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Dingo Firestorm

Page 29

by Ian Pringle


  Angry as he was, the general still held the fate of the new Zimbabwe firmly in his hands; he had the power to authorise a coup. He recalled:

  I had to weigh up whether we would make a Dingo-style strike with a few men against many thousands and with the countryside swarming with these people, who, by the accounts of the provincial commissioners, were fully on Mugabe’s side. Also, I was tipped off that our plan had been leaked to Mugabe’s men. Before seeing my commanders to give them my decision, I went off to see Boris Thomas, my Presbyterian minister. I didn’t tell him any details, just that I had to make a hell of a decision. He said I would be guided and I walked back to my office. I don’t always believe in proverbs, but there is this tiny proverb: ‘Don’t ever light a fire that you can’t put out.’

  When Walls was back in Milton Building in Salisbury, the anxious commanding officers of the RLI, SAS and Selous Scouts – Charlie Aust, Garth Barratt and Pat Armstrong, respectively – arrived to hear their commander’s decision.

  ‘I have decided,’ Walls told them, ‘that this will be lighting a fire which we can’t put out.

  ‘Charlie Aust, the RLI commanding officer, was shocked. He just wanted to get in there and kill the bastards, as did the others. Pat Armstrong was, I think, non-committal, and Garth Barratt looked as if he was expecting it, but I may be completely wrong. Anyway, Garth said, “So we do nothing?” I confirmed that we would do nothing.’

  Having made this historic decision, Walls drove to the Pockets Hill television studios to make an announcement to the Rhodesian forces that their job was to preserve the peace. ‘It came as a hammer blow to all the guys waiting to go and attack the assembly points. So I can understand why I was seen as the mongrel of the century, the traitor of the century,’ said Walls.

  Peter Walls made a brave decision, one that history has probably judged as the right one. Had the coup gone ahead, Rhodesia would probably have lost the very few friends it still had – and the fire would probably have eventually been unquenchable.

  By appointing Walls as his supreme military commander, Mugabe shocked his own commanders and surprised the world. It didn’t last long, however. Four months later, in August 1980, Walls gave an interview to the BBC and told the truth – that he had indeed asked Margaret Thatcher to annul the elections, although he didn’t reveal the contingent coup plan. Walls was either naive or deliberately precipitating a problem. In any event, he resigned his commission, which gave ZANU-PF all the ammunition it needed. Mugabe had a special piece of legislation drafted, enabling the state to strip Peter Walls of his birthright, the citizenship of the country in which he was born. The stateless general and his wife, Eunice, took exile in South Africa. He never returned. Peter Walls died in 2010.

  After Peter Walls’ resignation and deportation, Rex Nhongo (Solomon Mujuru) became commander of the Zimbabwe National Army, a position he held until going into private business in 1995. He died in 2011 in a fire on Alamein Farm, a 5 000-hectare spread near Beatrice, 70 kilometres south of Harare. Nhongo had forcibly seized the farm and its moveable assets from a white commercial farmer, Guy Watson-Smith, 10 years earlier, at the height of the land invasions in Zimbabwe.

  Norman Walsh stayed on in the Zimbabwe Air Force, rising to air marshal and commander in 1981; he played a vital role in developing the new air force. There was an unpleasant time when saboteurs, almost certainly operating from South Africa, blew up four brand-new British Hawk jets, five Hawker Hunters and a Lynx. Walsh’s chief of staff and colleague, Hugh Slatter, and five Zimbabwe Air Force officers were arrested and charged with sabotage, an offence carrying the death penalty. Walsh was deeply concerned and went to extraordinary lengths to support his officers.

  Slatter recalled: ‘Norman`s position was precarious to say the least, because although he realised that the charges against us were false and he felt the need to support his officers as commander of the air force, he also recognised that the CIO, Ushewokunze, the Home Affairs minister, and others were watching for one move that would allow them to brand him as part of the sabotage plan and an enemy of the state.’

  Walsh was not allowed access to the lawyers of his accused officers; he was under constant observation, with his phone tapped. He got round this by lying in the back of a car under a blanket. It was a huge risk, as he could have ended up in prison on the same serious charges. Slatter later said: ‘How many people do you know who would literally put their life on the line like that? I only know of one.’

