WHILE THE TWO OF YOU WERE OUT OF THE CITY OVER THE HOLIDAY, THE WASHINGTON POST RAN A VERY LONG THREE-PART SERIES ON SOUTH AFRICA

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January 7, 1986
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 5 Central Intelligence Agency Executive Registry NOTE TO: Director of Central Intelligence Deputy Director of Central Intelligence While the two of you were out of the city over the Holiday, the Washington Post ran a very long three-part series on South Africa. Because of its likely wide readership in the Administration and on the Hill, I asked both ALA and Fred Wettering to evaluate the article. The texts of the article and the two evaluations are attached. I think all three are worth skimming. Attachments: As Stated Deputy Director for Intelligence CONFIDE 1TIAL Cl By Signer DECL OADR Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 /1 -31 1 ' .-T AP (f.? A X -) - 00 - Z70 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116ROO0901050006-1 CONFIDENTIAL The Director of Central Intelligence Wuhingtao, D.C. 20505 National Intelligence Council 6 January 1986 MEMORANDUM FOR: Chairman, National Intelligence Council FROM: Frederick L. Wettering National Intelligence Officer for Africa SUBJECT: South Africa: The Washington Post Articles and DI/ALA Analysis 1. 1 do not have strong differences with ALA's analysis of last week's three-part Washington Post series on South Africa, but I have some nuanced differences in how we view it. 2. 1 was rather less impressed by the series for two reasons: first, because the authors, after some dramatic leads, then watered their conclusions down to pap; and second, because the articles contained some explicit and implicit assumptions which are challengeable. 3. Specifically, the first article leads with the eye-catching thesis that the foundations of white minority rule are starting to crack, then proceeds to explain in the fine print that in fact "most whites` believe they can hold on (to power) indefinitely." Second--as ALA noted--the authors suggest that the SAG is adrift without a plan as to how to go forward, but then go on to cursorily describe and dismiss the successor plan to apartheid, termed neoapartheid, which promotes a middle class alliance with black urban elites. This gives short shrift to the SAG plan of reform and cooption, and 1, like ALA, see no indication that the Botha Government will do anything but plod ahead with its reformist scheme. While the SAG has certainly not effectively articulated this scheme to either South Africans or the world, I believe they have a definite vision and have not been deterred from it by last year's violence. 4. There are two implicit assumptions in the series that I take issue with: first (as in the recent State/INR series) is the assumption that black rule is inevitable and that the only ways it will come about are through a prolonged, violent revolutionary struggle or a quicker, negotiated turnover of power. While these are both arguable scenarios, they are not the only ones nor in my view even the most likely. Second, DECLY OADNER 1 CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116ROO0901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 CONFIDENTIAL there is the assumption that the middle ground for blacks--a black leadership which would negotiate with the SAG on power sharing but accept the SAG gradualist approach and not insist on a total and revolutionary role reversal--has disappeared forever due to confrontation and intimidation. The authors--and I suspect many in this Agency--see only an increasing racial polarization and confrontation. Again, while this is an arguable scenario, I contend that there remain possibilities for clacks with sufficient followings to deal with the SAG and accept and participate in government reforms just as elements of the Indians and Coloureds did (Inkatha/Buthelezi being the most noteworthy current example, but I suspect others may well emerge). I find the Algerian scenario a bad analogy. 5. In sum, I agree with DI/ALA that the series is better than most appearing in the popular press and conveys some useful thoughts--the most useful perhaps being the phrase "blacks have created an enduring crisis, not a revolution." Nonetheless, as a serious professional analysis (as opposed to popular journalism) the series is flawed by questionable assumptions, overdramatic assertions at the beginning, and wishy-washy conclusions. Fre ick L. Wettering CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 CONFIDENTIAL SUBJECT: South Africa: The Washington Post Articles and DI/ALA Analysis NI 0/ AF/ FLWetteri ng DISTRIBUTION: Orig - C/NIC 1 - VC/NIC (Ford) 1 - VC/NIC (Fuller) 1 - ALA/AF/DI 1 - NIO/AF 1 - NIO/AF Cnrono 3 CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 DIRECT`:'RATF. OF INTELLIGENCE 7 January 1986 SOUTH AFRICA: COMMENTS ON THE WASHINGTON POST SERIES Summary The recent series in The Washington Post, 'Black Power, White Control: South Africa's Year of Struggle," gives a generally well- balanced description of the major dynamics shaping the South African situation. We agree with most points made in the series, particularly that blacks 'have created an enduring crisis, not a revolution,' even though a new and more radical fervor is gripping urban blacks, especially youths. We also agree that events have shaken many South African whites and that most plausible scenarios for the country's future include intensified-violence and repression. The recent series of articles in The Washington Post, "Black Power, White Control: South Africa's Year ofuggle," is well-written and a cut above most analyses on the topic by journalists or scholars. Drawing on relevant current events as well as historical background, Glenn Frankel paints a vivid portrait of an intransigent white regime besieged by restive blacks showing unprecedented political consciousness and an increasingly hostile international community. * See the series in The Washington Post, 29-31 December 1985, written by Post correspondent Glenn Frankel (a US citizen) with the assistance of AT -lister Sparks (a South African journalist). (U) This paper was prepared for the DCI b South Africa Branch, Office of African and Latin American Analysis men queries may be directed to the Chief, South Africa Branc C O N F I D E N T T A I Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 ? V V 1\ 1 1 V L 1\ 1 1 Il L Frankel correctly points out that the unrest and international pressure have exposed some vulnerabilities of South African whites: -- Declining economic conditions have hurt white morale. -- Many whites have been shaken by the sporadic attacks against members of their community and by the ferocity of the fratricide in black townships as the number of victims with even remote ties to the government increases daily. -- The ability of blacks to unite behind and sustain protests such as consumer boycotts of white-owned stores does not augur well in the view of many whites who fear further flexing of black economic muscle. -- Many skilled white workers and professionals are leaving South Africa. Strengths and Weaknesses Frankel deserves credit, in our judgment, for putting the last 16 months of violence in a context that bucks the trend established by many journalists who have seasoned their reports with cataclysmic language. He writes, and we agree, that: "while blacks have succeeded for the first time in a generation in seriously damaging white South Africa, they remain far from their goal of toppling white rule. The dream that many youths believe is around the corner remains elusive. And because white military power remains intact, there is no clear path to get there. Black created an enduring crisis, not a revolution." We believe that Frankel correctly emphasizes the importance of white reactions to growing pressures from the black populace and the international community. White resolve and unity, in our view, are the most important factors affecting South Africa's political future, as evidenced by their central position in the various scenarios outlined in the series. As one South African expert on black politics is quoted by Frankel, "in the end, the (white) regime will collapse from within, when the groups whose support it enjoys withdraw." Frankel skillfully, and correctly in our view, explains why pressures from the black populace and the international community are likely to continue to build. He also gives the reader an appreciation of the diverse factors, such as the 2 CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 v v na u . a n y unique history of the Afrikaners, that one must consider when assessing potential white responses to those pressures. We believe Frankel is strongest in his analysis on trends in the black community. He offers some poignant insights into the causes and effects of a growing nihilism among young urban blacks. He also describes vividly the dramatic phenomenon of attacks on black collaborators and the losing battle that black moderates are waging to retain credibility among their dwindling constituencies. Departing from the romanticism that frequently characterizes other journalists' work on the topic, Frankel depicts the African National Congress as a two-faced group--sometimes moderate in appearance, other times radical--that is heading toward full-fledged urban terrorism, but faces almost insurmountable obstacles to overthrowing the white regime.* This is consistent with our own views. Our criticisms of the series are relatively minor: Frankel occasionally overstates his case; e.g., he writes that "there is virtually no one in the black community who expects to be ruled by whites in the year 2000." Even some influential black leaders, including Colored activist Allan Boesak and ANC head Oliver Tambo, have stated that it may be several decades before the white regime falls. Frankel dismisses the rightwing threat to the National Party too quickly without explaining its constraining influence on the government's attitude toward reform. Similarly, he does not adequately address the trauma that the reform issue has generated within National Party ranks and the larger white community. We believe that Frankel's observation that the government is "unsure of its direction after decades of certainty" is somewhat off the mark. This has become a familiar theme of critics of the government, and a growing lament among even * Frankel quotes analaysts who believe, as we do, that the ANC "is still far from developing the disciplined clandestine networks that could launch a sustained guerrilla war or endure a long-term tit-for-tat campaign with the South Africans... rural warfare is unlikely because of South Africa's vast barren spaces and the long distances between its borders and population centers." 