The Last of Africa's Cold War Conflicts : Portuguese Guinea and its Guerilla Insurgency
(2021)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Pen & Sword Military, 2021
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (304 pages)

ISBN/ISSN
9781526772992 MWT14338459, 152677299X 14338459
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Portugal was the first European country to colonize Africa. It was also the last to leave, almost five centuries later. During the course of what Lisbon called its "civilizing mission in Africa" the Portuguese weathered numerous insurrections, but none as severe as the guerrilla war first launched in Angola in 1961 and two years later in Portuguese Guinea. While Angola had a solid economic infrastructure, that did not hold for the tiny West African enclave that was to become Guine-Bissau. Both Soviets and Cubans believed that because that tiny colony- roughly the size of Belgium - had no resources and a small population, that Lisbon would soon capitulate. They were wrong, because hostilities lasted more than a decade and the 11-year struggle turned into the most intense of Lisbon's three African colonies. It was a classic African guerrilla campaign that kicked off in January 1963, but nobody noticed because what was taking place in Vietnam grabbed all the headlines. The Soviet-led guerrilla campaign in Portuguese Guinea was to go on and set the scene for the wars that followed in Rhodesia and present-day Namibia

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits