour consequence la Its patsies villas du Svd, fortifi6es contr fondation d'un mouvement appel6 Anya'nya, 1es affaques do d'Anyo'nya ne sort ha~bitee an 1963. Ce nom est talus d'un poison mortal maintenont 'qua par des Arabes, tes Africain lqu'on obtient an bra. vnt an ,poussie're to cyant fui par crainte des ~pers6cutions. Dan 16te s6ch6o d'un cobra. to brousse, to dos de i'Anya'nyo pr6vout. Celt Anya'nyo tronsforma la guerilla, qui existait region est trop peu maniable at trop grand depuis 1955, on une force de combat plus ~pgour~ que -les troupes arabes puissant I ppvt, Fofr63sleasegl8/f~Q/A,a : C lA-R b- efficace. +`fEBirfs sa`fit' fFifp`"4a161E3;`4 rrdi e lomba, at Is secrgtaire ? g6n6rol de 1'UNSA, CPYRGHT 1-p I W1 s 0 WVLf~rPdi+cReae4ses 999/09/0 ovec s ' t peu d effets sur ot des forces gouvernementales en nombre supcrieure.. Mais, par jeur tactique do guerilla, Is reussissent 6 harasser one armee profession- neile de plus de 10.000 hommes. Celo com- prend ;la destruction de ponts at de routes, I' attaque de convois routiers at de bateaux sur in Nil, lo coupure des voies do cheffirin do for. reliant Khartoum 6 d'outres contras. Dien sOr, des ovtorit6s da Khartoum ripostent. ills (les Arobes) orrivent gdneralement b la tombde de to nuit, entourent un village at jettent des tisons sur les tots de chaumes, dit Joseph Oduha. iAffotds, Jas habitants i en- fuient de cat enfer brOlant at tombent entre ik-s mains aces Arobes ?qui ;as torturent, les violent at les ossassincnt - la plupart do temps, co sent des femmes, des enfants, et des rnc~cdcs.. Les hommes ?vivent habitueaernent dons la` brousse, combattant oil s'entrcinant cu combo".' ..!is kisser 6-leers famrnes st c ?leurs enfants 'le soin do. cultiver le pau rl.a se::res ciui pout encore 1'6tre. Chaque fois que tes Arobes :trouvent des traces de ccmpement africain, its reduisent tout 6 nouveau en cendres, dit I' article do Dio Presse. C'est pourquoi on grand ncmbro de Soudanais do Sud ont fui leur? pays. Plus encore sont morts do faim. II n'y a Ibgalement spas de discrimination rcciole au Soudan. Cependant, ~selon le jcumal outrichien, .!as Arabes ' qui ant dte to classe dominants pendant dos g6nerations at qui ant, duns; le-.passe, considers des Africains comma des 'esolaves, jugent encore da -population afri caine do Sud comma one race de seconde dc?sse, ails ont transformd ? de Soudan ' en on Etai; erabw>, dit avec omertume Joseph Oduha. aLes Africains. doivent s'humilier ou `. etrq`. ddracinds.> Ure aide m?ilitair?e, 'continue to journal, est' gpportdo par de Kremlin aux outorites arabes do Khartoum. Des Migs rosses 6ambardent .les ~ ~lages du Soudan du Sud, at ?1'armee souda noise recoil on entraine?ment 'special des con settlers militates sovigtiques. _ i Des IportoLparoles do gouvernement du,. .'4j1 at do a'ONA ont ? pane ?recemment, en friquo orientate, b I'auteur ye rarticlo,, do.. Die Prosse., :$t phen Lamm, du gouvcrnement du Nil, a?` Dieu no d?it-il pas que tou'~ ids hommea taisscnt dgaux at fibres? Mais.les Arcbes no ,noes -reconnaitront jemais com'me de sires dgaux. Its ne 'donneront ja.mais. cu Sud one chance do se developper sur le plan econo-' mique, social at dducatif. De notre cote, sous n'admettrons pas de compromis. Nous no voulons non do mo'ins qu'une -ind.d:pendance' aorta liltea.. Joseph Oduha ?parla . av nom de l`OFA: v.Novs continuerons !la gu6nilla )usqu'6; nibrement lo Soudan et on a ropporte ses to radio nationalo du Danemork, a visits der-. Lasso Jensen, correspondant on Afrique do (r C 7`~J'~'- 4 c3UO1 OOfiT1 journal de Stockholm, Dagens Nyhcter. Co- impressions dons on article ptlblie par to quotidian liberal, fonds it y a environ cent an darntar (celul qul amens no pouvolr to L'article !disait: aDepuis to coup d'Etat do I' do gaucho), le nombro dos eonseillera dgyptions, quelques centainos 6 pros da 10.000.b L'article a.joutait quo i'on pensait que des conseillers' conies mesures do nationalisation of quo les dconomiques russes avoient. prepare. les rd- chaff ears Min-21, pouvant servir 6 des ope- rations centre la gudrillo do Sod, ont die inclus. sovidtigve aux forces armdes soudonaises.. La Soudan nest pas to soul pays africain an puissance av Tchad, at les gouvernements; Iybien aide on. petit groups de secessionistes- sont impliques des Arobes. Le gouvernement ddchird par des conflits racioux et dons lequei dons. Jet province diythrdenne do j'Ethiopie. tentative d d 'secession, sanglanfe *et similaire, do Syria et u Yemen do Sod favorisent one. THE CPTHOLIC VIRGINIAN CPYR.GHT 25 December 1970 South Sudanese P11 V; along UIN Hearing on Ferseeution Charge By Kathleen McLaughlin UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. NC wo emissaries from the South Sudan Liberation Front have been trying for the past several weeks to offer testimony before some com- mittee of the United Nations on the alleged persecution of South Sudanese. The two claim that religious ra- dial and political persecution ' has been imposed on their people by the predominantly Arab and Mos- lem government at Khartoum, the Sudan's capital, for more than eight years. The South Sudanese are black Africans, and a great many of them are Christians. Since the Sudan gained inde- pendence in 1956, the government - dominated by Arab northerners - has been trying to unify the coon- try by imposing the Moslem' re-' ligion and the Arab language on! the southerners. Guerrilla warfare -9 CPYRGHT CPYRGHT rerners were killed while thousands more sou t refuge in neighboring cou Ties. Christian schools were elos and most missionaries ex- pelle two black spokesmen, Fred- eric B. Maggott and Lawrence Wol Wol, are intense and articu- late bout the factors responsible for t e ordeal they and their com- patri is have endured for so long. Th Arabs in the north, they as- serte , are committed to the crea- tion f an Islamic republic of the Suds , in a socialist or Communist -guise and to eliminating the Chris- tian leadership among the south in population. In he south, they added, the black citizens want greater autos my, with adequate repre- sentat on in the national parlia- ment. They have not sought to be- come independent because they stronger a onomically and social- ly as a sing -ppri dsRor Rel i Both men are aware of the pro- scription in the United Nations charter against interference in the internal affairs of any member state. They said they understand that to present their case against their own government, they must enlist the good offices of some neighboring nation. To date, no African delegation has been will- ing to assume the hypersensitive role of accuser. Nevertheless, they maintained, genocidal operations being con- ducted against the blacks in the .south have reached the stage at which human lives and rights are' being destroyed on such a: scale that, if left unchecked, they may decimate the population there' Since 1962, they said, nearly one million southern Sudanese men, women and children have perished either through famine1 and disease, or have been killed by bombs or gunfire. Another 300,000 - including many of the intelligentsia - are living as refu- gees in Uganda, Kenya, the Congo, Ethiopia and the Central African Republic, they said. Those remaining exist in an at-y mosphere of terror, hiding in. tropi-I cal forests and the mountains, or under threat of sudden military at- tacks by the army, they added. "Soviet-supplied MIG's and helicopters are using fire bombs and rockets to strafe villages there," the two said. "In the last six months villages in the Upper Nile and Equatoria province have been badly bombed, killing people and livestock; and in the past eight weeks the towns ,in Morta and- Ido were destroyed through bombings and attacks by armored cars" Maggott and Wol Wol described their area as one in which social services have ceased to exist. The economy has been shattered, they asserted; hospials and schools have either been razed, or turned into miliitary installatior}s, and not. ,a single development program hasp ever been launched there, with, either national or external back- ing. Maggott and Wol Wol said that, the rigors to which southern Su- danese have been subjected by. their northern Arab rulers have cc- mented resistance among the great majority of the 4 million Africans .of the south, despite the. 'di- vergences that exist. hSftiA /09AW : Gc+Id RDP79-01i1l94AOOO3 Q48fl010$'&im- Anya-Anya, said that a few years government, he said. Both Chris- ago only guerilla tactics could be used and active fighters had to find refuge outside the towns, but that today sympathy for them has grown along with their numbers. They are now able to find shelter in various communities and to fight back as attacks are made, he said. Additional weapons have been acquired from successful sor- ties against Arab outposts, and some 400 Arab troops have been killed in the past few months. Maggott, who is a Catholic, re- called that all foreign clergymen had been expelled from the Sudan 'in 1964. Native clergy serving the 750.000 Christians in the south tians and non-Christians have dc- veloped a greater 'unity in their will to resist the northerners, Mag- gott said. Outside the United Nations en- clave, the visitors have been given opportunities they have so far been denied inside. They have told their story on television and radio programs; have spoken to a number or organi- zations in'the New York area, and, before leaving in fate December,. will have addressed audiences in Minnesota, Ohio, New Hamp- shire and other parts of the coun- try. . CPYRGHT CHICAGO SUN TIMES CPYRGHT 30 Decmeber 1970 ii ful L ":~ r 11G. .7 WASHINGTON - The war which the world I g n o r e s - the Arab-black, north-sou struggle in the Su- dan - Is growing nastier and bloodier without any prospect that civilized men will intercede. This is the sad finding by two black Sudanese emissar- ies, Lawrence Vol Wol and F. B. Mag- gott, who have be- seeched 'Americans and United Nations officials during two. months of travel to show concern for the fate of 4 million Sudanese southerners wh are being exterminated by their Arab cou tryinen. This is a civil war in which America blacks might be expected to rise to the sup port of a persecuted, Negro minority. "But I is'hard," Viol Wol says, "for black American to take up our cause because most of then on't know what is going on. Also most o hem are so pro-Arab regarding the Middl ast,that they are unaware that a persecute eoplp like the Arabs can also" be per ecutors." The two men have elicited some sympathy nd help from major church groups, but the ave l not so far managed-to dent,the UN's eluctance to get involved Id another African lull war. \' r '! CPYRGHT lE STATE DEPARTMENT It cautiously in erested because the Sudan 14 plainly a key to the Russian hopes of penetrating Africa. The Kremlin's backing for the new Socialist g vernment in Khartoum is wholehearted. So- V It advisers in mufti are spotted through the s thern provinces to direct the use of Soviet w apons against the black guerrillas. he struggle Is so one-sided that it is kept al ve only by the biblical bitterness which the S danese blacks feel towards the Arabs. The N ite Nile is a weak bond between these p pie and the Egyptianized Moslems in the n th. They fear the covetous instincts of the E yptians and they well recall that the slave r ders in the last century were from Khar- to m. hey have been repeatedly betrayed in the itical dealings of the past 25 years. The B tish ruled the Sudan by encouraging black se aratism until 1946, when they suddenly an cynically decided to appease the Egypt- Jai s who wanted a unified Sudan so that even- tu fly they might control the whole package. HE BLACKS' GRIEF has deepened since th Sudan won independence in, 1956. A suc- ce sion of military governments has tried to qu sit