3 CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 (. U N r t u t N I 1 A L some of its supporters. The government, nonetheless, has continued to stick to a course of reform roughly hewn by senior officials. Although seemingly blind to the unviability of some of its plans, the government has partially unveiled them in the past year while continuing to work out the details behind the scenes. Frankel writes that, "for the first time, there is a tension and contradiction between the state's military and economic power..Unbridled use of the former... causes direct, measurable harm to the latter." There is no question that heavyhanded security actions have contributed to the institution of international sanctions against South Africa and the introduction of black economic protests at home. This is not, however, unprecedented; South Africa went through the same experiences during outbreaks of violence in 1960 and 1976-77. Moreover, the government to date has eschewed the option of an all-out, unbridled security response to the unrest. Its reluctance to do so, in our view, is tied more closely to lingering hopes it can succeed in coopting blacks, rather than to fears of the economic consequences of its actions. Open-Ended Outcome Frankel shies away from making a specific prediction on the most likely outcome of the racial tensions in South Africa, ending the series by laying out some of the best-known scenarios with little indication of his own thoughts on which is the most probable. However, he seems attracted to an Algerian-type scenario in which increasingly repressive measures by the government would only steel the resolve of blacks to perpetuate violence. In his defense, each cycle of violence in South Africa's modern history has spawned a multitude of predictions about the country's future (as Frankel himself notes, a cottage industry of forecasting on South Africa has developed recently). His reluctance to select one future scenario as his personal favorite probably reflects a healthy respect for the fast pace at which events are unfolding and the host of factors that could affect both the nature and timing of the eventual outcome. 4 CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 APPENDIX Major Points in "Black Power, White Control: South Africa's Year of Struggle" Black Threat 1. The "comrades," angry young urban blacks, now control many townships. 2. Unrest has spread even to rural, traditionally conservative black areas. 3. Blacks have refined their protest tactics, including consumer boycotts, and these are likely to continue. 4. The political middle ground has all but vanished. 5. Nonetheless, the black movement at times seems leaderless and without direction, is not united, and remains far from toppling white rule. 6. Young urban blacks believe liberation is one or two years away; their elders speak of 5 or 10 years; virtually no blacks expect to be ruled by whites in the year 2000. 7. Black students may boycott schools to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Soweto riots. 8. A new black labor federation may become more politically active. The African National Congress 1. The group has gained stature and is perhaps the biggest winner in the unrest. 2. Usually one step behind events, the ANC's role has been mainly inspirational. 3. The group has two faces: one moderate, the other radical and violent. 4. ANC attacks--widely applauded by blacks--are up significantly but do little damage to the country's energy infrastructure or white morale; attacks unite whites behind retaliatory strikes. 5 CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 v n r a u L. 11 I L M L 5. The ANC shows signs of developing into a more hardline, terrorist group, but it is still far from developing capability to launch sustained guerrilla war or endure all-out effort by South Africa to wipe it out. Government Program and Plans 1. Apartheid is no longer viable, because it is too expensive and unwieldy. 2. The white regime is losing its grip, unsure of direction after decades of certainty. 3. Both liberal businessmen and the right wing lack adequate leverage to coerce the National Party. 4. The pace of reform is glacial; reforms are not mollifying the blacks as intended. 5. Attacks on black moderates undermine the deal the government had hoped to forge with the black urban middle class, but Pretoria is likely to continue to pursue measured reform while cracking down hard on dissidents. It probably hopes that after black radicals have been subdued by security measures, black moderates will come to bargain. 6. Botha may call for a snap election before support for the ruling National Party erodes further, and may hold a referendum for whites on new constitutional proposals. Scenarios 1. Analysts at a multinational firm believe South Africa might hobble into the next century under a rightwing white regime that responds fiercely to increasing black unrest and international sanctions by taking extreme measures against the black opposition, repudiating South Africa's foreign debt, seizing foreign assets, and stopping foreign currency flows. 2. The Rhodesian scenario: an intractable guerrilla war wears down white resolve and ends in a political settlement with major concessions to blacks. 3. The Algerian scenario: increasingly repressive measures by the white regime only steel the resolve of blacks to perpetuate violence; CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 1. V 11 f I U L 11 I 1 h L security forces always maintain the upper hand, but their actions also swell the ranks of blacks bitterly opposed to any compromise; a crisis among whites over government tactics eventually results in complete victory for blacks. 4. Following intensified black unrest, the white regime averts an all-out race war by reaching lasting compromise with blacks (this scenario is based on the belief that Afrikaners are "survivors": once they see the choice is between survival under black rule or destruction, they will seek a settlement). 7 CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 SUBJECT: South Africa: Comments on The Washington Post Series Distribution: Original -- NIO/Africa to forward to the DCI 1 -- NIO for Africa 1 -- National Intelligence Council 1 -- DDO/Africa 1 -- PDB Staff 1 -- Intelligence Liaison Staff 1 -- Chief, DDI/PES 1 -- Director of African and Latin American Analysis 1 -- Research Director, ALA 2 -- Production Staff, ALA (one sourced copy; one clean copy) 4 -- OCPAS/IMD/CB 5 -- Africa Division, ALA 2 -- ALA/AF/S 4 -- 25X1 ALA/AF/SI I (6 January 1985) 25X1 CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 THE WASHING m, PosT SIPtDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1985 BLACK POWER, WHITE CONTROL SOUTH AFRICA'S YEAR OF STRUGGLE ASSOGA I F U PRESS Black youth takes aim with a stone in township near Cape Town in August. Unrest Pierces Cocoon On R Minority Political, Fiscal Vulnernability Exposed First of three articles damaged this country's economy, By Glenn Frankel %aAngton Post Foreign Service JOHANNESBURG-It is morn- ing in the largest city in South Africa, a country torn by racial strife that has claimed about 1,000 lives during the past 16 months. But the scene here looks a lot like St. Louis or Cleveland, not at all like Beirut or even Bel- fast. Blacks and whites share the sidewalks. They carry briefcases, newspapers and shopping bags, not pistols or rocks. The trains are on time. Traffic lights are working. Tine ba::ks are opt::,, is the stock exchange. The o:,iy po- 'ice in sight are on traffic duty, not riot patrol. This portrait of tranga?ility can ae Viewed every working morning :u the business districts of every, r city in South Africa. It is tTing, puzzling-and in many ways misleading. For below the mace. out of the sight of most of !Ae 5 million whites who rule this son ft. South Africa's founda- tions are beginning to crack. bck unrest and protest have done permanent harm to its stand- ing abroad and threatened its vital links to the West. They have de- railed, and very likely destroyed, the white government's carefully constructed strategy of limited political change. At the same time, they have helped build the confi- dence of blacks that time is on their side and that three centuries of white rule may be coming to an end. But the main achievement of the black unrest and protest thus far has been more subtle: they have managed, for the first time in a generation, to pierce the protec- tive cocoon of power, privilcgr. and silence that the apartheid sv,- tent has built around South Afri- ra's whites. They have exposed an t1ro11o11lic aid political vulnerabil- ity that this society had long man- aged to conceal-and in the pro)- cess have damaged white morale and shaken one of the world's most entrenched governments. The damage at this point is mostly economic; the state's for- naidabTe military and police power remains entirely intact. The se- curity forces have managed to %YI:MA White., blacks share cseaia--r in .Johannesburg shopping center in October. confine almost all of the unrest tv the bleak, segregated [o u sflips that : ing `;ou:?t Africa's cities like a noose. By any measure, the guv- erumeut looks virtually immune to violent overthrow. But for the first time, there is a tension Ind contradiction between the state's military and economic power. Unbridled use of the for- mer-whether it be the deaths from police fire of 20 blacks in the eastern Cape Province township o' Langa last March or the exer- cise of extraordinary powers un- t?.et the five-ntonth-old state of emergency-causes direct, mea- surable harm to the latter. "When you look at the basic power equations and at the hard core of state power, probably nothing much has changed," said Hermann Giliomee, one of the country's most noted political sci- See SOUTH AFRICA. A24, Col. 1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 - The Washington Post 29 December 1985 entists. "But what makes 1985 dif- ferent. is it spelled out for whites what. may be in store the longer they hold out." - 1111tris three-part series, written by a correspondent who has witnessed fi nithand the conflict between black power and white control, seeks to took back at South Africa's year of struggle to define what has changed aid sift for clues about the future. k was a year when the young blacks of this country's segregated townships challenged the _ white .government for control of their streets. In the process, western banks, corporate board rooms. and even the White House joined in ac- tions that shook the government. It was also a year of increasing polarization in which the middle ground between the government and its radical foes shrank dramat- kelly. Political moderates on both sides found their constituencies and credibility eroded along with their ability to influence events. South Africa now seems to have stepped down a long, twisted road. An older generation of leaders of both the government and its main black opposition is soon to step down, and a younger one looks all too ready to continue their war. Although the death toll remains -.comparatively low, a process of self-destruction has. set in that could lead to a tragedy as large and con- vulsive as the liberation war that claimed as many as 1 million lives in Algeria a generation ago. -._ This series begins with South Africa's whites, who first came to these shores 333 years ago and gradually developed their own Af- rican-tinged culture and vernacular. -'These Afrikaners, who were the first white settlers on the African continent, who consider themselves as much a part of Africa as black natives and comprise 60 percent of South Africa's whites, have man- ageQ to cling to. power long after whites in the rest of the African continent have relinquished it and moved on. Earlier Crises Overcome They have overcome political crises before. After the mass pro- tests of 1960 and the Soweto riots of 1976, many