  The High Court found the men innocent of all charges, yet they were promptly arrested again, reflecting the paranoia gripping the Mugabe government. Under intense international pressure, the men were eventually released and deported. But the fact that they, and many other air force officers, were prime suspects just because they were white soured things permanently.

  Norman Walsh resigned from the Zimbabwe Air Force that year and emigrated to Australia, where he lived until his death in 2010.

  Brian Robinson left the SAS shortly after Dingo, achieving the distinction of being the squadron’s longest-serving commander. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel and took over as coordinator of special operations at ComOps involving the SAS and Selous Scouts, a role Robinson carried out until the end of the war in 1980, when he became commander of 1 Zimbabwe Parachute Regiment.

  Robinson left Rhodesia later in 1980 to become an international arms-sales broker. He returned to his roots in Durban in 1984 as managing director and shareholder of an automotive company. In 2004 he became a military adviser to the United Arab Emirates until he retired a year later and returned to Durban, where he lives.

  Despite the pleas of Rex Nhongo and others for him to stay on, Peter Petter-Bowyer left the air force in May 1980, a month after Zimbabwe was born. He became managing director of three Shell BP subsidiary companies. The Iraqi Air Force heard of his skills and asked him to develop a cluster bomb for high-speed delivery from a fighter jet. PB accepted the challenge, resigned from Shell BP and moved to South Africa, where he successfully developed the CB-470 cluster bomb for the Iraqis. He also developed weapons for the South African Air Force before setting up a trading business and ultimately a manufacturing business of his own. He left Africa for England in 2002 and settled in Norfolk, where he lives with his wife, Beryl.

  Rich Brand left the Rhodesian Air Force in 1978, the year after Dingo, and, after a spell in the South African Air Force, emigrated to Las Vegas. He joined the flight department of Circus Circus, one of the main casino groups in the desert city, as an executive jet pilot. He soon realised that he wanted a career in gaming, so he started at the bottom, managing slot machines, and rose to general manager at Silver City Casino, part of the Circus Circus Group. But his passion for aviation never faded. With his considerable skill for building model aircraft – most apparent in the perfect scale-model, radio-controlled replica he built of the Percival Provost, in which he flew his first solo – Brand built some excellent full-scale aircraft, including a Super Eagle called Springbok, an Ultimate called Bateleur and a Rans S-16 Shekari called Flame Lily.

  Rich’s ultimate achievement was building a Giles G-202, named Panzer One after the callsign of No. 1 Squadron, adopted under Brand’s leadership. He made over 50 modifications to the G-202, in which he went on to win Reserve Grand Champion at the EAA AirVenture at Oshkosh in 1998. He participated as a pilot in the aerobatic show circuit in the US with his wife, Susan, also a pilot, who took part as commentator.

  A good example of Brand’s incredible eye for detail, a trait he was remembered for in the Rhodesian Air Force, is illustrated in an article that appeared in the March 1999 edition of Sport Aviation. Brand is discussing the application of seven coats of paint and primer to an aircraft he was building: ‘The finish is determined not by what you put on, but what you sand off. I went over every square inch of it with a magnifying glass, looking for pinholes before shooting the finishing coats.’

  After retiring from gaming, Rich continued to build aircraft. He completed a
Lancair Legacy, named Protea, in 2011. Its registration is N3QB. The letters ‘QB’ stand for Quintin Brand, his famous uncle who, in 1920, piloted the first flight from London to Cape Town.

  Glossary and abbreviations

  aileron accumulator: small tank on an aircraft that stores reserve hydraulic energy for the ailerons

  air-strike log: written air force record of an air-to-ground attack

  AK-47: Kalashnikov automatic assault rifle

  AKM: modernised Kalashnikov automatic assault rifle

  ANC: African National Congress

  BCR: Bronze Cross of Rhodesia

  Black Watch: the Royal Highland Regiment

  BSAP: British South Africa Police

  callsign: a combination of numbers, letters or words used to identify a unique radio transmitting station (a group of soldiers, an aircraft, a base, etc.)