their. rebellious spirit and the claim, pe haps exaggerated, is that one million of tit m have been killed. The new officials in Kh rtoum, who first talked of autonomy for the three southern provinces, have settled on a s rategy of extermination with the help of Sov et helicopters. ' I circumstances In which the UN feels im- Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79- 11 404IM30Od13801a1ge&re the conflict, there may be no alternative to a prolonged 1s WWI to'g-019- hew XORK TIMES CPYRGHT 5 January 1971 2 Sudan ~`sffl g For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01 194AOOO3OO13OOO1-9 Charging Genocide,, Seek Help at'U.N. By MICHAEL T. KAUFMAN TWO black Sudanese liberation move- ment charged here yesterday that the Arab-led Government of Sudan was using Egyptian and Libyan troops as well as Soviet planes in the 16-year conflict that has pitted Chris- tian and pagan blacks of the South against Moslems of the north. . In what they described as an overt appeal to world public opinion, the two men described the policies carried out by the national Government in Khar toum "as genocide against the four million blacks of the South- ern Sudan." "We call upon the nations of the free world to express their indignation at what is happen- ing and to bring pressure to hear on the nations that supply armaments to Khartoum," said Laurence Wol Wol, a Sorbonne. graduate who, as a member of the Southern Sudan Liberation Front, has presented a petition to the United Nations calling for observer teams to investi- gate his charges of genocide. The other spokesman Fred- erick B. Maggott who identified himself as a colonel of An- ya'nya, the guerrilla army of the south, said that 25 Soviet- built aircraft were being Used In bombardments of the south- ern provinces and that Libyans and Egyptians were among the 25,000 troops fighting the rebels in the south. Many Killings Charged He said that in the last eight years some 250,000 black Su- danese had been shot to death and 250,000 had died of hunger. The petition presented to the United Nations by the two men details allegations of atrocities.{ Edward Lawson, who is in charge of doling with such communications at the United Nations, explained that normal procedure calls for 4he state- mint to be summarized and circulated confidentially at, the next meeting of the Human Rights Commission in Geneva. But under resolutions of the Economic and Social Council, he said, the Commission "has no power-to take any action. For its part, the Khartoum Government has accused out- side forces of stirring rebellion and secession. "They stirred up civil wars in the Congo and Nigeria and they are trying to play the same evil game in the Sudan," said Pr~rpiq{~s,q For al-Nimeiry in terviev, in Khartoum. ETHIOPIAN HERALD, Addis Ababa 5 January 1971 Leaders Tell Press mb Sudanese Guerrilla Forees TI,L AVIV, Monday, (Reuter). - E=tian and Libyan air for- ce p ivies are bombing guorria forces in Southern Sudan, accord- ing to `wo guerrillas in an interview with Israel army radio. The interview, recorded in London, three provinces in Southern Sudan, they was broadcast here last night. added, The two spoke of increased Egyptian involvement in areas *ere local black tribesmen are opposed to the Moslem authorities in Kihartoum. The two ,guemi'lla leaders -- Median Digran and Adam Noual - charged Egypt with a great part in war. They said Egyptian and some Lib. yan planes based near the Sudanese ca- pital were raiding guerrilla camps. Egy- ptian officers controlled the Sudanese military camps. Egyptian officers cont- rolled thin Sudanese miliitary academy, they added. The two ? leaders said the war in Su- dan entered a new phase in July last year when main guerrilla groups joined forgoes. These . forces now controlled The men charged t(hb Central Govern. ment winlh, atrocities against the black population of the south. Reports by western magazines that Israeli officers are training and advising the Sudanese'guemillas have been given "a complete and flat denial" by* foreign minbti officials here, elease 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01 194AOOO3OO13OOO1-9 16 CPYRGHT ibya,EARP1aiaes Approv sF6FM 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A0003001 ~Y R~HT 1 January IT 1 Rowland 'Evans ' and Robert Novak Sudan: DEEP IN HILLY,- 'high-grass country of south- ''ern Sudan, Soviet military technicians, pilots, and a :'growing arsenal of weapons are fighting a bloody coun- iterinsurgencY war against 1African tribes which has moved imperial Russian power halfway down the Af- rican continent. This hidden war, virtually unnoticed in the West, is the latest sign of deepening So- viet penetration into the Arab states of North Africa. The Sudanese government of Gaafar at-Nimeiry, an. Arab milital officer before he became Prime Minister, is making increasing use of Soviet anti-insurgency tac- tics, weapons, and man- power in its civil war against Arab-hating Negro nationalists in the three southern provinces of the Sudan. ? The Soviet Union, accord- ing to well-informed African sources,.. also has started building a new SAM-2 anti- aircraft missile net-this one not along the Suez Canal but near Port Sudan on the Red Sea, several hundred miles south of the main Arab-Israeli conflict, ussi s. THE LOW-CALIBER war- fare in southern Sudan is a microcosm of the main Mid- dle East tttettter of opera- tions #ar to the north, Titus, while Soviet technicians and weapons assist the Nimeiry government, the black tribes rebelling ? against Arab rule are getting, similar though skimpier assistance from Is= raeli technicians and equip- ment. An average. of one plane load of Israeli sup- plies arrives from the north each week. The Israeli game is ob- vious: To encourage the black revolution against the Sudanese government and thus drain off both Soviet and Sudanese military strength from the center of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Military experts here have been watching the increas- ing Soviet involvement in the Sudan with intense in- terest and anxiety. With cas- ualties in the thousands (in- nocent civilians as well as Indigenous black tribesmen fighting the Soviet-backed forces of the central govern- ment), Moscow has now sup- plied two squadrons of TU- 16 medium bombers, half a dozen AN-24s equipped with DASH I NGTON :POST 12 .1., J76 "T Eizxow's `-Sudan: :EEUsSI:I's tlinocn 1t a1-', -(Jan. 1) "11C writers' irnat'inatious, it is a pact of lies. c - -- enlightened Af1',cn sources" should have b, columnists Rowland Evans and itobert The corfiict was European instigated, and us, tnrough`aur'cblumnists, about the exact Novak, provokes a response because of two the - now ex: loit it. for evil purposes. Not all - extent of Israeli and Euro-American involve- reasons: its style and su.bstaa:.ce. The article con~iicts aris,~ from hatred, and the Sn ~_: s pep,,crccl with phases like "African dsrtese is such one. tribes," "Negro 'tripes," "olaek tribes," There are several large holes in the gen-alizinl,l an average of one plane lond of trab-i1 tin Ne~'.ro nalic nddlis`Si" C le. This tic tens article, First, it is incorrect for d u bcrata. en1pio lnent of esc tcriins :s ,a them to state that the Sudanese civil war is Evane and lov.,k either are ig:wi-ant of it, elude manifestation, dclcsi ble nstitution- a hidden war, virtually unknown in the aled, European anti?:1fricaflisrlt. ~)~ golden ~cc.,:." Euro-American elite knew the British a for laissez- aI e oilcan utlllzalion of poi cy in the area until 1956, when the Provi- t, :se dero,ail es at the expense of Africans s,o,al A:ic iii Administrative State of Armed Forces havo killed i--i encounters with tile Suclancso forces. -i~loney and mili- 13 no there Evans and Novak skotlld start Sudan was e~cated, and the armed revolt " tar-hardwares have beer reaching the us n;; the correct terms: "African peoples," `.i zer But the Burn American masses were Southern Provinces Torn the "cry areas "~lf:ican nationalists," "African ethnic or either totally kept inorunt of it. or mis- where this "hidden war" is supposedly "vir- lil:.guistic group :"--tcrins that are academi- cut:cr,ted aiOout it. Whatever information C0111%, valid, and politically acceptable to,'f t~ Janua (uc 1 l itle 1a;1(l of Israeli supplies a week. 't'ile sources r Y 1911 ew '1','i .1viv f~r~nc fh,' c rfnnlinc It cirr.n,rl ltn,l 1h' I svuw, okuuIunnr~' it, kit 111 .4n1ty ywa"I .,uI,.iit 'III uuuo rte. "IN 7 and ":u[v.sc: s lt?c'ii;) 1 }?lit to prop my a1 uneiry. R.: '1" V/O ~.? ?~r.,"~a14a4arc,i ~'~ilL~iM NLVi YOI -- A virtually unheard-of 15-year-old "~ ol:diiio?s aze getting worse all tih: time," Wol Viol e::plaincd. "A lot of bombing has been carried Out by ELyptiah pilots flying Russian Mies. They have 'bombed civilians in every village. They don't oven-look for military centres-they simply bomb any plc~it;e, yihere there are Southern Sudanese. in' addition to tho bloodshed, the Southern Su- danet;a havo been vletinhifod by rt ttt at'chnd?ocu t,h policy carved out by the Arabs, according to Mag;gott. "Crops are being,, destroyed," lie declared, "and iviiolo areas are being made desolate, causing tlhou- ;ai]d~ of people to ftce'the Country. Juba, our large:it city, has gone from 200 000 people to 50 000 in the past , , cit7d war ,iictv:een oui.h it one a c1.., n ` T~ few years." IS u ;: ne:e ..;:a.'as has it more than 500,000 dead, The South Sudan delegates yesterday presented P. ..cording, to representatives of the Southern, Sudan orialal. petition-letter to Dr. Edvard Hambro, presi- fiberatian Front. dent of the United Nations General Assembly, in a members of the Brant, who will visit Toronto which they detailed' atrocities. allegedly committed Lm. charged in an exclusive interview with The a ;airist the Africans of South Sudan. % S` Soviet-supported Ar- Ma ott charged the Nimeir abs -d b; ,tile S,ova:nmmt gg g y government with n? .afar AI-i\Tigve were ; engaging in a genocidal campaign resulting in the :mat^aliy e:.ferminating: " WaJ death of more than. 55G0,000 South Sudanese killed and urc- isca is Sa rminn Su-' _,,~ an estimated 500,000 dying from starvation or disease &n,. I f, resulting from the fighting. ` The Arabs, 1;?h have the, Few * 1-ople aware of it .alitical and economic powor, c-~zs~z~z.: z c are being, supported with arms from Russia," said "We feel'this terrible war has gone unnoticed ". Sur enese Col. Frederick B. illaggott at his Executive said Wol Wol, "and that few people outside the Sudan l atei suite here. "They also are betting aid from the are aware of the problem.". 