believed white rule was on the verge of collapse or dra- matic change. But as Oxford histo- rian Richard W. Johnson noted after the Soweto uprising. "The most striking feature of the demise of white South Africa is that it has constantly been prophesied and that it has not come about." This year has not brought about the demise of white rule, but it has s en new holes in the once solid facade of white power. After -dec- ades of knowing exactly who they were and where they were going. South Africa's white rulers now sees[ to have lost their sure grip. Tbey are trapped in a crisis that --took them by surprise and each :-move they make seems only to en- scare them further. - i now have recanted. As Anthony The July 21 state of emergency. Bloom, chairman of the Premier designed to restore order and rally I Group, a major holding company, :.white - support; led to - more- deaths and, considerable international crit- put it, most are "unwilling to stand e on up and be seen in open conflict with l f ti reez 1 par a w icism. The Sept. debt repayments, designed to sta- bilize the country's plummeting currency, the rand, and keep for- eign capital inside the country, un- dermined investor confidence and failed to strengthen the rand. Charges of police torture * and brutality and the recent dismissal of treason charges against leaders of the opposition United Democratic "Front have exposed the govern- ment to further international con- demnation. Pretoria's plan for converting its military domination of the southern :Africa region into new diplomatic ties has collapsed following reve- lations that its military clandestine- ly aided Mozambican rebels in vi- olation of 'its peace accord with the 'Maputo government. Even its once ironclad relationship with a sympa- - the Afrikaners' most feared oppo- tbetic Reagan administration has nent. By establishing a huge, bloat- veered toward collapse. ed bureaucracy to administer itself, - Faced with this reality, some apartheid offered economic deliv- whites have drawn radical conclu- erance to Afrikaners, awarding -sions and begun to contemplate the them the incomes and job security prospect of a black-majority govern- they had never enjoyed under Eng- ment, perhaps even one led by the lish rule-an estimated 46 percent outlawed African National- Con- of white workers are employed di- gress, the main black resistance rectly or indirectly -by the govern- movement. Some white business i ment. - leaders and liberal politicians openly defied President Pieter W. Botha by Structures of Apartheid journeying to Lusaka, Zambia, to -?ieet with ANC leaders. By establishing independent tn - But most whites still appear to bal "homelands" where blacks the- believe they can hold on to power oretically could enjoy full political indefinitely. Recent surveys indi- rights, apartheid provided an elab- cate that more than 80 percent of orate, although transparent, moral Afrikaners still support laws pre- justification for its cruelties. serving segregated schools and res- But, like the political party that idential areas and that more than 60 ? created it, apartheid has run out of percent of whites believe black rule steam. The costs of the bureaucra- is not inevitable. cy, bearable during the boom years Most whites are totahy oblivi- of the 1960s and early '70s, have ous," said the Rev. Nico Smith, a grown too burdensome for an econ- Dutch Reformed minister whose omy. under stress. The need for m,?n pia[ t tht yNl in oS;Jka skilled labor to service the sophis- ticated economy of 1985-South with a group of church leaders was Africa is estimated to be short as blocked by the government. "The . many as 500,000 skilled workers- more intelligent ones are aware has grown too great - for a system something is wrong but they don't expressly designed to smother know what. They have become cap- black achievement, not nurture it. Wes of their own structures." Others have sought to fill the leadership gap with little success. White conservatives, who formally broke with the ruling National Par- ty in 1982 to take an even tougher si xl, made some gains in recent Vartiamentary by-elections, but few analysts believe they will pose a major threat to the government by when the next general,elec- tions are likely to occur. Page Z of L The business community, frus- trated by the growing economic crisis, also has sought greater in- fluence. But business, which is dom- inated by the English-speaking white minority, lacks both the lev- erage and the will to challenge the government. Most business spokes- men supported Botha's new consti- tution in 1983 and welcomed the state of emergency although many government." White politics look unglued pri- marily because the radical ideology that held it together for two gen- erations is dying-and the new ide- ology designed to replace it is still- born. Apartheid was more than a set of laws enforcing racial segregation. It was a total system, designed by the Nationalists, who came to power in 1948, to enshrine South Africa as an Afrikaner nation by preserving for them permanent political dom- ination: It became for Afrikaners what Israel, founded the same year, was for Jews-a homeland and the fulfillment of a biblical dream. By fettering blacks in laws lim- iting their mobility, employment and education, apartheid weakened Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 29 December 1985 Page 3 of 7 'hack unrest and protest aave pierced the cocoon {pvwer, privilege and dente that the :purtheid system has wilt around South Ifrica s whites. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 29 December 1985 Page S/ of 7 Similarly, the party's visionaries and true believers of the '50s, who gned the apartheid ideal with missionary zeal, have been suc- sseded by gray men widely viewed by wtdtd critics here as more inter- sated in retaining power and prty- bge than in furthering a mythol- 4P76 iese are practical men, and the Soweto riots of 1976 and further - dents of unrest in 1980 convinced them 'that urban blacks would never At into the homelands scheme. In- stead they devised a plan to forge a Pew middle-class alliance with the black urban elite, bringing it into a stem , that would grant it privi- leges yet preserve Afrikaner con- trol. The first step was to be a new unicameral parliament with separate souses .for whites, mixed-race "Col- oreds' and Indians-but not for blacks,. whose exclusion was to be- ck'me one. of the issues triggering the unrest.' Later urban blacks would be included as well in some 'broader-national structure. . . Viewed ..through - the .peculiar ism of Afrikanerdom, the changes dramatic. Black trade unions were legalized and outdated ap- reservation of certain job cat- g es of apartheid, such as the egories to whites, were abolished. !tie permanence of urban blacks, previously considered temporary aoiourners in "white" cities, was acknowledged. Critics called the plan "neoapart- b id" because it entrenched Atiikaner rule even as it expanded its base. But its architects called it a "process," and themselves "reform- ers." The injustices of apartheid, inadvertent and otherwise, would be identified and ; eliminated-one at a time, in a painstakingly slow process that would have the twin "tales of being defensibly pro- gressive yet totally under white ''Apartheid is dead," they . pro- claimed, a statement belied and rid- iculed by'the profusion of laws and customs that keep South Africa's suburbs, bedrooms, classrooms and swimming pools strictly segregat- ed. What they meant was that apartheid no longer was necessary, that like a political Ice Age it would gradually, over decades, be thawed. - lee of Acceptable Change die pace of acceptable change is ltustrated in the government's de- cision to begin opening all-white downtown shopping districts to V wk businessmen, first announced i Feb. 28, 1984. Nearly two years beer, applications from local com- munities are mired in red tape by an unwieldy and conservative bureau- cracy and not a single district has been desegregated. - The new reform concept reached its apogee in November 1983 when whites approved by 68 percent an intricately designed new constitu- tion. But there was a missing ele- ment in- this political game, one whose absence went largely unno- ticed by whites even though it cast a shadow over the entire proceed- What was missing was the ap- proval of any of the ethnic groups to be affected. The idea of Colored and Indian referendums on the new con- stitution was scrapped when it be- came clear that neither group was likely to vote yes. The idea of a black referendum was never con- sidered. In effect, the white reformers had fallen victim to the ideology they, said they were discarding. Apartheid had taken urban blacks out of white areas, deposited them in townships or distant homelands, dehumanized and . depoliticized t`;: ice, leaving in white eyes strictly economic units-cheap, disposable labor. When black leaders arose, they generally wound up in jail or exile. So when the time came, not only was there no one to consult, but the very concept of consulta- tion, of enlisting black support, was radical and alien. New local governing bodies in the townships were supposed to win black support. Instead they gener- ated wrath. Taking office following elections with minuscule turnouts, they lacked legitimacy, yet pro- ceeded to assert their authority by seeking rent and utility rate in- creases. Those became the fuse to ignite a storehouse of explosive an- ger-The unrest began in the Vaal townships south of Johannesburg on Sept. 3, 1984-the same day the new constitution took effect. From then on, the two were inextricably linked: As the unrest continued and spread, the reform process began unraveling, then fell apart. With its undertrained and under- staffed police force-its 45,000 members nationwide are not much more than that of New York City- and its lack of reliable intelligence in the townships, the government found itself trapped between half- hearted reform and halfhearted re- pression. Each township shooting, every case of police overreaction exacerbated the problem, recruit- ing new black opposition, making ,it; impossible for black moderates to be seen talking -.to the govern ment. The state of emergency, .originally declared in 36 cities and towns; was an official admission that the situ- ation was out of control. . At first officials argued that noth- ing had changed, that .the - reform process was still on track. A few thugs and militants wereterrorizing the townships, keeping, moderates from the bargaining -table: Once they were removed from the-scene, ad would return. to twrmal,. they said: But more than .7,000 arrests under the emergency :have failed to achieve the. goal. Even some of the homeland leaders, the 'most collab- orationist of all blacks;' told Pres- ident Botha at a recent meeting in Pretoria that they cannot -be _ seen negotiating with the-government.