  Can: Canberra aircraft

  Capewell: quick-release device to separate a parachute from its harness

  casevac: casualty evacuation

  Chimurenga: Shona for ‘resistance struggle’

  CIO: Central Intelligence Organisation

  ComOps: Combined Operations

  CT: Communist terrorist

  Dak: Dakota aircraft

  Dare reChimurenga: ZANU’s war council

  dispersal: aircraft parking and manoeuvring area at an aerodrome

  donga: gully or ditch

  DShK: Degtyarov–Shpagin Krupnokalibernyj, Russian-made anti-aircraft machine gun

  elevator: controls the pitch axis (nose up/down) of an aircraft

  ESM: Exemplary Service Medal

  FAF: forward airfield

  flechette canister: warhead carrying darts known as ‘flechettes’

  FN: Belgian-made light automatic rifle

  frantan: frangible tanks; form of napalm-based ammunition

  FRELIMO: Frente de Libertação de Moçambique (Freedom Front of Mozambique)

  G-car: troop-carrying helicopter

  G-force: gravitational force

  gook: slang for insurgent, terrorist

  HQ: headquarters

  int: military intelligence

  IP: initial point

  JPT: jet pipe temperature

  K-car: command car – helicopter gunship fitted with a 20-mm cannon

  LTT: locally trained terrorist

  LZ: landing zone

  MAG: Mitrailleuse d’appui général, general-purpose machine gun of Belgian manufacture

  mark one eyeball: in military contexts, the human eye

  MBE: Member of the British Empire

  MiG: Mikoyan-Gurevich military aircraft (Russian)

  MP: Member of Parliament

  NDP: National Democratic Party

  OAU: Organisation of African Unity

  OCC: Operations Coordinating Committee

  OLM: Officer of the Legion of Merit

  op/ops: operation/operations

  OP: observation post

  operations order: written battle plan

  PTS: Parachute Training School

  RAF: Royal Air Force

  recce: reconnaissance

  RF: Rhodesian Front

  RhAF: Rhodesian Air Force

  RLI: Rhodesian Light Infantry

  RPD: Ruchnoy Pulemyot Degtyaryova, type of Russian hand-held machine gun

  RPG: rocket-propelled grenade

  RRAF: Royal Rhodesian Air Force

  SAAF: South African Air Force

  SAP: South African Police

  SAS: Special Air Service

  SB: Police Special Branch

  Selous Scouts: Rhodesian military unit that specialised in pseudo warfare (i.e. imitating the enemy)

  shamwari: Shona for ‘friend’

  sitrep: situation report – daily report on the enemy’s and own forces’ tactical situation

  SKS: Samozariadnyia Karabina Simonova, type of Russian semi-automatic rifle

  Sneb rocket: rocket-propelled warhead fired from an aircraft

  SSU: Short Service Unit

  stick: group of four soldiers, usually deployed from an Alouette helicopter

  stop group/stop: group of soldiers positioned to intercept (stop) fleeing enemy forces

  terr: terrorist

  TTL: Tribal Trust Land

  UDI: Unilateral Declaration of Independence

  VHF: very high frequency

  VSI: vertical speed indicator

  ZANLA: Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army

  ZANU: Zimbabwe African National Union

  ZANU-PF: Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front

  ZAPU: Zimbabwe African People’s Union

  ZBC: Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation

  ZIPRA: Zimbabwe People’s Revolutionary Army

  Select bibliography

  Extracts from the Operation Dingo operations orders, log and air strike reports, located in Box 844, British Commonwealth and Empire Museum, Bristol, by courtesy of J.R.T. Wood

  Adams, Mark, and Chris Cocks. Africa’s Commandos: The Rhodesian Light Infantry. Johannesburg: 30° South, 2012

  Chung, Fay. Re-Living the Second Chimurenga: Memories from Zimbabwe’s Liberation Struggle. Stockholm: Nordic Africa Institute, 2006

  Cocks, Chris. Fireforce: One Man’s War in the Rhodesian Light Infantry. Roodepoort: Covos Books, 1988

  Cole, Barbara. The Elite: The Story of the Rhodesian Special Air Service. Amanzimtoti: Three Knights Publishing, 1984

  Flower, Ken. Serving Secretly. An Intelligence Chief on Record: Rhodesia to Zimbabwe, 1964 to 1981. London: John Murray, 1987

  Geldenhuys, Prop. Rhodesian Air Force Operations: With Airstrike Log. Durban: Just Done Productions Publishing, 2007

  MacKenzie, Robert. ‘Fast Strike on Chimoio’ (Parts 1 and 2), Soldier of Fortune. Boulder, Colorado, January and February 1994

  Martin, David, and Phyllis Johnson. The Struggle for Zimbabwe. London: Faber & Faber, 1981