1,t ypti:-. Libyans and a nuirber of East European` i3:: cited censorship on the part of the ruling Arab ci,lurt ies, 1)articuiarly c ast Germany." government as the reason for_ the absence of world 3G, and his ca,lc1 policy seen both in directing political activities and in actual guerrilla fighting. Northern t oops slaughter or remove c the {en The government of Maj. Gen..laafar al to the port in order to Impoverish the ,roo Ni t eri, which seized power in May. 1969 has southerners, declares Mr. Pajokdit. ey ;;elv ungertaken "a war of extermination" hope to stare out guerrilla forces and t he , thr,oughout the three provinces of the south, general pop latlon which supports th ', and m de lares Mr. Pajokdit. Northern military This strategy may also intend to demos ize alai for es implement the policy in two ways: the Southerners. The way of life--even he to S through Indiscriminate bombing and through world view AA many of the region's tri es rs the liquidation of entire village communi- a closely bo d up in their cattle. tie . In spite of this determined pressure, r. rav Why the Nimeri government would em? ajokdit stat s that southern Sudanese g er- : tric ba I k on an as extermination" policy-if in. illa forces, known as the Anyanya, re Mor de.d it has-is not clear. The ruling Revo? aking stea progress against their A ab of th lutlonary Command Council prides itself on pponents. ey have shot down 14 pla es, 'he its) forthright analysis of and approtaeh to uring low-flying bombing. raids over n- and the southern problem; it has made impor- anya camps he claims. taut conciliatory y gestures toward southern ' He also sta s that Anyanya recently o r- in t interests. g an and for f ur days held the military g r- it From the outhern viewpoint these acts isori at Bu ath. There they seized 45 claim leave much to' be desired, however, and the ritish, Chin se, and Russian automa is and no thern rulers do not yet accept the need eapons..In addition, they made atta s some for a negotiated settlement of grievances. gainst posts at Akobo, Nasir, and Ufa g- broug In reased government, military action may rid wiped out two Arab platoons at Kier. seem signal the failure of the Nimeri southern These atta s a ~:~ent policy to make significant strides in the 19 ear to illustrate t e. mgnths since the coup. ectiveness changes brought about by a pore of the trnr, FinOncial support is said omu from Lit, 'a, Sfludi Ar,'blia, l)Cuwalt, operating patrols. Mr. Pajokdit de es that throe are presently 25,000 Eryp nya in the south. In addition, he says, are piloting bombing raids against the erners. ptian aid denied Mirghani, Sudan's Ambassador to m, denies the presence of Egyptian >s in the South. "The Sudanese them !s would not accept this," he states. Mr. ; hani also denies accounts of massacres maimings by northern soldiers and + is that southern refugees are returninga 1dan in increasing numbers. s not easy to check the claims of either in this conflict. Officially sanctioned 1 I in the region is restricted; unre- ed, , unofficial travel is dangerous. ver, both sides are aware of the role; press in shaping world opinion about ghting. This results in exaggerations alf truths. So far, the Khartoum gov- snt has been largely successful in keep. e southern conflict from press notice. i)so is difficult to assess the rival s. Reports of bombings, massacres, aimings have come from the south for months, however; some of them are it out by independent observers, it likely that these reports contain ele- of truth as well as exaggerations. ver, journalists who have toured the with ov g ernment troopst tht repora Massacres described l at eight m iths. These forces are n 4nya a control many roads and have these der the leadership of Emidid Tafeng, a troops -'isolated or pinned down in many Mr. Pajokdit claims that Arab soldiers f rmer soldier in the northern army. areas. ha'e massacred entire villages or segments Un estionabl the fighting has cost heav. of their populations in at least 212 cases. aids pressed honie y~ Het cites three phciftc examples. ily in terms of human lives. The United The raids against northern garrisons a e Natio s estimates the toll at over 500,000. 1!` In Bahr-el-Ghazal province Arab troops important not only as demonstrations f ' South rn Sudanese claim that another. mil' in chine-gunned all inhabitants of ,a Dinka yanya sire gth and as morale booste lion hve died in massacres or from indirect, village called Marial Aguog, he claims. The thin Anyan) it ' forces. They, also "provi e war-r afed causes such as starvation and vil~age, which had an estimated 'population apons, cloth ng, food, and other supp)ie ., untreated wounds. A 1.5 million death to]) of j700, lay close to Gogrial,.where Mr. Pa- dependent servers who have visit would mean that I Sudanese in 10 had lost joidit attended primary school. yanya cam s report that the guerrilla his lif in the conflict, one southerner in A similar massacre-of an estimated much of he southern countryside about hree. 2,000 people--reportedly took place in vil. fm m lack of ood, clothing, and medic I It se ms clear that an end to the fighting la es surrounding the police post of Ulang, applies, as well as from government h can c me about only through a nit miles south of Nasir, in Upper r ssment, political ,.Nile settle ent. That will not be easy to achieve, Province. After liquidating villagers, gov- Anyanya have real . problems armin given ast failures and the deep-seated ani. er~ment forces had their cattle driven over- t emselves. I J ring the Congo's 1964 Simb moslti which a cist on both sides. But the la d to the provincial capital Malakal; from r beilion they frequently captured ar alterna lye to this appears to be the war of there they were shipped upriver to north- s pplies being ent to the 'rebels from Jub , attritio or "extermination" which Mr. Pa? ern Sudan. says Mr. Paiokdit A 4 a e sap- r Kajo'Kaji in Equatorla rov- nltlcant gains in southarn udan, claims lntra, north n soldiers killed ttbeut art ..~. vet r,,., political activist there. Moreover of the villa e, and maimed young wo en, have Ilegull --J.rV Is rep his source, the gains have come )n according t this source. 'MO they face of the most determined military pressure yet mounted -by the Khartoum government during the little-known 15-year wa i. These claims are made by Ateny Mudra- Staff correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor Nairobi, Kenya ? Al ihr hra nn no of nvom rr at rta CPYRGHT sources have long since dried up, however. The Khartoum government has accused Israel of providing arms to Anyanya. But an independent observer, recently returned from a visit inside southern Sudan, reported no evidence of Israeli aid. This source and other Anyanya spokeq- claim that other Arab countries art! g the Khartoum government in its pur? In additio to massacres of villagers, Mr. n j Pajokdit s ter, indiscriminate born ing i ra ds have ccurred throughout the $ uth ;j,- since Sept. 5. The raids seek especial to organization of Anyanya forces within the': South -n LLnV ,w latm.' Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : GIA-RDP79-01194A000300130 0 - 25 r2A4. a 4S8~91n09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 A? Zan. 1971 SOUTH SUDANESE REBEL MOVE 2TT DAMAGING TO REGIME The helicopter rotor drives reddish clouds of dust into the hazy African awmner s1qr. Noisily, the Soviet Ni 8, weighing tons, rises from the landing field at Juba, capital of the Sudanese province of Equatoria. Our destination is the district city of Meridi, 240 kilometers toward the west, now reachable by land only twice a month by armed convoy. The passengers are a small group of information officials and journalists and a couple of government functionaries. An iron chest containing cash from the National Bank'to the value of 150,000 pounds is carried as freight. The crew consists of a Sudanese air force officer as captain, a'Soviet copilot in blue overalls who in fact directs the flight, a Soviet navigator, an Egyptian navigator who, except during take take- off and landing, occupies the third seat in the cockpit, and two soldiers, armed with heavy automatic rifles, relics of former German military aid to the Sudan. The soldiers watch for rebels through open portholes. The rolling country, traversed from north to south by a few rough mountain ranges, seems from the ;altitude of 2500 meters almost empty of human beings. For an hour and ten minutes nothing is to be seen except yard..bigh.steppe grass, scattered trees, sometimes condensing into bush, the windings of a river overgrown with algae, three or four villages of round grass huts. The whole of South Sudan, consisting of the provinces of Equatoria, Upper Nile, and Bahr-el-Ghazal (Gazelle River), with an area of 650,000 square kilometers, as large as the Federal Republic, Austria, Switzerland, and Italy put together, has a population of at most four million. The distance from Khartoum to Juba is as great as from Munich to Tanis, and from the eastern corner of the southern provinces on Lake Rudolph to the border with the Central African Republic Approved For Release _1. 999/09,1 : CIA-RDP79-01194AO003.00.130.001,-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 is is as far as from Paris to Sofia. In the entire South there is no asphalted road, only dirt roads, most of which are not passable during the six-month long rainy season. The only railroad runs from Khartoum +o Wau, capital of Bahr-el-Ghazal, and the only reliable, but slow, traffic route is the White Nile, which waters a 400 kilometer long swamp region between Juba and Malakal. Cut Off for Decades That this huge country today belongs to Sudan is a result of British colonial policy during the 19th century, as is the fact that for two generations it has not been assimilated by the Arab North. Rigorously, the British cut off the South from settlers and Islamic missionaries from the northern sections of the country, as well as against cultural and economic penetration from the more highly developed Arabic Sudan. The South remained Black Africa, the South remained backward. When the Sudan gained its independence in January, 1956, there were in the southern provinces only six persons with university education, only one middle school, hardly the beginnings of commercial agriculture, practically no native handicrafts,, and practically no industry. Perhaps 20,000 to 25,000 of the black tribesmen were converts to Islam, about 200,000 had been won over to Catholicism by white missionaries, 25,000 to 30,000 were protestants. The rest, over 90 percent, have up to the present time hung on to their native religions, grow millet for their on consumption, and live as hunters and food gatherers or as nomads with their herds of cattle. Although the South was hardly conceivable as an independent commonwealth. .'the small African elite,, which in this had the support of the people, from the beginning of independence resisted the turning over of British power to the Arabs. As early as in 1955, the last year Ap4#~i~14rd~.?n1,9a~dQ~heII~~OIt~O~OQIII Guth' s d v. ERMIRe ams 8# ON-2 wQlAA 78rx0a @.Q43QM 30M -9 that time., with interruptions, been, in a state of rebellion against Khartoum. In Meridi, which the governor of Equatoria had the day before described as "the quietest and safest place in the province," the traces of the rebel.lton are seem +alnoet ever; era. At the eouthorn edge of the city, only 25 kilometers from the blue hills. of the Congo, new plantings of millet and coffee can be inspected only when in advance a Landrover has been positioned at the edge of the field with its machine gun. pointing toward the bush. Heavily armed soldiers surround every step taken by the journalists. On a dam, protected by armor plate and machine gun pits above the small reservoir formed by the Meridi River, the escorting officer asks with friendly solicitude: "You will not wish to go to the other side?" As around all of the cities of the South, a ring of grass hut villages has grown up around Meridi, among the people of which there . are too few men. The deputy commanding officer of the Southern Army Region, Colonel Omar el Tayeb, fr,nkly admits that forced deportation is one of the cornerstones of the pacification policy. "We shall resettle the people. We collect them in the forests and in the open country and resettle them near the cities." The purpose is to deprive the rebels of the opportunity to disappear among the people and to support them- belves. "And when the people refuse to come with the soldiers to build a 'peace villager?" With the self-satisfied smile of a man who has done a good job, the Colonel estimates that over one half of the inhabitants of Equatoria who formerly lived in the bush and those who lived in the most endangered areas of the other two southern provinces have been collected. "We must simply do something for the people. It is the course of history. They Approved For Release 19991O9$02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 App a