-- As a, result, some white officials are now conceding publicly that something has gone badly wrong. "There certainly has- arisen a-very strong frustration "and- bitterness Amongst-black leaders," said-Gerrit ViIjoen, the Cabinet minister- in charge of education and black eco- nomic development, in'a' recent in- terview. `Viljoen not -only`blam'es manipulation by-radicals; but'also what he calls the "wrong . percep- tion" that the new tricameral par- liament meant the permanent ex- clusion of. blacks from national po- litical rights. He . - concedes .that South Africa is in a political crisis and that getting blacks to the table, as he put it, "is perhaps our biggest problem." Good Life in Suburbs Still, for a long time most whites felt no impact.. Perhaps the maid didn't come- to work one day. But the unrest was out of sight and out of mind. The. good life of the white suburbs was untouched. - But if apartheid protects whites, it also isolates them and leaves 'them dependent for knowledge on a government-whose -own sources.-4f -information' are:-less' than xrliable. -When' the shock came, both were unprepared. It hit where they were most vulnerable-the economy. It is one of the world's most top- "heavy and unbalanced economic systems; an inverted pytimict-dda fragile base.At the top'is?a=luxuiy, consumption-oriented economy, whose spending patterns reflect those of the United States, the so- ciety- white South' Africans most $eek to emulate. The old Boer War image of the' Afrikaner as spartan commando carrying all his posses- sions on horseback is as outdated as the American plainsman. South Af- rica until recently boasted 11 au- tomobile manufacturers, including a Mercedes=Benz plant and the only BMW factory outside Germany. There are swimming pools in most white backyards and even many of the poorest households keep black servants. . This aspiring version. of Beverly Hills sits atop a Third World society of nearly 25 million blacks-, whose average income,. birth' and., infant mortality rates. reflect th6se.7of its African neighbors. They . have. pro- vided the reservoir of cheap labor that for generations has - kept the Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 29 December 1985 Page S of 7 system functioning, but at the same Time-fhei~ own needs and-deniiands 4sve -, increased. geometrically .South-AfA+'h black education bud- ;/et alone. has : increased more than. f - , Q per :aver- the "last decade; aftou capita expenditure fore t la ks.: is; silt only one-seventh the Amount.for whites.... ? South . Africa has. Africa's most highly industrialized economy, but :1 remains. dominated by minerals ;such as gold, diamonds and coal, .which comprise 75, percent of its .export earnings. During the 1970s, dramatic -increases ?iw the price of Sold . papered ` over ~ cracks in the economy. But -gold' and-vther min-, era[ prices generallyhave stagnated in the 1980s . while-South' Africa's once-.robust- farming . sector has cane to resemble -some of its wea k- er African neighbors due to drought and.a decline in govAment sub- sidies: Diverse deniands from urban blacks, middle-class-whites and,the apartheid bure ucracy lave ':also caused ec 'be T rams. Despite a 25 to30 I y increase for civil servants'l . ear, white living standards in -real'-terms have fallen every year since 1981. Foreign' investment capital built South Africa, but it has been quietly Oowing out -of the couflfry since. the Soweto uprising 9t,2976. To fill the investment gap and finance its def- icit, Pretoria has=-looked mainly overseas for loan capital, borrowing to. the_.point where short-term for- eign debt hit $14 billion earlier this year. South :Africa, critics. warned, was mortgaging its future.: Still, .the: debt., posed no--immedi- ate problem so long as international bankers. ; were . willing to rollover the,-,loans. But . fast- August, they _abruptly stopped... -.:. _ _ Chase Manhattan, engaged in a kiad campaign to' reduce its lend- ing exposure overseas, led the way, Botha's emergency declara- t6onas its rationale in attempting.to calf in $350. million. in outstanding loans. Others lagged,' waiting for ,acme ;signal , that- the". government was 4warg:of the depth of .the crisis "and':piepared tolaunch dramatic reforms. Instead' Botha. -delivered -his -Durban speech, a- message of cold defiance. The banks suspended new loans, investment capital began a headlong flight and the govern- ment was forced to declare a debt Breeze and institute strict foreign exchange controls. No one knows how many billions have-fled =much of the loss will be al tfufly concealed- em corporate bal- ance sheets-but Reserve Bank Governor Gerhard de Kock has sug- gested the loss may approximate the size of South Africa's large cur- rent account trade surplus, which amounts to at least $2.5 billion this .ear. The loss, and the accompa- nying plunge of the South African rand-it has fallen farther and fast- er than..even the, devalued curren-. cies ' of African economic basket +ssssa such as Zambia and Tanzan- i .'-reAZcts a stunning drop in both foreign and, local business confr 'The barks accomplished in just two weeks what the entire interna- tional disinvestment movement couldn't do in five years,", said Pre- mier Group's Bloom. Economic Pain Whites have begun to feel the re- sult. The fall of the rand has meant steep price increases in imported goods-South Africa in essence is exporting capital and importing in- 'flation. A recent business seminar here was ? told the country 'is losing 1,000 jobs per week, and the gov- ernment is even contemplating lay- offs inside the formerly sacrosanct white civil service. For the first time in decades there are reports of hunger among white schoolchil- dren. - The apartheid system, de- signed to guarantee white comfort, now inflicts economic pain on some whites.. _ - The net result has seriously dam- aged white morale. Official emigra- tion statistics remain low, and many whites are trapped here by the sharp-decline of the rand. - If they left now,' their assets would be worth less than half what they could buy only two years ago. Were the rand to regain even a fraction of its -former value, _ many believe white emigration wouktsoar. The -whites who can afford to leave now-'are those the . economy can ? least afford to` lose. They in- clude recent college graduates who have yet to accumulate assets yet have needed, marketable skills, and I older specialists being recruited by overseas corporations willing to make up the potential loss of mov- ing. In the past 18 months one es- timate is that at least eight of the ?30 best 'investment analysts on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange have quit and` moved abroad. Companies were also leaving- the American Chamber of Com- merce here estimated at least 20 American firms pulled out in the first eight months of 1985-until the government's Sept. 1 debt freeze made it prohibitive to pull out their assets. Many multination- als instead are said to be using bookkeeping maneuvers such as ii "transfer pricing," which involves the parent firm's overcharging for goods it sells to its South African subsidiary, to quietly move their money out of the country. De Kock has publicly conceded there is little he can do to prevent such practices. The financial crisis also has long- term implications for blacks, for it comes at a time when South Afri- ca's economy desperately needs to grow if it is to meet black aspira- tions without destroying white life styles. Most analysts believe the economy must grow at 5 percent annually just to stay even with the estimated 300,000 new job seekers each year. Black unemployment, according to University of Cape Town researchers, already has passed 25 percent and in depressed areas such as Port Elizabeth it ex- ceeds 50 percent. Yet this year the gross national product is projected to decline nearly 2 percent. Faced with these stark economic realities, an increasing number of businessmen are calling for a return to strict government controls on imports, an artificially fixed rand price and even tighter restrictions on foreign exchange. Others argue convincingly that such measures would be a first step toward a siege economy. South Africa could come to resemble Africa's largest eco- nomic..sick man, Nigeria, which -boasts huge loan defaults, declining agricultural productivity, a thriving black .'market in currency and chronic corruption in its massive bureaucracy. Government supporters point out that while white morale may be down, white will to rule remains, as does the military and police power to enforce that will. "We've had tur- bulent times but the government is still firmly in control," said Carl Noffke, a former South African dip- lomat who now heads the Institute for American Studies at Rand Afrikaans University here. "There may even be' a drastic decrease in our standard of living and in social services for blacks-but South Af- rica can survive." Other observers do not dispute South Africa's ability to hang on, but contend that the price of exclu- sive white control will continue to rise. `Period of Attrition' "What we're looking at is not an economic collapse," said one ana- lyst, "but a long period of attrition where the economy is eroded steadily and irrecoverably. It's very likely that those who leave, compa- nies and people, will never come back." But whether whites, swathed in protective layer$ of privilege and complacency, recognize how much is at risk is an unanswered question. Outside of business and liberal cir- cles there still appears to be little sense of urgency. "They are prepared to change," said Afrikaner political scientist An- dre du Toit, "but only as far and as fast as absolutely necessary. The danger is that it will always be too little and too late." Special correspondent Allister Sparks contributed to this article. NEXT.- Conflict among blacks Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 29 December 1985 Page A of 7 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 29 December 1985 - Page Z of Z Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Second of three articlas '1 of u ,,Illu:nr~ l'(,%! MONDAY'.1-ECEit ER 30. Own Campaign At the same time, many black moderates have found themselves trapped between their often radicalized children and a police force many of them see as brutal and unyielding. The political middle ground has all but van- ished. Those who have been perceived as coop- erating in any way with the white authorities have lost credibility, support and, in some cases, theirlives. Still, while blacks have succeeded for the first time in a generation in seriously damaging white South Africa, they remain far from their goal of toppling white rule. The dream that many youths believe is around the corner remains elusive. And because -white military power remains -in- tact, there is no clear path to get there. Blacks have created an enduring crisis, not a revolution. By Glenn Frankel + "We have tested the regime to some extent, but we Wai,uigtnn Post F.wcign ScrvKC I - - 'have failed to realize our potential," said the Rev. Joe JOHANNESBURG-They are called the - Seoka, an Anglican cleric and deputy president of the "comrades," and in this year of struggle, burning Azanian People's Organization, a radical group whose and death they have emerged as the young loot Black Consciousness philosophy sets it apart from the soldiers of a largely leaderless, faceless move- multiracial stance of the ANC and the UDF. ment that has challenged the power of Africa's , "It is worrying to us," said a young activist, known as last white bastion. Lucas. in Crossroads, the bleak squatter community In their angry passion, their certainty and outside Cape Town that has been the scene of periodic their self-destructiveness, young urban