  Meredith, Martin. The State of Africa: A History of Fifty Years of Independence. Jeppestown: Jonathan Ball, 2005

  Moorcroft, Paul, and Peter McLaughlin. The Rhodesian War: A Military History. Jeppestown: Pen and Sword Military, 2008

  Petter-Bowyer, P.J.H. Winds of Destruction. Victoria, Canada: Trafford Publishing, 2003

  Presler, Titus. The Transfigured Night: Mission and Culture in Zimbabwe’s Vigil Movement. Pretoria: Unisa Press, 1999

  Salt, Beryl. A Pride of Eagles: The Definitive History of the Rhodesian Air Force 1920–1980. Weltevreden Park: Covos Day Books, 2001

  Smith, David, and Colin Simpson. Mugabe. Falmouth, UK: Sphere Books, 1980

  Smith, Ian. The Great Betrayal: The Memoirs of Ian Douglas Smith. London: Blake Publishing, 1997

  Tekere, Edgar. A Lifetime of Struggle: Edgar ‘2-Boy’ Zivanai Tekere. Harare: SAPES Books, 2007

  Wood, J.R.T. Counter-Strike from the Sky: The Rhodesian All-Arms Fireforce in the War in the Bush, 1974–1980. Johannesburg: 30° South, 2009

  Index

  Abraham, Chris 153

  Adams, Mark 135, 176–177

  admin base

  attack on Chimoio (Zulu 1) 142–143, 184–186, 209

  attack on Tembue (Zulu 2) 220–223, 228, 234

  Adriano Antonio farmstead 67, 82, 247

  Aero Commander aircraft 125

  Aeromodelling Championship 149

  African National Congress (ANC) 5, 58

  Afrikaans press in South Africa 58

  agriculture in Rhodesia 23

  Air Trans Africa 133, 162

  Aitcheson, Mark 153

  Alamein Farm 249

  Alexander, George 162, 185, 234

  Alouette helicopters (G-cars and K-cars)

  attack on Chimoio (Zulu 1) 141–142, 144–145, 155–159, 171, 178–181, 185, 187–190, 193, 195–199, 205, 209–211

  attack on Tembue (Zulu 2) 219–220, 222–225, 226, 228–229, 232, 234, 236–237, 240–243

  history of 18–19, 21

  planning for Operation Dingo 90–92, 108,
114, 123–124, 134–135

  Second Chimurenga 22, 24–25, 37, 53–55

  Alpha bombs 98–99, 172–173, 193–194, 206, 207–208, 231

  Altena Farm 46–48

  altimeters 153

  America see United States

  ammunition trains 106–107

  ANC see African National Congress

  Andrew Fleming Hospital 135

  ANFO 152

  Angola 59, 73

  Annan, John 54, 153, 166–167, 170, 202–203, 211

  anti-aircraft weapons 81, 132, 179–180, 196–197, 204, 212

  Antonio farmhouse 67, 82, 247

  Armageddon Gang 24–29

  armoured cars 75, 132

  Armstrong, Pat 248–249

  Aust, Charlie 248–249

  aviation in Rhodesia, history of 15–19

  Baldwin, Baldy 197

  Banda, Hastings 58

  Banket 23

  Barfoot, Frank ‘Slash’ 27

  barrage trains 106–107

  Barratt, Garth 51, 52, 248–249

  Battle of Britain 16

  Battle of Chimoio (Operation Dingo, Zulu 1) 1–2, 155–225, 245–247

  Battle of Sinoia 20–28

  Becks, Dave 26, 28

  Belgian Congo 7–8 Bellringer, Finch 198

  Belvedere airport 16, 18

  Bene 39, 218, 239

  Benecke, Cocky 124, 153

  bird strikes 124

  Bland, Robert 49

  blue note 153, 233

  Blue Section 133, 137, 167–168, 173, 179, 194, 201, 227, 239

  Blythe-Wood, John 137, 166–167, 173, 203, 227, 231, 239

  Boer Union 147

  bombs

  Alpha bombs 98–99, 172–173, 193–194, 206, 207–208, 232

  CB-470 cluster bombs 251

  flechettes (darts) 217, 227, 230, 231, 239

  frantan (napalm) 35, 55, 125, 133, 166, 171, 211, 217

  fuel-air bombs 152

  Golf bombs 133, 135, 152–153, 166, 217

 

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