nqtF2 ppyl e it now09tYU ~.a er~i y7 n.111un s 0a gQus .QO01-9 It does not please them, as a matter of fact. In the course of the resettlement, the men often disappear into the bush, to join the rebels or to go over the border, mostly to Ethiopia, Uganda, and the Congo. In the grass hut slums around the cities poverty predominates. From 1963 to 1970, the population of Juba tncreesed from 18.,000 to 65,000, and that of Meridi from 4,000 to 15,000. For that many people there is shortage of work, sanitary facilities, everything. Demoralization, idleness, crime, and prostitution prevail among most of those resettled. To the extent the people of the South have stayed on the land, the government during the civil war restrains tribal feuds less than before. Nevertheless, the villagers are between two fires: If they cooperate with the rebels, they meet with an army punitive expedition, if they remain loyal, which also happens, the rebels ruthlessly take revenge on them. There are tribes that have literally been crushed between these two millstones. Of the Lapit people, who once numbered 30,000, only a few hundreds now vegetate at the edge of Juba. On a hill above Meridi's better secured north side, between palms, mango trees, and luxuriantly blooming shrubbery, stands the protestant church, a thatch-roofed English brick Tudor structure. A female choir sings a hymn in melancholy rhythm to the accompaniment of rattles and hand drums. Nericli's churches have not been disrupted. In MalIkal, capital of Upper Nile Province, Monsignor Yhkwan is even building a church with the financial aid of Rome. He declares that there has been no interference with his work and that his parish experiences no persecution. .in the night, other voices meet the strangers from the grass huts that are devoid of electric light. They speak with the firm faith Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CI&RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 and simple vocabulary of tho rLi.ssion school. "We must still have confidence. God has given us this trial so that we may bear witness, and you, our brothers,-must also do so," says a black Anglican minister, who no longer has a congregation. In the chaos of the years 1965-66 his church lost a total of 38 ahurchos +tutd meeting hftaaa in the South. They were destroyed by government troops not because they were Christian, but because they were centers for the literate, organized minority which led the resistance to assimilation by the North. Since during the British time there were only mission schools in the South, the leaders of the autonomy movement can only be Christians. However, the majority that has remained heathen experiencs nothing that is different. "We no longer make progess, we fall behind," complains a Catholic priest. His church has lost fewer buildings,. and has remained more intact organizationally, but since the expulsion of the 33 white missionairies at the disposal of the Sudanese government in 1962 the load on the shoulders of the few native clergymen is too heavy. Khartoum only seldom grants visas to priests from African and Arab countries who could help out in South Sudan. A Presbyterian church man expresses his opinion in the sharpest terms: "If what is being done to us by Khartoum were done by a white regime, the whole world would be ;stirred up. What is happening in South Sudan is ten times as bad as what our brothers in South Africa and Rhodesia have to bear." Like practically all the young,people with whom we talked when unobserved by government eyes, c he admits'to'belonging to the Anya Nya, the rebel movement, and to approve of its goal, secession. In June of last year the Anya-Nya (Poison Grass) took the four other separatist organizations (Anzania Liberation League, Suer Republic, Anidi Govermmert, and Nile Republic) under its wing, checkmated Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 d stablished a unified Applb*6 eF' Y62p. UTA-K '~94A000300130001-9 military, command. Its leader is former Lieutenant Joseph Lago, a Catholic. Second in command is Samuel Abu John, ex-captain and Protestant$ and third in command Frederick Brian William Maggot,: former major and also a Protestant. Joseph Lago is said by the Sudanese secret service to have alone contacts with Israel. HO :Le said to have been there himself and to have sent other Anya-Nya fighters there for training., Victory by Means of Soviet Helicopters Although the fighting strength of the black rebels is estimated as slight by independent observers on the other side,tha Anya-Nya has very largely attained one of its goals: A considerable part of the Sudanese army is today in the South. A large proportion of the roads is impassable because of mines and the danger of attacks from ambush. In December., an Anya-Nya group led by four white mercenaries attacked the police station at Bor on the Nile, 300 kilometers from the borders of Ethiopia and Uganda., killed a Shilluk chief who was collaborating with the authorities and four policemen and disappeared. The six rebels killed, left behind by the Anya-Nya, were well equipped and clothed. "When a year ago we caught a rebel, he had only one or two cartridges. Today they have bazookas and fivec.centimeter mortars," complained an officer. From time to time, the rebels succeed in bringing smaller ares under their control. The most important of these, the Moroto (The Great Gathering Place), located in an inaccessible mountainous area on the border with Uganda south of Yei, was in the fall stormed by a Sudanese brigade after a battle lasting for 25 days. Helicopters., flown by Russians, played a decisive role. The commanding officer describes helicopters as "the only means the army has of carrying out such an operation. Without helicopters the'soldiers would never have been able to reach this inaccess- Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-F DP7 O'~1 of 003re~~~0eQa~~- ble place." Prisoners were rarely taken. os o e pfd., as did the man who serves the Anya-Nya as chief trainer and Khartoum as Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 proof of imperialist instigation of the rebellion, the German ex-Foreign Legionnaire Rol4 Steiner. Steiner was subsequently apprehended in Uganda and handed over to the Sudan. The contention that American and West Germans are pulling the strings behind the increased Anya-Nya activity has beoome small change in national Arab propaganda from Khartoum to Beirut, from Cairo to Baghdad. In the meantime, nobody can furnish details on the supposed materialization of the federated republic, not the administration in the South, not the army, not the police, not the information ministry in Khartoum, and the President's office. The Ministry for Southern Affairs serves up a list, in which are lumped together persons and organizations (Caritas of the Friends of Africa) who are active as propagandists or collectors of funds for the South Sudanese. A broadcasting station in Cologne is said to be stiffening the backs of the rebels. Minister Joseph Garang, himself a Southlander and Communist, is more positive: ,It cannot be a coincidence that these organizations become more active when a Left regime appears in the Sudan." The creation of Garang's ministry and his appointment to the administration for the South was one of the few actions that followed upon Numeiri's proclamation of the principles of regional autonomy of 9 June, "1969. When the revolutionary, government at that time annotnced that it "recognized tlb historical and cultural differences between the North and the South and fixtnly believed that the unity of our country must be founded upon these obejective facts," it was at first believed in the South. The rebellion died away. Complete calm prevailed for almost six months. Nothing happened, however, except that projects for economic development of the three provinces were proposed. Arabic remained the only language in the. administration and in the schools; the government, the ar~rAWSot ~dc~i l .fie M@~ re~ 'b~4Q@fl9N(i*30001-9 ApprrooUgt~grrrle elfma%%e Rpvolu~3ona y.,ORunDPJ9-O 19f 02Ri3t~01 obgin et9 CPYRGHT Sudsudan: Aufstand als Uberbleibsel des Kolonialismus only one of nine provincial govenors is from the South, and only three officers of ranks as high as colonel; at Khartoum University there are only 220 students from the southern provinces; there is no joint regional administration for the provinces of Equatoria, Upper Nile, and Bahr-el- Ghazal, staffed and directed by southerners. The chance of meeting the desires of the South in peace, so that the fires of rebellion could be permanently extinguished, has been passed up. The vicious circle has once more been closed: As long as the rebellion lasts, no real autonomy can be assured, and as long as autonomy is not assured, the rebellion .will last. Bes G L~I1~~Q ~G Lj FQ666 1/7 ~J'~L./lCAB l le Reglerung macht die Gewfihrung der Autonornie von der Autlosung der Rebellenbewegung abhfingl. Von unserem Korrespondenten:Rudolph Chimelli Der Rotor des Hubschraubers trelbt rdtliche Staubwolken in den dunstigen afrikanischen Sommerhimmel. Gerauschvoll hebt sich die ton- nenschwere sowjetische Mi 8 vom Flugplatz von Juba, der Hauptstadt der siidsudanesischen Pro- vinz Aquatoria. Das Ziel: 240 Kilometer weiter westlich die Distriktstadt Merida, die auf dem Landweg nur ,Hoch zweimal monatlich itn bewaffneten Konvoi erreichbar 1st. Die Pracht: eine kleine Gruppe Informationsbeamte and Journalis6n, ein paar Regierungsfunktio- nare, eiA Eisenkoffer mit 150000 Pfund in bar von der Nationalbafnk. Die Besatzung: ein suda- nesischer Fliegeroffizier als Kommandant, im blauen Overall ein sowjetischer Kopilot, der je- doch tatsachlich den Flug dirigiert, ein sowjeti- scher Navigator, ein agyptischer Navigator, der aulier beim Start and bei der Landung den Brit- ten Sitz in der Kanzel ubernimmt, and zwei Sol- daten, die rechts and links mit schweren Ma- schinengewehren, Relikten einstiger deutscher Militarhilfe ar den Sudan, aus gedffneten Bull- augen nach Rebellen spahen. Das wellige Land, das einige schroffe Felsbar- rierren von Nord nach Sid durchziehen, eraccheint ue271Vnr s atop e- r i e5506V, 'fef s c manch . al - FnI((r04'N;g!M. (a wahrend einer Stunde and zchn Minuten nichts. Der ganze Siidsudari, bestehend aus den Provin- zen Aquatoria, Ober-Nil and Bahr-el-Ghasal (Gazellenflull), mit seinen 650 000 Quadratkllo- metern so grol3 wie die Bundesrepublik, Oster- reich, die Schweiz and Italien zusammen, hat hochstens vier Millionen Einwohner. Von Khar- tum nach Juba 1st es so weit wie von Munchen nach Tunis, von der ostlichen Ecke der Siidpro- vinzen am Rudolfsee bis an die Grenze der Zen- tralafrikanischen Republik so weit wie von Paris nach Sofia. Im ganzen Siiden gibt es keine Asphaltstral3e, sondern nur Erdwege, von denen die meisten wahrend der sechs Monate wahren- den Regenzeit nicht benutzbar sind, eine Eisen- bahn von Khartum nach Wau, der Hauptstadt von Bahr-el-Ghasal, and als einzigen zuverlassi- gen, aber langsamen Verkehrsweg den Weii3en Nil, der zwischen Juba and Malakal ein 400 Kilo- meter langes and 300 Kilometer breites Sumpf- goblet bewassert. Seit Jahrzehnten abgeriegelt Dal3 dieses riesige Land heute zum Sudan ge-, CIA-F OI'-rtbchea i ~tMtn'n- schenalter nicht an den arabischen Norde:,assi- Britep den Suden a en Siedler und islamische, A4issi!rdrprt~d?ir1Rthel4 9/02 gen kulturelle und' wirtschaftlichc Durc r n, gung aus dem ?h6her entwickelten arabischen Sudan ab. Der Suden blieb Schwarzes Afrika, der Suden blieb zuruck. Als der Sudan am 1. Ja- i nuar 1956 in die Unabhangigkeit entlassen wur- de, gab es in den drei SOdprovinzen nur sechs' Personen mit Universitatsbildung, nur eine ein- zige Mittclschule, kaum Ansatze zu einer kom- merziell betricbenen Landwirtschaft, so gut wie kein einheimisches