blacks spasms of violence and police roundups for the past have set their own communities aflame-but year. they have also plunged white South Africa into "The power of the people is very strong, but we lack its most severe political and financial crisis since the means of confronting the regime. The regime is the the Boer War of 1899. one that does the shooting and the people do the dying." Aided by a government whose police tactics 1 To a great extent, Lucas and his fellow "comrades" consistently have undercut its expressed desire have become the heart and soul of the challenge to for "reform," they have succeeded in sustaining white rule, and there are groups who identify them- 16 months of civil unrest. They have discredited selves as "comrades" in virtually every major black ur- Pretoria's strategy of limited change, damaged ban center. Through inspiration and intjmidation-and, its economy and done permanent harm to its on occasion, through public killings-they have com- standing abroad. pelled fellow blacks, many of whom already support Unrest has spread from traditional urban (Heir goals, to acquiesce in their tactics. flashpoints like Soweto, Port Elizabeth and Cape The "comrades" are a mixed bag of militants, street Town, into townships and rural areas once noted thugs and bored teen-agers. In black communities like for their tranquility and conservatism. In the Soweto and Crossroads, many come from the long-or- g"anized network of street gangs that operate like little cpafias among the squalor and the poverty of the town- Elsewhere they are groups that have spontane- BLACK POWER WHITE CONTROL SOUTH AFRICA'S YEAR OF STRUGGLE Qus;y risen from early episodes of unrest. Massive un- employment among young blacks-it exceeds 50 per- process, blacks have revived and refined eco- t e. stifu inferiority of South Africa's segregated nomic weapons such as consumer boycotts that la-& 5, have jolted segments of-the whites mufllty in?r'"'fiietr politiirk,.as suggested by the name they have a way they never h~i.bae~3ouchesi before.u... b. _ for tlvemselve a ten,an amorphous .bie91d,0L The unrest also has helped revive the standing Ague socialism, black nationalism and, increasingly, of the organisation-wit .whieit many blacks:iden- 4ti-Americanism. But mostly they, define themselves-: tify most closely, the outlawed African National *r .their enemy-the "system" in all its hated manifes- Congress. Tbe.:ilaited Democratic .Froa4..the ?ons: the .schools,..police, soldiers and those blacks. internal politieal-movement that most nearly re- mho "collaborate" by working `for the -government-and- Elects the congress' concept of a future South - iI various agencies. Africa, survived?a year of harsh repression. - . Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Comrades' in- Townships Lead Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 30 December 1985 Page L of _7 Trough a process of alienation and polarization, black youths have lost their "sensitivity for lire," a white minister says. the "Necklace" Becomes a Symbol &:,Those who defy the will of the comrades face retri- liittion. Shoppers who buy goods from boycotted white Mores have been forced to drink liquid detergent or eat bw meat. A 20-year-old man was stoned and then irned to death in Soweto two weeks ago for holding a use party in violation of a "people's ban" on Christ- pastinte festivities. A young student nurse accused of freaking a strike at a Soweto hospital last month was ablaze. ?a The "necklace"-a tire filled with gasoline, placed sound the neck of a "traitor" and set on fire-has be- & me the macabre symbol of a generation that believes K has nothing to lose. Of the nearly 1,000 blacks who $ve died since the unrest began in September 1984, Ilmost one-third have been killed by other blacks, with Most of the remainder shot by police or soldiers. "We have gained the power," said Scipho, a teen-aged ctivist in Crossroads. "Everybody now is prepared to e. for his rights. People no longer feel threatened by e bullets. When they see soldiers and police they are eager.:=to confront then. They [the government[ have arrested our leaders but the situation just goes from bad to worse." Consumer boycotts of white businesses have been a key element in the rise of black power in perhaps a-doz- en urban areas. -In areas.-like eastern Gape Province, boycotts fonaeci.the-white mainess:ooaxenunity to ern.- cede with the governtneat lor. the release of local black leaders and for.the withdrawal of the Army from black townships. While organized by community groups linked to the United Democratic Front, the boycotts-have been most effective witaraiirmeak?by!~dhe-eomrades.` oftett-.roper ating with the taeit-cottaent of UDF leaders. in siany townships the comrades have used the boycotts to con- solidate their own hokl. Those blacks perceived as cooperating in any way with the white authorities have lost credibility, support and, in some cases, their lives. A year ago, Manielodi, a black satellite town on the outskirts of Pretoria, the seat of white rule, was a quiet, model community with a -well-defined and compliant black power structure:.Today it is under the de facto control of the comrades. School boycott committees decide when children go to school and when they stay home. A business boycott committee determines when and where people shop. A "people's court' even decides, in some cases, who lives and who dies. The government lost control of Mamelodi through a now familiar combination of hiack grievances and police repression. A school boycott organized by the UDF-af- filiated Congress of South African Students turned into a running street battle between stone-throwing youths and armed police when authorities tried to force students back to the classrooms. A black policeman was killed. Some children died and others were beaten by black po- lice, who seemed to residents to be out of control. Adults who intervened found themselves under as- sault. The car of Louis Khumalo. a pharmacist who or- ganized a parents' association. was blown up last May. n4 tober he wwraetamed without charge for a?weeic Last month, .IChunrato ,aid.. he was clubbed repeatedly. by a black police lieutenant on a Mamelodi street and later arrested and beaten while- in -custody by police who accused him of instigating unrest. Last week he was detained once more, along with the president of the town's chamber of commerce and-five-other-business-?? men and clerics, accused of helping to organize a boy- cott of white businesses. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 30 December 1985 Page 3 of 7 A target of blaek-violence in Kwazakele Township Pert kU"-iR a "Recklaee" buming-Jaktahme _st top, youths in uniform wield wooden rifles at a-funeral for blacks kiNed at Queenstown-in ea*. December. - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 30 December 1985 Page y of Z ....y::.tfri~~~~Rf-ii~2'--~ii~uiry'~$~''YB,~~?~'3:~1YN3~E. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 30 December 1985 Page S' of 7 The bitterness and the alienation came to a head Nov. 21 when a peaceful protest rally of nearly 50,000 resi- dents outside township offices dissolved into a bloody showdown. Rocks were thrown and police opened fire with shotguns and tear gas. At least 13 blacks died. The radicalization of Mamelodi was complete. - What happened in Mamelodi has been repeated in variations throughout South Africa's urban townships. It has been a process of alienation and polarization, Black youths, said the Rev. Nico Smith, a sympathetic. white butch Reformed minister who lives on the out- skirts of Mamelodi and leads a black congregation there, have "lost their sensitivity for life. They have reached the point of no hope." Smith recalled a recent meeting he had with some of the comrades in which he argued that they should return to school because, as he put it, "education is power. "They said it indicated how little i knew," said Smith. One youth described how his father, a high schooi pru, cipal with two university degrees, had been stopped at a police roadblock and hauled off to jail in front of his son because he had left at home his "pass," the identity book that all urban blacks are required to carry. The lesson, the youth told Smith, was that "even the most educated black man is treated like dirt-the schools are there to make us better trained slaves." In this charged and bitter atmosphere, the ties bind- ing parents and children have been tested and strained. If they hold, it is often because the parents recognize in their children the same discontent they carry in them- selves. "Young people are driven by the same anger and frustration that I feel," said Zodwa Mabaso, a UDF sup- porter and Soweto mother of four who spent four-.... " months without charge in detention last year. But they are more bitter. I can still feel sorry for the policeman, but that's not the same for young people. "Our children are no longer children. They become adults and we ourselves become the children. Even a 10-year-old will tell you there's no time for play and no time for school, only time to think about what you do if the policeman comes tonight." ' The discontent that underlies the unrest had sat like unfused dynamite in the pit of black souls since the Soweto uprising of 1976. Ironically, it took an act of government "reform" to set it off again. The uprising was one of a series of events that grad- ually pushed Pretoria's planners away from classic apartheid, South Africa's system of white domination, toward a new concept that would include an alliance between the white government and an identifiable black urban elite. Whites would remain the senior partners, but the right of local self-government, home ownership and even a form of citizenship would be bestowed upon a black middle class. Give them a stake in the system, the argument went, and a network of conservative black professionals, businessmen and local officials would arise that would defend the status quo. The government's black foes quickly recognized the strategy as a threat to their efforts to build a united opposition. When Pretoria announced the first phase-a new constitution granting limited political rights to Indians and r'ilxed-race "Coloreds" and a new plan for local government in black townships-oppo- nents mobilized. Activists took advantage of a loosening of the state's usually tight grip on political dissent to form the United Democratic Front. Moderates such as Zulu Chief Gatsha Buthelezi also mounted a strong cam- paign against the new "dispensation." They failed to defeat the constitution at the -ballot i box-a whites-only referendum approved it by a--re- sounding margin. But the activists were more success- ful in the streets of black townships. - The wave of violence began Sept. 3, 1984r in Shar- peville, the sane township where 69 blacks had been cut down by police fire in a famous incident 24 yearn earlier, and one of the first victims was the black deputy.- mayor. After police opened fire on -demonstrators, . a mob descended on Sam Dlamini s house, hacked him to death at his front door; then dragged his body to-his car y and set it ablaze. Five other kcal councilmen died in similar fashion in other townships in the region. The pattern was set. From then on; as the unrest spread from town to town, the targets almost. always included blacks identified with "the system." Black po- licemen, town councilmen, alleged police informers- all were singled out, their houses burned, their shops looted, their lives put at risk. The idea, as a young activist in the-'East Rand town-. ship of KwaThema put it, was to make them "feel the same pain that we are feeling." The effect was to un- dermine and wreck the incipient deal South Africa's white rulers had hoped to forge with an urban black middle class. - Perhaps the biggest winner in the unrest is an organ- ization that had little role in initiating it-the African National Congress. Leaders of the congress have been in jail or exile since the organization was outlawed in 1960 after the Sharpeville Massacre. The low-level sabotage campaign they have been waging against the government seemed to reach a dead end in early 1984 when South Africa signed a nonaggression pact with Mozambique, the black Marxist state that had provided the main spring- board for ANC attacks. With its main operatives ex- pelled from Maputo and with President Pieter W. Botha received as a reformer on his June tour of Europe, the ANC appeared to retreat into a sullen shell. Drfodion to the ANC But even at its lowest moment, the ANC had a crucial weapon in its depleted armory -black devotion. Many looked to it as the only organization willing to mount a military challenge, however small or ineffective, against white rule. Older blacks based their loyalty on the memory of the organization's mass protests in the 1950s, while the young idealized a movement they had never seen and leaders they had never heard. "Where are you, Oliver Tambo?" go the words to one of the many freedom songs that resound at funerals for victims of the violence. It goes on to plead with the ANC leader for machine guns and bazookas to kill white soldiers. "We are waiting for you to lead us to freedom." The congress was quick to react to the unrest with calls for youths to attack "enemy personnel" and render the black townships "ungovernable." In some areas, mostly around Cape Province, the ANC's traditional stronghold, congress operatives have played a major role in planning attacks on policemen and organizing actions such as boycotts. Elsewhere its role has been mostly inspirational, its calls for insurrection usually at least one step behind events. Recent South African visitors to Lusaka, white businessmen and liberal politicians, have come away with the impression that the:ANC's leadership fears that the anarchy on township streets is out of its control. There are at least two contrasting sides to the ANC as seen from South Africa, and the organization is consid- ered to have `lternated smoothly between them this year. The side the businessmen saw in Lusaka is that of moderation and reasonableness. It is the same one Ol- iver Tambo presented to Cape Times editor Anthony Heard in the interview Heard published here in Novem- ber in defiance of South African law. Tambo stressed the movement's hopes for a nonracial South Africa where "everybody's property is secure." Violence could be suspended and negotiations with the government could begin, he said, as soon as Pretoria de- monstrates its readiness by releasing imprisoned ANC leader Nelson Mandela and other political prisoners, lift- ing the state of emergency, pulling troops out of the townships and ending the ban on-the-ANC. : .- "There is always the possibility- of a truce," said Tambo. "It would be very, very easy if, for example, we started negotiations." Those deftly wordedsfatements have helped'to drive a new wedge into the once rock-solid white community here and to nurture doubts among some whites about their government's ironclad refusal to release M ndela or talk to the ANC until it denounces violence, cuts all ties to-Comtttunists and submits, in Botha's words, to "constitutional means."- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 30 December 1985 Page 6 of 7 ANC's Violent Side . The other side of the ANC is more radical and more violent. Its voice can be heard on Radio Freedom, broadcast from Ethiopia. Tanzania and Zambia, urging blacks not only to "eliminate enemy agents within our community," but to take the struggle into white sub- urbs. "Let them feel that the country is at war," in- structed an Aug. 2 broadcast from Addig Ababa. Other broadcasts encouraged black maids to attack the homes of their white employers. The ANC's military wing has dramatically stepped up the number of its attacks inside South Africa-this past year-122 as of Dec. 15 compared to only 44 for all of 1984, according to the Institute of Strategic Studies at the University of Pretoria. Among them was the recent land-mine explosion that took the lives of six white wo- men and children in a northern farming community near the Zimbabwean border. Such attacks are too infrequent to terrorize the white community into submission or to do major economic dam- age. They tend instead to have the opposite effect-unit- ing whites behind retaliatory raids into neighboring states and the government's no-talks policy. Among blacks, however, the attacks are widely ap plauded as one of the few ways whites can be made to feel some of the same despair that permeates the town- ships. "There is a greater respect for the ANC," says Lucas, the young Crossroads activist. "Wherever you hear the word ANC, people listen." There is evidence that even blacks in more conser- vative rural areas believe the violence is justified in fighting white rule. A recent survey of 120 school teachers and civil servants in Lebowa, a nonindepen- dent "homeland" in the northern Transvaal, found that 78 percent approved of student boycotts and other ac- tions even when they lead to violence. "Even damage to buildings, injuries to people and oth- er forms of physical violence are mostly described as the inevitable consequence of apartheid," wrote Johan i Malan, a white anthropologist who conducted the survey. "The general contention is that if less boycotts and vi- olence occur, the government will not be embarrassed enough to consider the dismantling of apartheid." The Soviet Bloc provides the ANC with most of its military hardware, and analysts estimate there are about a dozen members of the small South African Communist Party on the ANC's 30-member National Executive Council. .lBut Tambo, himself a noncommu- nist, centrist figure, has been careful to keep the move- ment broad-based and flexible, emphasizing his prag- matism to western governments and businessmen at events such as the private dinner he held with Amer- ican corporate leaders in New York earlier this year. Again, the politically moderate tones of Tambo con- trast with the strident Marxism displayed by such in- formation organs as Sechaba, the ANC's monthly mag- azine published in East Germany. As the struggle con- tinues and Tatnbo and other older nationalists are re- placed, many analysts believe the congress inevitably will shift farther to the left. While the ANC has gained stature this year, political moderates identified to any extent with the government have been the biggest losers. The Labor Party, once the foremost political movement of mixed-race or Col- ored South Africans, is widely believed to have lost much of its urban constituency because of its partici- pation in the new constitution's tricameral Parliament. When Colored students in Cape Town stepped up a series of schoolboycotts in September, the-party's min -;: ister of education closed. the schools for nearly a month _. and fired dozens of activist teachers. As a result, the - party has been-note closely: identified with the-govern- ment it once bitterly opposed. _ Similarly, Zultt.Chief Buthelezi, whom many white-,:--:-- moderates seeae-the black leader they can most readily bargain with, found himself at war with the -ANC and? supporters of. the Uniited Democratic Front, who -ac- cused him of being a "puppet" of the government. ? Buthelezi preaches nonviolence, but members of his Inkatha cultural movement formed vigilante commit-. tees and participated in the factional fighting that rocked Durban's townships in August with at least 70 deaths. The Zulu groups, armed with traditional clubs and spears, operated with the tacit consent of white- police, who stood aside while they restored 'order.' His critics contend that Buthelezi someday will be enticed into playing the same collaborationist role that Methodist Bishop Abel Muzorewa played in preindepen= dence Zimbabwe. But Buthelezi has held back, strongly criticizing the Botha government and refusing to be' seen negotiating until a minimum set of conditions, in? cluding the release of Mandela, is met. He is seen as more likely to end up in the same role's as another Zimbabwean nationalist, Joshua Nkomo, who. could not expand his strong regional following into a national power base. Even white liberals have begun to have second thoughts about Buthelezi. The trips to Lusaka to meet the ANC, the arch-rival of Buthelezi's Inkatha organ- ization, were considered a blow to the chief's stature. So too was the failure of a much publicized alliance for a-- national constitutional convention launched by Buthe- lezi and the white Progressive Federal Party. The movement failed to enlist black support outside Inkatha after the ANC reportedly sent word that it be lieved the alliance "premature." Buthelezi's supporters eventually resigned from the steering committee of the alliance, which is still searching for black moderates. - The failure of the movement was another indicatioa. of how thin the political middle ground has become here for both whites and blacks. It also illustrated the control the ANC can wield. But while the ANC-UDF phalanx may be ascendant, blacks are still far from united. The battles between the UDF and Buthelezi, between the UDF and supporters, of Black Consciousness, and the endless search for "traitors" and "collaborators" have had a corrosive ef- fect. Even older UDF leaders have found themselves at times under attack from the young comrades for preaching an unacceptable brand of moderation. The result is a movement that at times seems lead-, erless and directionless, a weakness some black stra- egists themselves acknowledge. "We have gotten caught up too much in our political differences and weaknesses," says Seoka of the Azanian' People's Organization. "Organizations become ambu-. lances. They go into an area after people start dying and they leave as soon- as things calm down. We still have a long way to go." Special correspondent Allister Sparks contributed to this report NEXT: Scenarios for an uneasy future Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 30 December 1985 Page Z_ of 7 BLACK POWER, WHITE CONTROL Blacks have revived such economic weapons as consumer boycotts. Above, a parch in Johannesburg SYG" in June. At least six protesters were killed and scores injured when marchers clashed with police Nov. 21 in Maamelodi. i Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88G01116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 31 December 1985 T11E WASHINGTON Post TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1985 Page I of G Grim Scenarios for Future Last of three articles By Glenn Frankel Wxhington Pmt Foreign service JOHANNESBURG-On a sunny Friday afternoon in late October a pickup truck pulled up beside a bus stop in downtown