Handwerk, praktiscl) keine Industrie. Vielleicht 20 000 his 25 000 der schwar- zen Stammesleute waren zum Islam bekehrt, et- wa 200 000 waren von. watOen Missionsran ft r den Katholizismus gewonnen, 25 000 bin 30 000 waren Protestanten. Die ubrigen, mehr als 90 Prozent, hangen bis heute Naturreligionen an, bauen wie eh und je Negerhirse zum eigenen Verbrauch, leben als Jager und Sammler oder nomadisieren mit ihren Rinderherden. . Obgleich der Suden als selbstandiges Gemein- wesen kaum vorsteilbar war, wehrte' sick die' kleine afrikanische Elite, die hierin ihren ROck- halt beim Volk hatte, von Anfang an dagegen, daB mit der Unabhangigkeit des Sudan die Macht von britischen in arabische Hande Ober- gehen sollte. Schon 1955, im letzten Jahr der Herrschaft Londons, meuterten die sfdlichen Garnisonen. Da der Suden mit semen Forderun- r gen auf Autonomie und Federation niemals durchdrang, befindet er sich seither mit Unter- brechungen im Aufstand gegen Khartum. In Meridi, das der Gouverneur von Aquatoria am Tag zuvor ? als ,ruhigsten und sichersten Platz in der Provinz" geschildert hat, sind die Spuren der Rebellion fast uberali zu sehen. Am siidlichen Stadtrand, von wo as zu aen Drauen Hugeln des Kongo nur 25 Kilometer sind, kon- nen neue Anpflanzungen von Hirse und Kaffee nur besichtigt werden, wenn vorher ein Land- Rover mit aufmontiertem Maschinengewehr am Rand der Felder in Richtung auf den Busch In Stellung gegangen ist. Schwerbewaffnete Solda- ten umringen jeden Schritt der Journalisten. Auf dem von einem Schittzenpanzer und Ma schinengewehrlochern gesicherten Damm, der den Meridi-FluB zu cinem kleinen See staut, fragt der Begleitoffizier freundlich besorgt: ?Sie wolien dock nicht auf die andere Seite gehen?" Wie um alle Stadte des Sudens hat sich um Meridi ein Ring von Grashiittendorfern gebildet, unter deren Bewohnern zu wenig Manner sind. Der stellvertretende Kommandeur des siidlichen Armeebereichs, Oberst Omar el Tayeb, gibt of- fen zu, daB die Zwangsdeportation einer der Eckpfeiler der Be friedungspolitik ist. ,Mir wol l.en die Leute umsiedeln. Wir sammeln sie in den Waldern und im offenen Land ein und siedeln ?ie .in. der.Nahe.der-Stadte neu an." Der Zweck .set, den Rebellen,die, Moglichkeitzu nchmen, in der Bevolkerung unterzutauchen. und sich zu versorgen. ?Und wenn die Leute nicht mit Ihren Soldaten kommen;und ein.,F.iledensdorl' bauen wollen?" f Mit dem selbstzufriedenen Lacheln eines Man- nes, der ein gutes Werk geleistet hat, schatzt der Oberst, daB Ober die Halite der frilher im Busch lebenden Einwohner ltquatorias und der am moisten gefahrdeten Gebiete der beiden anderen SOdprovinzen eingesammelt warden 1st. ?Wir musses einfach etwas; fur die Leute tun. Es ist der Gang der Geschichte. Jetzt gefallt as ihnen nicht, aber spater werden sie uns verstehen." . Es get alit ihnen tatsachlich nicht. Bel der Um= siedlung verschwlnden haufig die Manner irn o eg Bch Atthhiopie gganda u n~2 2A Kongo zu gehen. In den Grasnut v 3ihis zum ~ ae WnrMir AUM 3 Afl -9 CPYRGHT ner gewachsen, Meridi von 4000 auf 15 000. Fur so viele Menschen fehlt es an Arbeit, an sanith- ren Einrichtungen, an allem. Demoralislerung, MuBiggang, Kriminalitat, Prostitution sind die Dominanten im Leben der meisten Umsiedler. Soweit die Bevolkerung des Sudens auf dem Land geblicben ist, gebictet die Regierung im Burgerkrieg den Stammesfehden weniger als fruher Einhalt. Ohnehin stehen die Dorfer zwi- schen zwciFeuern: Arbeiten sie mit den Rebel- len zusammen, trifft ale eine Strafexpedition der Ammon; bleibdn tie loyal, was such vorkommt, rachen sich an Ihnen rtleksichtslos die Aufstiin- dischen. Es gibt Stmmme, die von diesen MOhl- steinen buchstablich zerrieben worden rind. Vom Volk der Lapit, das einst 30 000 zahlte, ve- getieren heute nur nosh wenige Hundert am Rand von Juba. Auf einem Hugel Ober Meridis besser gesi- cherter Nordseite steht zwischen Palmen, Man- gobaumen und uppig wuehernden Blutenstrau-. chern die protestantische Kirche: strohgedecktes englisches Backstein-Tudor. Ein Frauenchor singt zur Begleitung von Rasseln und Hand- trommeln eine melancholisch-rhthmische Hymne. Meridis Kirchen waren nie zerstort. In Malakal, der Hauptstadt von Obernil, ist Monsi- gtrore Yukwan sogar dabei, m It der Finanzhilfe Roms eine neue Kirche zu baa~ren. Er bezeugt, dal er keine Behinderung seiner Arbeit und daB seine Gemeinde keine Verfolgung kennt. Aus der elektrizitatslosen Nacht der Grashilt- ten dringen dent Fremden andere Stimmen ent- l gegen. Sie sprechen mit dem festen Glauben und dem einfachen Vokabular der Missionsschule. ?Wir haben noch immer Vertrauen zu Weiflen. Gott hat uns these Prufung aufgegeben, damit wir Zeugnis ablegen, und ihr, unsere Bruder, mulct es auch tun", sagt ein schwarzer anglikani- scher Pfarrer, der keine Gemeinde mehr hat. Seine Kirche hat in den Wirren der Jahre 1965/66 -im gesamten SUden 38 Gotteshauser und Ver- sammlungsgebaude verloren. Sie wurden von den Regierungstruppen zerstort, nicht well sie christlich, sondern well sie die Zentren der le- senders, schreibenden, organisiert handelnden Minderheit waren, die den Widerstand gegen die EingIiederung in den Norden leitete. Da es zur britischen Zeit im Suden nur Missionsschulen gab, konnten die FOhrer der Autonomiebewe- gung nur Christen sein. Die heidnisch gebliebe- ne Manderheit, die ihre politischen WOnsche nicht verstandlich machen kann, empfindet je- doch rilcht anders als sie. ?Wir machen keine Fortschritte mehr, wir fal- len zuruck" klagt ein katholischer Priester. Sei- ne.Kirche hat weniger Gebaude eingebtiBt und ist organisatorisch besser intakt geblieben, snc~.' seit der Ausweisung s:imtlichrr 33 weif'c:n :.iit- sionare, welche die sudancsische Regicrurr; i:;. verfugte, 1st die Last auf den Schultern der w ;- nigen einheimisches Pfarrer zu schwer. `?- ',Priestern aus afrikanischen und arahiscl,'~n T,;.n,- dern, die im Sudsudan aushelten konnten, gibt Khartum nur selten ein Visum. Am scharfsten urteilt ein presbyterianischer Kirchenmann: ?Wens ein weilles Regime mit uns t Diu: t in foreign countries, Sirntzl- t; aeo':caly 1:11 missionaries were expelled. Large-scale civilian violence grew. It is mw clear that without tliL I co-operation of the "Anyaa Nya", there r:a1). he no effective ac,Rtr)!11- L tr ation In the rural areats of'ttte south. Generai T11feng, a 1336-vea1r- oid nrnrcr ottirer .1 1 &40,1- Iona Corps who led the 3vS i mutiny- is is the rebel Lender.. The L;ucrilla force was o^;aniscd n 191,3. Today, it equipped with nrockrn automatic weapons, -1nd receives foreign , military aid. legit, Juba and Nirnule are places is he: e heavy fighting has been report=sd. Significantly, It 4s the. Na~sc*r).te danesc~ Leaders wife. setik a fe deral-type set up under, which the three southern provinces would get an autonomous statue. Approved For Release 1999/09/(f"2 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 A roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 THE ECONOMIST 13 February 1971 Sudan South comes first CPYRGHT The Sudanese army has recently scored some successes in its apparently endless war against the southern separatist rebels, the Anyanya. These successes were due partly to a new supply of Russian weapons, in par- ticular troop-carrying helicopters, and partly to the changed attitude of the former Ugandan government. One of the more publicised incidents was the handing over by the Ugandan authori- ties of Rolf Steiner, a German mercenary who had fought in the Congo and Biafra before he came to Sudan. He escaped into Uganda after his camp near the frontier was over- j un two months ago ; the Ugandans landed him back to the Sudanese. i hese military operations are one art of a two-pronged attempt by the adical army officers and left-wing nteilectuals who now run Sudan to nd a solution to the southern prob- ed. The other part is represented by he declaration of regional autonomy announced by President Numeiry after e seized power in May, 1969. This as not just a fine-sounding phrase ; the government, particularly its arxist members, are looking for ways of implementing the liberal measures nvisaged in the declaration. The regime's concern with internal affairs far- outstrips its interest in the till shadowy plans for inter-Arab unity. resident Numeiry went to Cairo last month for the meeting of heads of tate of the proposed Egyptian- ibyan-Sudanese-Syrian federation in rder to show willing and to avoid ivink the Libyans an excuse for saving the Sudanese were dragging their feet. But the Sudanese have made it per- fectly plain that they, like the Egyptians, will not be party to any hasty, ill-prepared union which' would only humiliate the Arabs by its inevitable failure. The Libyans recently published in their army newspaper details of the discussions which led to the declaration of tripartite federation (Syria was a late, and not.. altogether welcome, fourth) ; this provoked the Sudanese into publishing their version of the talks. The Sudanese report claims that the Libyans were proposing the imme- diate unification of the three countries' foreign ministries and political organi- sations (though Egypt, at present, is the only one of the three to have a political organisation) and the estab- lishment of a fixed timetable for full constitutional unity. All this, the Sudanese argue, is impossible because of the wholly different circumstances of the three countries. The ardent, puritanical Islamic Arab nationalists in Libya are ihnpatient with Sudan's concern with its southern conflict and censorious of the continuing presence of marxists in the Sudanese government. But Sudan's leaders need the support of both right and left. Although the revolution of May 25, 1969, was carried out on a wave of popular enthusiasm for the idea that Sudan should shed its old ways and decisively join the ",progres- sive" Arab camp, much of this enthusiasm has waned and the regime lacks a solid popular base. So it is trying to win allies where it can. The recent release of 125 of the 16o men accused of being involved in the fighting at Aba Island last March (when the Imam Hadi al-Mahdi was killed) was aimed at disarming right- wing opposition. The Sudanese com- munist party is split but the weightier half, led by the attractive, if irrepres- sibly bourgeois, Abdul Khahk Mahjoub, is now opposed to the regime. Mr Mahjoub himself is in detention and two of his supporters were eased out of the government in November (the third minister dismissed at this time, Major Farouk Hamdallah, is not a com- munist). Marxists who retrain in the government include the minister of labour, Muawiya Ibrahim, and the minister of industry and mining, Ahmed Sulaiman. Their presence does not satisfy Sudanese communists but they help to protect the regime from an all-out onslaught from the left. Approved For Release 1999/06/b2 : CIA-RDP79-01194AGGO30013000-1-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 HELSINGIN SANOMAT Oslo 17 February 1971 DISAGREEMENT EXPRESSED WITH GUERRILLA CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS The South Sudanese freedom front representative visiting in Finland is indignant that he has not been allowed to participate in the students' and African Freedom Movement Conference. The Conference's second organizer, the Union of Finnish Students (SYL), answers that the representative's organization is not an African organization recognized as fighting against colonialism or racism. The South Sudanese freedom front representative Dominic A. Mohamed said Tuesday, 16 February, in a press conference held in Helsinki, "the conference's participating Arabs fear that the Sudan army's cruelty directed against the Southern negro population will be revealed if I am allowed to speak. "South Sudan's 4-million-negro population has continually been subject to the political rule of the Northern Mohammedan Arabs' social, racial and religious persecution and even economic exploitation. Lately this has moved into systematic genocide. Since 1962 the army has killed nearly one million South Sudanese. The army receives military aid from other Arab countries, especially Egypt, and Libya, and uses Soviet MIGs, napalm, military experts and pilots." Mohamed said that he had protested to the SYL that he had not been permitted to participate in the conference. "Separatism" SYL chairman Seppo Harkonen said, "our conference is a closed work conference. Six freedom movements are participating in it, and they are recognized by the OAU, and are fighting against colonialism and racism. Several of the movements also have special consultant status with the U.N. "On the other hand the South Sudan freedom movement is a typical separatist movement, which acts in an already independent country. Its representative's participation would not be in keeping with the general nature of the conference, nor are similar movements represented in this conference. Toe list of. conference participants was drawn up beforehand. The South Sudan freedom front-representative has studied in the U.S. and has just arrived from there. He could not be accorded observer status either because the conference is intended only for student u' ions and certain international organizations.','... Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 S3 HELSINGIN SANOM/1T, Oslo 17 Febkppi}o%lOckFor Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 CPYRGHT sissik o fere ssi . osan tta j ista Etell-Sudanin vapautus- ri?ntatuan parhaillaan Suo- nlcssa vicrailcva edustaja on ni rkastynyt siita, ctta ha.nen ci ole sa1Ii-ttu osallis. tua Otaniemen Dipolissa kaynnissa olevaan "Opi's- kciijat ja Afrikan vapau. tusliike" konferenssi.in. Konferenssi,n toinen jar. jestaja Suomen ylioppilas- kuntien liitto vastaa taha.n, etta kyseisen 11enkil6n jar- jesto ci ole Afrikan yhte. naisyysjarjeston tunnusta- nma kolonialismia tai ras?is- mia vastaan taisteleva jar. jesto, joiI:le konferenssi on tarkoitettu. vat arabit pelk:iavat, etta Sudanin armeijar, maan etelaosan neekerL- v5esti on kohdistamat julmuudet paljastuvat, jos mina paasen sinne puhumaan", sanoi Etela-Sudandn vapautusrintaman edustaja Domi- nic A. Mohamed tiistaina Hel- singissa pi'tamallaan lehddsl.dvas- taanotoila. "Eteli-Sudanln nelimiljoona.Lnen I nea;cer ivaestb on jatkuvasti maan pohjoisoa;an muhamettilaisten era- en poliittisea ylivallan alaisena, telskunnallisen, rodullisen ja us- o1Lsen vainoh seka taloudelli- n rii > Sudan's own civil war .appears to be warming up again. The Khartoum Government.. dominated by the Moslem majority in Northern Sudan, has,never?been able to pacify the Southern area of the country. That part of Sudan is inhabitod by some 4 million blacks, most of them Christians. The Anya NNya, a military force of black guerrillas who want independence for the Southern Sudan, has kept war gong for night years. In this war to date at least 50,000, probably many more, have died. Most of those killed were blacks with ties to the peoples of Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Congo. > > Israel, says the Sudanese Government, is getting into Sudan's war. Through Israeli m41iary missions in Ethiopia, Uganda and the Congo, say officials in Khartoum, Israel Is supplying arms to Southern rebels. Soviet-made antiaircraft guns lost by Egypt to Israel in the June War of 1967 now are-used by rebels against Sudan's Soviet-supplied helicopters. Ask Israelis, and you get official denials that..their arms go to Sudan's rebels. You also gets an unofficial reminder: "Sudan is at Israel's back moor." Approved For Release 1999/09/0256CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 CbYRGHTTI? , -1 /\i i i Ca: xumv197 1gs on a F_ aul d- Lin, e " . Across the midsection of Africa, at roughly the point where the savanna -treets the tropical forest, a kind of hturran fault line separates the Arab world, front Black Africa. This zone of instability, from Chad to the Horn, is a battleground where Arab gtiarriilus are Pitted again,t'I black gov- c~>nntvitt,r, ttrttl.~l frirtttt rt1Gt.'ls nt ,inst Arab regimes. In a sense, two of the s:nb. barmiest rebellions-the civil war In the southern Sudan and the Eritrean uprising in northern Ethiopia-are extensions of the Arab-Israeli conflict to the north. The situation in the Sudan has been further complicated by the So- viet Union's powerful thrust toward the Indian Ocean. SUDAN The Soviet Viet Nam Like their neighbors in gyp, the- men who run the Sudan have found for- c^gn Communists a good deal easier to ,pt along with than the domestic va riety. Two weeks ago, Major General Jaafar Numeiry, 41, the Sudan's leftist loader, vowed that he would I "crush aind destroy" the country's 6,000-mem- be'r Communist Party. The local Com- nunists, he said, were guilty of ev- eggvthing from sabotage to poking fun at the Sudanese armed forces. Nonetheless, Numeiry's revolutionary rti+gime is becominf; more and more de- pwndent on the military support of the Soviet Union, which has some 500 ad- visers in the Sudan. Farther down the Horn of Africa in Somalia (see map), there are an estimated 325 Russian ad- vi~ers. Last year the Russians began to construct a naval base at Port Sudan o the Red Sea, an, installation that wall he useful, once the Suez Canal is re- o1 ened. in the further expansion of So- vi~t naval activity in the Indian Ocean. ~w the Russians are installing SA-2 an- tiaarcraft missiles to defend the base. !Even more startling is the fact that about 100 of the Sudan's Soviet ad- visiers are directly helping the Khartoum goternment t prosecute its civil war agtinst 6,000,000 black southerners. (The north containsi 6,000,000 Arabs anti 3,000,000 blacks.) The southerners der!'iand autonomy within a federation, ar uing that under the existing system .they will never be given any real au- thority by the Arabs of the north; at in- de endcnce in 1956, for example, the nonitherners grabbed off 796 of the 800 available government posts. There is, tween the two regions: in the 19th cen- t, Arab slave traders from Khartoum a . d Cairo carried off 2,000,000 blacks it chains from southern Sudan. Drums Sounding. Since last Sep., teltibcr the Russians have engaged in p vinces. Last month they accompanied S danese army units in a raid on the drltims sounding"), attacking the south- erllcrs by surprise while many were bath- scit of a cobra or scorpion) lost a Al bombing raid against a rebel base. c used nearly 1,Q00 civilian casualties. Russians have almost certainly flown h licopters into combat against southern ay also have conducted bombing mis- si sins with AN-12 transports and two s uadrons of TU-16 medium bombers. T le Russians, in addition, ;are known h e flown MiGs into combat in the so th is uncertain. n any case, the Soviets have al- re dy set two unwelcome precedents p ticipated so actively in a Third World c interinsurgency efTort, and never have .hgped bomb their villages, The situ- bit hyperbolically: THE SOVIETS HAVE CPYRGHT Soldier of Fortune, The southerners have received sonic modest foreign sup- port of their own. In September 1969 .--about three months after Numeiry seized power in Khartoum and aligned the Sudan more closely with Egypt -the Israelis began parachuting arms and supplies from an unmarked DC-3 to Owing-ki-bul. The ADC-3 apparently flies in from either southwestern Ethi- opia or northern Uganda; Israel pro- vides extensive aid to both countries. Because the Khartoum government has allowed Ethiopia's Eritrean rebels to cross the Sudan while returning to their own country from overseas, Emperor Haile Selassie has permitted the south- ern Sudanese to take refuge in Ethi- opia from time to time. Until recently, the southerners were also aided by one of Africa's more no- torious soldiers of fortune, German-born Mercenary Rolf Steiner. A veteran of losing battles in Indochina, Algeria and Biafra, Steiner spent sonic 13 months .trying to train the rebels to fight the rul- ing Arabs. "They fight very well against each other," he once said. "But against the Arabs they feel inferior," Late list year Steiner was captured by Uganda police while spending a few days of unofficial rest and recuperation outside the war zone. After three months, in .1 Uganda jail, Steiner was secretly turned over to Sudanese authorities. He is now in prison in Khartoum, where his fate will be settled by still another group of foreign Communists. The case against him is being prepared by some of the 50 East Germans who advise the Stidaricse Interior Ministry on se- curity techniques. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 :5ClA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 25X1C10b Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Next 2 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 CPYR (roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01 I94A000300130001-9PYRGHT BALTIMORE SUN, 19 February 1971 'U.S., Expected To Get Down . To 3 Viet Divisions By July By GIIAnLES W. CORDDny Washington aureau Of The Su, Washington, Feb. 17-mere-II In the process, the equivalent can ground forces in South Viet-, of at least 1' of the 4i1 es or official communiques. Itdivisons now in Vietnam are ex- combat divisions at peak I':pected to be withdrawn by about strength, are confidently expect- ed to be down to the equivalent of 3 divisions by the end of June, .with the largest concentrations' in the still difficult northern sec- tor of the country. Continuing bullish appraisals of the Laotian operation, notably I President Nixon's today, would seem to underscore civilian leaders' confidence that they will not only meet but exceed their unannounced long-range withdrawal goals. Goal of 284,000 The presently announced goal is to.be down to 284,000 men to all services by May 1, which means that 49,000 must be These withdrawals, it is said, currently are expected to in- clude two of the 1st Air Cavalry Division's three brigades, and the remaining two regiments of marines. Two-Thirds Will Leave It has already been announced that two-thirds of the 11th Ar- mored Cavalry Regiment-in the Saigon area-will be pulled out by May 1. After this, the American con- 1 tribution to the defense of Sai- gon and, the provinces around it, called Military Region 3, will be the remaining third of the ar- pulled out by then. mored regiment and a brigade A question now is the size of a 'of infantry from the 25th Divi- further cut Mr. Nixon will order sion. This brigade will probably in April and how long it will be withdrawn by June 30. cover. But regardless of the an- American ground combat res- swer, informed quarters now ex- ponsibilities in Military Region pect that the troop level will be, 4, the Mekong Delta, below Sal- down to about 250,000 at the end gon, have long since ended. of June-a cut of about $3,000 from the present level. And when. that time is reached, the American ground forces remaining will be de- scribed officially as having tak- en up a "security mission" and having turned over their combat responsibility to the South Viet- namese. "Fire Brigade" Role The mission of the remaining three divisions will be defense of air bases, supply complexes and, apparently, some coastal cities. They also will have a "fire brigade" role for a time. Little has been said about this, but. it calls for them aiding I South Vietnamese units in dire distress, if it comes to that. Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, American commander in Viet- nam, is increasingly turning over "tactical areas of respons- ibility's , IVIA '~'n' ' force U.S. "security" mission. In the provinces or Military Region 2, north of Saigon, the American ground force now con- sists of one airborne brigade, the 173d, which may take over the "security mission" of guard- ing the supply complex on the coast at Qui Nhon. The pesky area is Military Re- gion 1, the five northern prov- inces, and there the American forces will consist of the 101st Airborne Division, the 23d (Americ4l) Division and a mechanized brigade. The out- come in Laos may have much to do with when this force is cut back. lease 1999/09/02 : CIA -RDP79 NEW YORK TIMES, 29 January 1971 SAIGON, South Vietnam, Jan. -- r)e ntte ates command today reported that all United States Air Force combat units are to (be withdrawn from South Viet- nam by the end of 1972, leav- itig only Advisors and tech- niclans, if the South Vietnamese 'Air Force is sufficiently strong by then. Meanwhile, the sources said, the United States is conduct- ing the heaviest bombing cam- paign of the war in Laos and Cambodia in an effort to force North Vietnam "to make ac- 1commodations" and to pave the ;way for the withdraal. The sources saidwup to 500 United States warplanes from the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps were making daily raids. on North Vietnamese troops and supply routes in Laos and Cambodia. - Some attacks Are in direct support of, South Vietnamese, Cambodian and Laotian troops fighting the North Vietnamese .and Vietcong, the sources said, but about 75 per cent of the raids are against enemy supply routes, depots and troops along the Ho Chi Minh trail through southern Laos. .The United States Air Force now has 30 squadrons in South Vietnam, with a total of more than 700 aircraft and 42,200. men. No squadrons are being withdrawn during.the current- sixth-phase cutback of Ameri- can troops that will reduce au thorized United States strength to 284,000 men by May 1. . The South Vietnamese airl ,force has 32 squadrons, 7001 planes and helicopters andl about 40,000 men. The present goal is 50 squadrons and 1,200 planes and helicopters. In the... war, little ground' action was reported in South Vietnam, but three grenades ripped through a theater in Binhdinh Province, killing 10 Vietnamese and wounding 19. The South Vietnamese com- mand said the grenades were` I thrown by "Communist terror- ists." About 80 miles farther north, a bomb exploded in a market place, and 9 Vietnamese civil-' ians were reported killed and 22 wounded. The incidents occurred dur- ing the four-day cease-fire de- clared by the Viet Cong for the Lunar New Year. It runs ". 4AOOO OO f 30 'f "- A d r"PYRGHT WASHIn~ o ~ II,Y?NrEwRelease 1999/09/02 : C IA-RDP79 01194A000300 3000 -9 17 February 1971 pop a Wa W%, The new ARVN o HE 1.1 million-man South Vietnamese army (called ARVN) is a far better trained and equipped force than even its friendliest appraisers might have gucsecd a year aga. Yet it could be rather se- verely hurt in the current Laotian invasion. What seems most impres- sive is the evidence, pointed to by senior U.S. defense offi- cials, that the ARVN now has a considerable superiority in firepower over the North Viet- namese-Viet Cong adversary. Confronted by this potent weaponry, the Reds in recent months have either avoided engaging South Vietnamese forces altogether, or have fought brief, sharp, losing encounters and then broken off the battle. This was the case at a key mountain pass on, Cambodia's Route 4, and in several engage ments. northeast of Phnom Penh on the Chup plantation. All these cost Hanoi heavily in lives. ? ? ? IN their own populous and vital delta region, the ARVN have. conducted three successful sweeps, including one in a mountainous border area and another in the U Minh forest. South Vietnamese Rangers protect the Cambodian border sectors west and north of Saigon. It was a sign of South Vietnam's present relative stability militarily that its crack air- borne division could be lifted away from the Saigon perimeter and thrust into the Laotian adventure aimed at cutting the Ho Chi Minh trail. About half of the ARVN's 1.1 million men are regular army, navy, air, marine and other forces. The remainder are so-called regional and popular forces (these latter are not to be confused with the so-called home defense units made up of men below and above draft age). Pentagon sources say virtually all the 1.1 million today are fitted out-with M-16 rifles and that the regulars and some regional ele- WASHINGTON POST 12 January ,1971 ' S. Koreans Weigh: Viet Pullout ments also have a, useful array of mortars, machine guns, grenade launchers, 195 and 155 milliometer howitzers, good tanks and ar- mored personnel carriers. In the air, the ARVN has T-28 jet trainers (more effective than any World War It figh- ter), A-i fighters (propeller-driven but loaded with firepower), converted transports called "dragon ships," helicopters with door guns. This force is providing most if not all of the air cover for ARVN's present stands in Cam- bodies at Chup and Snuol. THE South Vietnamese do not have our'most advanced M-60 tank, nor our more sophisticat-. ed helicopter gunships. We are training some ARVN men for such craft, but none are yet deemed ready. Our more powerful and longer-' reaching air weapons, the fighter-bombers and the B-52, are not likely ever to be put in South Vietnamese hands. The gunships and the bombers, manned by us, are of course playing a major role in the Laotian thrust, as are South Vietnam-based 'U.S. 175-mm. guns with a range of some 20 miles. With the ARVN plunging into unfamiliar ter- ritory thick with hills and forest cover, and hence ideal for hidden enemy fire points, our strong air and artillery backing were deemed necessary for balance or possible superiority. As indicated, even with this aid the South' Vietnamese are expected to encounter rough going in their ground strike at the trail. The North Vietnamese may or may not choose ma- jor confrontation, but the trail as a manpower and supply lifeline is so crucial the Reds seem bound to try to chew up some of the invaders.: The dangers are obvious. Our support for the ARVN is a clear gauge of confidence in this army's greatly enhanced capabilities. Probably only severe reverses in Laos would dim this judgment materially. Overall, the judgment of senior U.S. officials stands: "a very competent military force" performing in a "highly professional manner.". CPYRGHT clay)-President Chung Hee Park said today his govern- ment "is studying the gradual withdrawal" of South Korea's, 50,000 troops from South Vietnam. A timetable for the pullout will be decided "through dis- cussions with South Vietnam, the United States and other Vietnam war allies," Park told a news conference. He said he believes South sent to Vietnam in 1965. Approved For Release 1999/09102 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 PYRGHTApproved For Release 1999/09/02 CIA-RDP79-01194A00030013000 ARGHT CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR 13 January 1971 Withdrawal fr~in cornbat role: continuation of Pattern' Withdrawal of Americans from combat, responsibility in Vietnam will hardly be a magic moment in the war. As steadily sinking casualty figures have shown, Americans already have been with- drawing from the major combat role for .more-than a year and a half. The departure of each United States unit has left a void for the Vietnamese - not other Americans - to fill. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird has tied the ending of U.S. ground-combat re- sponsibility to the President's May 1 dead- line for American strength in Vietnam to be at a level below 284,000. 1 . According to present Pentagon planni^ most U.S. units seem likely to be either c of Vietnam or in process of turning over their areas of combat operations to the Vietnamese by that time. By the end of the fiscal year, June 30, the process is ex- pected to be virtually complete. Positigns of danger As of that moment, Americans still will' be in positions of danger, and there will be continued weekly casualties, although hopefully at a still lower level. Even if di- rect combat with the enemy is lowered, Americans still will be lost in accidents of one sort and other, and as a result of mines, rocketing, and booby traps. The steady decline in U.S. losses so far will mean that the concrete results in terms of losdes, will be continuation of a pattern, not abrupt change. According to present projections, yet to be finally worked out in consultations between the Pentagon hierarchy and the American: military commands in Vietnam and the Pacific, there will be about three U.S. com- bat divisions remaining in Vietnam by mid- year. [The White House fias announced that the next troop-withdrawal plan will be made public in mid-April. It will cover the period after May 1, when the current cycle ends. The Christian Science Monitor I Vietnam following the current pullout. This Washington White House wishes to keep its options open be ome tied down to too many specific pr mises about how troops will behave in w at will undoubtedly be a touchy and diffi- cu t transitional period.] Ti ing viewed 'fhere will be vast remaining American w4 at has become a huge logistical network. pats of Vietnam between the sea and the. K *turn. American involvement in northern- m st areas will remain relatively heavy. thl delta in 1969. Now, with the envisioned exiept in the most persistently difficult IIithin a matter of months, these depar- In the third military region, which in- cl es Saigon, the remaining brigade of the A erican 25th Division. will be pulled out, al g with the 11th Armored Cavalry Regi- in at. In addition, it is likely that two bri- ga es of the 1st Cavalry Division (air- signs in Vietnam, will be going home to Ft. th 1st Armored Division there, sources say. le ve only a single brigade of the 1st Air C airy remaining on the scene. Further north, in the second region, re- in ining elements of the 4th Infantry Divi si will be returning to the United States. T s will leave only the 173rd Airborne Bri- gs e, which is operating in Binh Dinh Prov- in a along the coast. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 CPYRC*ffproved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 CPYRGHT ? The heaviest concentration of Ameri- can strength will be in the First Region, which includes Danang and Hue. All of the Marines will he leaving, but Army units are staying around. The 101st Airborne Division (Airmobile), which has at its disposal about 440 helicopters, will be staying to back up the 1st Vietnamese Division, generally con- sidered Saigon's best, Cutbacks expected in' addition, the heavily armed brigade of the 5th Mechanized Division now on the DMZ will probably remain, along with the American Division, now being called its for- mal name, the 23rd Division, partially be- cause of the bad publicity it got from time to time while known as the Americal. As withdrawals continue past May, the Americal and the brigade of the 5th Mechan- iied will be taken out, leaving eventually only the one brigade of the First Cavalry Division in the populated central region, the 183d in the second region, and the 101st Divi- sion in the north. Then, as time and the situation permit, other cutbacks will occur, probably starting with the 101st. In practical terms, all of this means that after May 1st, there just will not be many American infantrymen around to get shot at, except in the northernmost areas. The 173d Brigade has been devoting its time since spring of 1969 to the pacification of Binh Dinh Province. As other American strength in the region around diminishe3, however, the brigade undoubtedly will as- sume broader responsibilities. As some other units with combat responsibilities are re- moved, it will perform protection missions, provide backing for the Vietnamese and he available as a fire brigade to help with problems. Greatest threat seen Farther north, in Military Region I, lies the greatest