Jo- hannesburg. Several black youths jumped out and joined a small band gathered there. They grabbed bags of rocks and bricks from the back of the truck and headed for nearby shops. It was over in a matter of minutes. About 20 white-owned stores were hit, windows BLACK POWER, WHITE CONTROL SOUTH AFRICA'S YEAR OF STRUGGLE smashed, goods in a few cases looted. By the time police arrived, the youths had melted away into the crowds on the sidewalks. In the 16 months of rifts, burnings and killings that have descended upon South Af- rica, the incident was little more than a foot- note. one of a handful this past year in which Vmc k violence briefly spilled over into white areas. But in its premeditated organization and swift execution, it seemed like some- thing more-perhaps a prelude, a warning of things to come and of a day when blacks might take to the streets of white South Af- rica armed with guns and explosives, not just rocks. Urban terrorism, as reflected in that in- cident and in last week's bomb blast that killed seven whites at a shopping center south of Durban, is one of the likely direc- tions that analysts believe the struggle for South Africa could take if it is not resolved peacefully within the next few years. There are many scenarios; indeed, pre- dictions about the fgture have become al- most a cottage industry here, reflecting the deep anxiety of whites and the great expec- tations of blacks. There is no agreement on a timetable. The young "comrades" on the streets of Mack townships believe their liberation is only a year or two away. Their elders speak .,dj pows, or rn Tbeeeiavirtwillyno one ? is the Mack community who expects to be t!rWby w16tes in the year 2660. Anzmg whites, tlr firture is more hazy, although there is general agreement that So" Africa will not remain the same. Many be !eve the unrest may be a chronic phe- sernenon and that the economic slide that has begun, and thert9E-toreign firms and innextinent - capital, is irreversible. Many Soath African firms Have begun making glens to cope with further economic sanc- tions, which they beieve are inevitable albuld liberal governments come to power Urban Terrorism, Economic Decline Likely to Continue in the United States, Britain and West Ger- ment falls. but it is succeeded not many. by black-majority rule but by a re- But the majority of the country's 5 million = gime composed of extreme right- whites do not seem ready to accept the idea wing elements of the ruling Nation- that black rule is inevitable. Many believe ;,l Party with strong support from the military and police. they can hold out indefinitely, albeit with a reduced standard of living and a higher, but Unfettered by the need to placate tolerable, level of violence. western critics, the new govern- ment proceeds to imprison, even The attitude among many whites toward execute, the country's internal "en- South Africa's approximately 22 million emies." It authorizes new and larger blacks, says political columnist Ken Owen, is military incursions into neighboring that "we're giving up the notion we can rule states to eliminate South African them, but they won't rule us." Much of that insurgents based there. It also attitude stems from the privileged economic strikes out against the West by re- and social position whites enjoy in South Af- F pudiating the country's debt, seiz- rica and their fear of losing their status and ing foreign assets and stopping for- their property under black rule. But for the eign currency flows. South Africa Afrikaners, who make up 60 percent of the hobbles into the 21st century under whites here and who control the govern- economic and political. siege-but ruent there is another, deeper fear-that of forfeiting their des- ' tiny as a nation, of becoming just another minority group in a country that is no longer theirs. 'Afrikaners believed they had a divine right to nationhood and that they would'always be vulnerable to hostile forces around them until they had a homeland of their own. The apartheid system of racial dom- )nation was designed to preserve *d justify that homeland. To dis- sriantle it now is to surrender a dieam and to risk survival as a ped- .-pleand a culture. Many Afrikaners ',would rather partition the country ?nd seal themselves off in a small enclave than face such a prospect. :4 "Afrikaners are not ready to en- xertain the notion of giving up pow- 'er," said political scientist Hermann 'Giliomee. "The game is not about .apartheid, it is about power. If you lose power, everything is up for ;grabs. In. the end, whites will keep ion shooting to protect their way of fife, or they will pay others. to do it." Assuming white intransigence .,will prevail, planners for one major 'multinational firm have drawn op a ;grim but perhaps plausible scenario: - ; The noose of international Banc- -tons slowly tightens around a de- Iiant government, the economy con- tinues to deteriorate and the result- ing growth of black unemployment feeds township unrest. Black insur- gents step up attacks on whites and ? an increasing number with market- able skills or liberal beliefs flee w"seas. Eventuatlp, the govern- sull under white rule. Searching for Alternatives A small but growing number of white moderates, believing they are faced with such a nightmare, are desperately searching for alterna- tives. They have bowed to the in- evitability of black rule, even under ? the outlawed African National Con- gress, the main black resistance movement, but many see no path short of a bloodbath to get there. Their conversations often are !aced with apocalyptic visions. The Rev. Nico Smith, a Dutch Reformed minister, spoke of "a ca- tharsis that will purify the entire cotfntry." Hennie Bester, one of the Afrikaner students at Stellenbosch University who, like Smith, was prevented by the government from traveling to Zambia to meet with the ANC, said he longs for "some- thing dramatic" within the next year or two, something that would shock and alter white thinking. "Otherwise," Bester warned, "we are looking at a -protracted age of darkness, a civil war in which the whites,-the Afrikaner and the Eng- lish, will lose whatever they have." One reason the future is so un- certain is that both the government and the ANC are nearing a gener- ational change of leadership. South African President Pieter W. Botha is 69; ANC President Oliver Tambo, 68: and Nelson Mandela. the congress' impriwined leader. 67. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 rrll. nu ~Il III' '..V11 UVJI. 31 December 1985 Page 7. of G While Botha stays in office, the government is likely to continue its two-pronged strategy of cracking loam harshly on unrest and on po- ideal dissidents while pursuing its } of messered change. The state of emergency, which Botha first declared July 21, may be dropped, but many analysts expect same of its more stringent provi- sions to be retained, including the lRw - immunity for police and military actions taken to quell un- rest and the ban on unauthorized press coverage. When Parliament reconvenes at the end of January, Botha is likely to offer a legislative package that could include the restoration of black citizenship, changes in the eountry's restrictions on black movement, a legalized end to forced I removals and new black property rights, all of which he unveiled in a series of double-edged, semantically dense speeches this year. He is also expected to give some indication of his plans for a new con- stitution that would finally give blacks a political role in the nationa! government, although probably as part of a racially based confedera- Uon that virtually no black leaders outside the nominally independent "homelands" would find acceptable. Botha: Angry Politician Botha is a visceral politician, tough, angry and at times unpre- dictable. Some analysts believe he may call a snap election next year-he doesn't have to hold one antlt 1989-in an attempt to hold a solid parliamentary majority for his National Party before its support is eroded further by a worsening economy and black violence. He may even call a white referendum to ask white support for whatever new constitutional plan Pretoria devises. Once an election is out of the way, Botha could then retire grace- fully, without appearing to have been hounded from office by the critics he so clearly despises. He is unlikely to make the kind of dramatic concessions that most black leaders believe are necessary to defuse the crisis. Those would include releasing Mandela and oth- er longtime ANC political prisoners, legalizing the organization and invi- ting its exiled leaders to return home for talks. Botha has said he will not make awl a move until the ANC leader- ship denounces violence, disowns Its ties to South Africa's small Com- munist Party and submits to"con- attMutional means." Others believe w-canaot afford a dramatic gesture because the government would risk losing control and the political ini- tiative to the ANC-and control is crucial 'to the cautious, iiicremental process Pretoria is wedded to. UNITED PRESS I' i ERNATIONAL/REU f LR Black nationalist Winnie Mandela, right, argues with South African police as they arrest her for defying an order banning her from her home in the Johannesburg suburb of Soweto. Story, A13. More likely is that the govern- ment will continue down its present path and hope that at some, point, after the radicals have been sub- dued by the police, black moderates will shed some of their natural dis- trust and come to Pretoria's bar- gaining table. Gerrit Viljoen, the Cabinet min- ister in charge of black affairs and education and one of those tapped as a likely contender for power when Botha retires, conceded in an interview that even the govern- ment's white constituents were "impatient." "They want dramatic steps," said Viljoen. "They want to know what's going to happen. There is definitely an impatience and a readiness 'on the part of the majprity of the elec- torate to get [on with] reform." Viljoen said he believes that "in the really short-term future," blacks will occupy "positions of power." Nonetheless, he added, the govern- ment is still committed to preserv- ing "group rights and group secu- rity," which he defined as "differ- entiated residential areas, educa- tion and some form of group rep- resentation in political structures." That means the presercttion of race class cation statutes. which define "groups" and specify their members, and of the Group Areas Act, which enforces segregation in housing and schools. It also means rejection of the principle of one per- son, one vote. Viljoen insists that all these mat- ters can be discussed with blacks and perhaps altered at the bargain- ing table. Everything is negotiable, be says, except for a commitment to nonviolence. But Botha himself ioc sent out different signals, tell. ing the Nationalist faithful at party ewpesses Mis year that Group t as and segregated schools were inviolable. Boycotts Likely to Go On None of this is acceptable to the vast majority of urban blacks, es- pecially to the hard, young "com- rades" who serve as the shock troops in the low=level insurrection that continues to boil in black and mixed-race townships. They have plans to make 1986 a "no-go" year for township schools in honor of the 10th anniversary of the Soweto ri- ots. It is also likely that blacks will continue to use and