military threat to Vietnamiza- tion. Headway has been very modest and erratic in many areas, particularly in the region that includes Quang Ngai and the village of Son My. . It is it this northern region that pacifica- tion remains in trouble in wide areas. There is a constant ?roblem of infiltration, and the allies have never been able to lji?ing it to a halt. The possibility of some broad combat effort springing forth in this area remains a deep concern. Thus, the Americans will be staying on a while in Military Region I'with the hope that ,any new znemy offensive can be frustrated. in Its early stages. Dut to budgetary considerations, if noth- ing else, the administration will keep on bringing Americans home. By mid-1972, the strength of American infantry forces should be down to around a division or so, possibly less. And there will be fewer flyers, artil- lerymen, and supply people as the Vietnam- ese take over more of those tasks. Indeed, just as the ground combat role will be turned over this spring; the combat support and logistical roles should be nearly completed by the same, time a year later, in 1972. Thus, it can be anticipated that the Amer- ican involvement will be moving steadily downward through 1972 to reach a level in the tens of thousands in 1973-as compared to hundreds of thousands now. CPYRGHT WASHINGTON POST 8 January 1971 Pentagon Says 100,000 to Stay WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 (UPI) -- U. troops wi cease to play a major combat role In Vietnam after May 1, but the Pentagon said today that more .than 100,000 combat troops will remain there in a security role. A Pentagon spokesman, Jerry W. Friedheim, men-1 tioned the figure after De- fense Secretary Melvin R.; Laird said in Bangkok today' that by May 1 a major portion of our combat forces that have! a combat responsibility or a combat assignment within the country will have been with- drawn." Friedheim said that the present force level of 385,000 U.S. troops in Vietnam would be cut to about 285,000 as of, May 1, and that more than 100,000 of these will be combat troops, [The latter figure is consist- ent with the percentages men- tioned by Laird at various times as 45.50 per cent and 40- 60 per cent.] CPYRGHT NEW YORK TIMES 23 February 1971 U.S. Troops in Vietnam Fewest Since Fail of `66 SAIGON, South Vietnam, _ m ero United States fighting men in South Vietnam has de-' clined to the lowest point since the fall of 1966, the United States command said today. The command also an- nounced the impending do parture of Marine Fighter At- tack Squadron 115, the last Marine Corps Phantom jet fighter-bomber squadron left in South Vietnam. American fighting strength in the, week ended Feb. 18 totaled 330,600 men, a drop of 2,300 from the previous week, the command said. The decrease included 200 sailors, 400 marines, 300 air- men and 1,400 soldiers. The forces remaining in South Vietnam rare 248,800 soldiers, 16,200 sailors, 24,- 200 marines, 41,300 airmen and 100 Coastguardsmen. In addition, the command said,,, ,there are 18,500 sailors and 500 Coastguardsman, aboard ships operating off the coast. 4 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 25X1C10b L Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 March 1971 L 1_11% SOVIET MANIPULATION OF THE ANGELA DAVIS CASE 1. The trial of Angela Davis, arising out of the State of California's accusations that the black militant and avowed member of the CPUSA supplied the guns that were used in the August shoot-out at the Marin County Courthouse in San Rafael during which four people were killed, including a judge, has achieved international significance. It appears to be developing into a. rallying-point for a Soviet-manipulated international anti-U.S. campaign reminiscent of the orchestrated Communist propaganda efforts made on the behalf of the atomic spies, Ethel and Julius Rosenberg. In this context it is very important that Angela Davis is an attractive, educated and gifted American black girl. It takes little imagination to see her as a symbol of racial and political suppression by the "capitalist" U.S. Government and society. 2. The Soviet government press agency TASS issued a long commentary on her case recently. She was described as a young Communist and "courageous fighter for freedom." TASS said the charges against her are groundless and that they come against a background of hounding and intimidation of those who press for social change. On 5 January 1971 TASS listed organs of the Soviet press (Sovetska s Rossiya; Selskaya Zhizn; Komsomolskays Pravda ' chorusing the hee of political and racial repression, as opposed to legal procedings on criminal charges. 3. The Daily World, official paper of the Communist Party, USA, proclaims that a "Free Angela Campaign sweeps Sovietland." As illustration it reports that workers of the Moscow Tire Factory, the Soviet Women's Coiamittee, the Soviet Teachers Union, students of Patrice Lumumba University, the Pioneers and Komsomols are all mounting a major campaign to free her. The paper's Moscow correspondent, Mike Davidow, adds, "In the Tadzhik and Turkomen republics, school children have written letters to President Nixon and Governor Reagan demanding her freedom." Communist parties and other organizations in Eastern Europe have also championed her cause. 4. On 25 December 1970 a telegram was sent to President Nixon by a group of 14 leading Soviet scientists, including Pytor L. Kapitsa, dean of the Soviet physicists, Vladimir A. Englegardt, a biochemist, Mikhail D. Millionshchikov, another prominent physicist, and Igor Y. Tatum, still another physicist and winner of a 1958 Nobel Prize, appealing to the President "to safeguard the life of Angela Davis and give her an opportunity of continu- Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194AO00300130001-9 ing her scientific work." The U.S. Government responded two days later by proposing that the group attend the forthcoming trial as "observers." As of this writing, there is no Soviet reply to the invitation. 5. Dr. Kapitsa and several of the others have protested inside the Soviet Union against repression of (liberal-minded) scientists and intellectuals. Last autumn Kapitsa joined an unofficial committee of scientists and intellectuals devoted to examining new scientific and political ideas, a group which the authorities consider a forum for intellectual dissent. It is apparent that the U.S. Government considers the appeal to President Nixon to be an expression of genuine concern by a group which may not have all available facts; hence the invitation to come to the United States and observe the trial. 6. The Soviet government apparently thought so too. It also appears that the Soviet government may have realized that it might be losing control of its anti-U.S. campaign, and that if any Russians were to attend the trial they should be politically reliable. On 30 December the Novosti press agency announced that an appeal had been sent to the White House by a 10-man group of different composition, artists and intellectuals headed by Dmitri Shostakovich. All members of this group had been recipients of numerous Soviet awards and prizes. No reference was made in the Novosti announcement to Dr. Kapitsa's appeal. The tone of the second appeal was different: it was far more polemical with such assertions as the one charging that the Davis case "is only the latest link in the chain that starts from the lynching of Molly Maguire trade union leaders," a secret workers' group active in the Pennsylvania anthracite district about 1870. The announcement was reported in the U.S. press; but the letter mentioned in the release was never sent to the White House and therefore no response was made. 7. Worldwide orchestration of the Angela Davis case is well under way. Members of Communist front women's groups and Communist front trade unions have already delivered petitions on her behalf in France, India, Ceylon and in many other countries. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194AO00300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 DATES WORTH NOTING March 18 Paris 100th anniversary of Paris Commune, 18 March - 29 May 1871. March 27 USSR Anniversary of Khrushchev's succession to Soviet premiership in 1958, consolidating his one-man control of Party and State. (Removed by coup 14 October 1964) March 30 Moscow The 24th Congress of the Soviet Communist Party, which was supposed to meet in 1970. April .3 USSR 18th anniversary of exposure of Stalin's trumped-up "Doctor Plot," which had anti-Semitic overtones: 3 April 1953, one month after Stalin's death, Pravda announced the release of nin'ctors, six of them Jewish, who had been arrested for murdering Zhdanov and Shcherbakov. Pravda admitted their arrests were a 'miscarriage of justice." April 13 Japan 20th anniversary of Soviet-Japanese non-aggression pact signed during World War II and broken by Soviet Union one week before the end of war, 8 August 1945, when Japan was on the verge of surrender. It was during the last week of war that the Soviets captured the Kurile Islands. Aprill7 Yugoslavia Approximate target date for completion and promulgation of constitutional? amendments designed to reform federal- local governmental structure and to provide for an orderly (non-coup) method of transferring executive power. If Yugoslavia devises reason- able formulae for dealing with these Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 basic problems, it could add to debate in the Soviet Bloc on these issues: e.g., among the 1968 reforms in Czechoslovakia under Dubcek was an increase in local political responsibility, which is now being undone by the present regime; among the effects of the recent Polish workers' strikes was public acknowledge- ment by Gierek that Poland needs an orderly system of rotating leaders in and out of power. April 17-19 Cuba 10th anniversary of the Bay of Pigs. April 19, a Cuban national holiday, could be the occasion for anti- American demonstrations in Cuba and elsewhere in Latin America. April 21-26 Salzburg Congress of European National Youth Committees. Representatives from Bloc youth groups and the Communist international youth fronts are expected to attend as observers. The Congress may discuss, inter alia, European Security and the possibility of the European National Youth Committees undertaking joint programs with Bloc youth groups. April 22 Sofia 10th Congress of the Bulgarian Communist Party, billed by Party leader Todor Zhivkov as one of the most important events in the Party's history. The agenda includes a new constitution for Bulgaria and the new Party Program. Zhivkov has announced that the Party Program (the first to be presented to a BCP Congress) will provide for "completing the construction of a developed socialist society and for creating the material and spiritual prerequisites for a gradual transition to communism." However, the BCP's blueprint for the future of Bulgaria may be overshadowed at the 10th Congress by a rush to be first to conform to the line and style of the CPSU Congress which just precedes 2 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9 the Bulgarian Congress. The BCP Congress was to be held last fall, but after the CPSU Congress was postponed to this spring the Bulgarians followed suit. (Czechoslovakia is to hold its Party Congress May 25, and East Germany on June 14.) April 30 Cambodia First anniversary of the entering of U.S. forces into Cambodia (the forces were withdrawn two months later, on 30 June.) Because of the Cambodian anniversary, plus May Day, the first week in May could be the occasion for anti-U.S. demonstrations. (Some of the traditional Easter Week marches could take place in early May instead.) Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000300130001-9