refine economic weapons such as the boycotts against white businesses that proved devastatingly effective in the, eastern Cape Province and parts of Cape Town this past year. The "comrades" and the black community organizations that fall under the umbrella of the United Democratic Front may have an ac- tivist ally in the newly formed Con- gress of South African Trade Unions, whose leadership has pledged a new era of labor activism. If so, it could mean an increase in strikes, even a coordination be- tween work absences and store boycotts that could further weaken South Africa's economy by with- holding the two most important contributions blacks make-their labor and their buying power. The ANC, convinced Pretoria is a long way from the bargaining table, appears determined to step up its insurgency. After vowing to con- duct a "people's war" at a consul- tative conference last June, the movement is beginning to hit at "soft" targets. Last week's shopping center bomb, planted in a wastebas- ket outside an ice cream parlor, was one of the first to have been aimed exclusively at white civilians. While the ANC has yet to either claim or deny responsibility for the blast, the incident suyVests a new mood of angry militancy following a South Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington post, 31 December 1985 Page 1 of G African as.assuwtion raid on refu- gees in Lesotho. That raid, in turn, followed a land mine explosion in the northern Transvaal that killed six whites. Malysts believe the ANC is still far from developing the disciplined *ftVkstiae --aetworks that could frtnnch a sustained guerrilla war or eboure a long-term tit-tor-tat [m- paign with the South Africans. Ru- ral warfare is unlikely because of South Africa's vast barren spaces and the long distances between its borders and population centers. But ti+e ANC is clearly moving in the direction of urban terror, with con- gress radio broadcasts from Ethi- opia and Tanzania calling for blacks to organize and expand a network of small military cells. The recurring theme is that blacks must begin to bring the struggle into white areas, to pierce the protective veil around the white community. "The whole country must go up in flames," said an August ANC broadcast from Addis Ababa. "Let l there be no peace in all areas." i The rhetoric suggests a future in which Afrikaner and-black nation- alists are locked in a death, grip that destroys them both and takes down several of South Africa's black neighboring states as well. But where most see intransigence and attrition, a few analysts see a glim- mer of hope in the psychology of the Afrikaner. Afrikaners are above all sur- vivors, who withstood years of hardship on the high, hostile pla- teaus of southern Africa. Once they see that the choice is between sur- vival under black rule or destruc- tion, this argument goes, they will settle. "There may be occasional epi- sodes of organized violence against Wbites, but I don't see the ANC sus- taining a major expansion of guer- rilla activity," said political scientist Tom Lodge, an academic authority on black resistance movements. "In the end, the regime will collapse from within, when the groups whose support it enjoys withdraw." The Rhodesian Example When considering the future, many South Africans look north to bababwe, the former Rhodesia, 14icb went through a seven-year struggle in which nearly 30,000 people died before blacks took pow- er. Like most historical analogies, it is imprecise and in some ways mis- leading. Landlocked Rhodesia's white population was tar smaller 'than South Africa's, as was its econ- omy. But in some ways it was less vulnerable to economic sanctions than South Africa, where 40 per- .sent of the gross nation l product is tied in some way to foreign trade. The international trade embargo on Rhodesia, which South Africa helped break, encouraged an eco- nomic boomlet for nearly, a dec- ade-tmtd gradually, combined with the assaults of black guerrillas, it began to wear. the country down. Nonetheless, the similarities be- tween these two white bastions still echo. One of white Rhodesian prime minister Ian Smith's top security aides, who still lives in Zimbabwe and insists upon anonymity, has some pertinent advice to offer white South Africa. He recalled that at one stage Rhodesian troops were killing 1,000 black guerrillas a month and were assuming they would quickly win the war. Bat at the same time, he said, black recruits were signing up with the guerrillas at the rate of 2,000 per month. "The measure cf your success is not the number you kill but by the number of recruits your enemy is getting," -said the aide. "For every guerrilla ' we killed we made- at least two new ene- mies." The aide had another piece of advice for South Africans: "You're better off settling it while you're ahead. We could have gotten a much better deal in 1971 than we got in 1979. Once things start going downhill you're in no position to negotiate anything except as a los- er." Analogy in Algeria But South Africans pondering the --future might also look much further to the north to Algeria, where Af- rica's most bitter and brutal inde- pendence war was fought. Again the parallels are imprecise. Algeria was a French colony, while South Africa is an independent na- tion, and there is no mother country to pull the plug on the Afrikaners the way the government of Gen. Charles de Gaulle finally put an end to French rule there. Before he did, as many as I million people died in eight years-1,000 times the num- ber killed so far in South Africa. But in other, less tangible ways, the Algerian nightmare has many frightening lessons to teach-and both sides in the South African struggle have gone there to learn. Before independence, South African police and soldiers were sent to Al- geria for training in combating ur- ban guerrillas and in the brutal in- terrogation techniques that the French refined. In recent years, ANC insurgents have received guerrilla training in camps outside Algiers. Heavy-handed repression, includ- ing the widespread use of police torture, was as common in Algeria as it is in South Africa. So, too. was the brutal response of the rebels to those branded as collaborators. Per- haps ene-third of all the deaths in - the -.war were Algerians killed by fellow Algerians-a statistic that grimly parallels South - Africa, where the same rough proportion of deaths in political violence has been the result of blacks, killing other blacks. The nature of the struggle also has eerie echoes. By any measure, France won the shooting war, grad- ually eliminating the guerrillas from urban centers and isolating them in small rural pockets. But it could never win the war for the loyalty of Algerians and, as in modern South Africa, every police or military op- eration that took civilian lives be- came a tool of radicalization and recruitment for the rebels.- . struggle finally triggered a crisis in French society similar to the one black activists hope to trig- ger in white society here. Lesson Learned Late The French found out too late what some whites in South Africa are just learning-that the elimi- nation or imprisonment of opposi- tion leaders may not crush a free- dom movement so much as remake it into a faceless and even more un- controllable force. When white businessmen in the eastern Cape region sought to ne- gotiate an end to this year's crip- pling economic boycotts, they found to their dismay that the black lead- ers they needed to approach were being held incommunicado. Until they were released there was no one to talk to. In his book, "A Savage War of Peace," British historian Allistair Horne described a process of cruel inevitability that began to grind away at Algeria, destroying any middle ground between the warring sides. "Once it took hold, there seemed no halting the pitiless spread of vi- olence," wrote Horne. "It seemed as if events had escaped all human control; often, in Algeria, the essen- tial tragedy was heightened by the feeling that-with a little more magnanimity, a little more trust moderation and compassion-the worst might have been avoided." Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 - .. I.V . 31 December 1985 Although the killing is still at a btv level. the same process of hu- man erosion appears to be taking hold in South Africa. Its shadow was evident earlier this month at two f .erals in widely different settings. llse first was the mass rally of 30.M ,gathered to bury 12 blacks ?~ by police in ' Mamelodi, a township on the outskirts of Pre- toria. South Africa's capital. There were emotional displays of anger, ANC banners and slogans and vows of revenge. But the most poignant moment came when a young father carried the small white coffin of his 2- month-old .baby. She had suffocated to death from the fumes of tear gas Fired by the police. Two weeks later, two almost identical white coffins were buried in Tzaneen, a small Afrikaner farm- ing town in the northern Transvaal. Inside were the bodies of an 8-year- old girl and her 2-year-old brother, who were among six whites killed when an ANC land mine blew up their pickup truck. Their mother was buried nearby. The ceremony was more subdued than at Mame- lodi, but the anger and the longing for revenge ran just as deep. It is likely that few participants at either ceremony could sense the invisible lines that ran from one fu- neral to the other, could see that the children buried at each had been the victims of the same war or that in death black and white were now, finally, equal. Nor would many at these funerals see that the war that claimed these small martyrs could be ended tomorrow if the will and the political nerve to do so could-be found. Until that happens, only one thing is certain: There will be many more funerals, more small white boxes, more victims of the struggle. !or South Africa. Special correspondent Allister Sparks contributed to this report. AGENCE FRANCE?PRESSE In a September speech, South African president Pieter W. Botha rejects negotiations with the outlawed African National Congress. He is viewed as unlikely to make the dramatic concessions that most black leaders believe are necessary to defuse South Africa's crisis. AeW471D PAM c.gTOS Sock violence briefly spilled over into Johannesburg twice in October. Tip, a white man flees a mob protesting the execution of Benjamin Meloise.above, an unidentified man- it aided after being beaten when.. he tried to stop looters in another outbreak later in the month. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 The Washington Post 31 December 1985 Page S of G Above, angry youths at a mass funeral this month for 12 black residents of Mamelodi, township near Pretoria killed by police during a demonstration in November, below, grieving family at funeral in Tzaneen for Jacobs van Eck and her two children, among six whites killed when an ANC land mine blew up their truck. Although the killing is still at a low level, a process of human erosion appears to be asking hold.... Its shadow was evident at these two funerals in widely different settings. Possibly, few participants at either ceremony could sense the invisible lines that ran from one to tie other. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006l1 J Page C of Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/24: CIA-RDP88GO1116R000901050006-1