scholarly journals Adelante! Military Imaginaries, the Cold War, and Southern Africa's Liberation Armies

2020 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 619-650
Author(s):  
Jocelyn Alexander ◽  
Joann McGregor

AbstractStudies of southern Africa's liberation movements have turned attention to the great importance of their transnational lives, but have rarely focused on the effects of the military training Cold War-era allies provided in sites across the globe. This is a significant omission in the history of these movements: training turns civilians into soldiers and creates armies with not only military but also social and political effects, as scholarship on conventional militaries has long emphasized. Liberation movement armies were however different in that they were not subordinated to a single state, instead receiving training under the flexible rubric of international solidarity in a host of foreign sites and in interaction with a great variety of military traditions. The training provided in this context produced multiple “military imaginaries” within liberation movement armies, at once creating deep tensions and enabling innovation. The article is based on oral histories of Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA) veterans trained by Cuban and Soviet instructors in Angola in the late 1970s. These soldiers emerged from the Angolan camps with a military imaginary they summed up in the Cuban exhortation “Adelante!” (Forward!). Forty years later, they stressed how different their training had made them from other ZIPRA cadres, in terms of their military strategy, mastery of advanced Soviet weaponry, and aggressive disposition, as well as their “revolutionary” performance of politics and masculinity in modes of address, salute, and drill. Such military imaginaries powerfully shaped the southern African battlefield. They offer novel insight into the distinctive institutions, identities, and memories forged through Cold War-era military exchanges.

Author(s):  
Paul E. Lenze, Jr.

Algeria is a state in the Maghreb that has been dominated by military rule for the majority of its existence. The National People’s Army (ANP) used nationalism to justify its intervention into politics while ensuring that withdrawal would occur only if national identity were protected. Algeria, similar to other Middle Eastern states, underwent historical trajectories influenced by colonialism, the Cold War, and post-9/11 politics; briefly experimented with democracy; and as a result, experienced the military as the dominant institution in the state. The resignation of Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika after 20 years of rule in April 2019, following six weeks of popular protest, has raised questions as to whether democratization is possible. Algeria’s history of military involvement in politics, the strength of the military as an institution, and its cooperative links with domestic elites and international actors portend the endurance of authoritarianism for the foreseeable future.


1997 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 5-16
Author(s):  
Paul-Marie de La Gorce

With France in the lead, the European Community in 1996 seemed on the verge of cautiously asserting a more independent role in the Middle East peace process. This is in marked contrast to Europe's passive role for more than a decade following Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon, and especially since the Gulf War, a period during which France and other major European powers acquiesced in U.S. domination of Arab-Israeli peace issues. Reviewing the history of European initiatives and absences during the cold war era, the author examines whether Europe now has the determination to chart its own peace policy despite U.S. and Israeli antagonism to its involvement.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
László Zentai ◽  
Gábor Gercsák

Abstract. Cartography of the Cold War era was very characteristic in the Eastern Bloc countries. The abnormal secrecy instructions forced by military cartographic authorities (following the Soviet advisors) influenced the making of all kinds of large- and medium-scale cartographic products for public use. Most of these maps were somehow distorted, although it was not easy to implement the technology of distortions developed by cartographers in the analogue map production era in the early 1960s. Tourist maps are expected to be created using topographic maps, but the access to classified topographic maps (both civilian and military) was limited for civilian users (even for civilian national mapping agencies, at least in the early years of the Cold War era). The tourist maps of this era were quite different from country to country in the Eastern Bloc, partly due to their cartographic traditions and to the relationships between the military and civilian cartography even influenced by the users’ demands.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 88-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renata Keller

This article is the first in-depth study of Cuba's revolutionary news agency, Prensa Latina. Drawing on a wide variety of archival and published sources, including Cuban media and memoirs, declassified intelligence reports, U.S. State Department records, and newspaper articles from across Latin America, the article analyzes the agency's controversial creation, international reception, and significance. The evidence presented here shows that Prensa Latina was a powerful weapon in Fidel Castro's revolutionary arsenal because it provided a way for the Cuban government to gather and shape information and garner international support. Studying the history of Prensa Latina provides new insight into the production, circulation, reception, restriction, and manipulation of information during the Cold War. The Cuban agency's efforts to reshape the international flow of information posed a clear challenge both to the traditional media and to Castro's enemies across the Americas, spurring them to pursue a wide variety of tactics to silence Prensa Latina.


1991 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-113
Author(s):  
ROBERT JERVIS

2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 563-584
Author(s):  
Adam R. Seipp

This article examines the relationship between German civilian workers and the United States Army in the Federal Republic of Germany during the Cold War. Using archival and published sources, the article offers an entangled history of ‘local national’ employees and their role in maintaining the American presence in Central Europe. Beginning in the late 1960s, German labour unions began to challenge American labour policy. In doing so, they consistently argued for a more forceful assertion of German sovereignty. This labour relationship was therefore important for both the military history of the Cold War and for the development of German democracy.


Author(s):  
Joseph M. Siracusa

What significant lessons can be learned from the history of nuclear weapons? ‘Post-Cold War era’ considers post-Cold War attempts to curb nuclear proliferation. The clarity of the Cold War world has given way to the ambiguities and uncertainties of a world where global security is threatened by regime collapse, nuclear terrorism, new nuclear weapons states, regional conflict, and pre-existing nuclear arsenals. The nuclear rivalry with Russia, North Korea, and Iran gives the feeling of returning to the Cold War period, with the ever present threat of a deliberate or unintended confrontation. So far, we have avoided mutual destruction, but is this down to policy or luck?


2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 35-45
Author(s):  
Benjamin Aldes Wurgaft

This essay examines the history of futurism and the appeal and difficulty of predicting the future. It considers the difference between the Cold War-era futurism of making predictions and the more contemporary style of shaping and building the future piece by piece.


Ñawi ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 41
Author(s):  
Rubén Garrido Sanchis

La utilización del documental como un testimonio histórico ayuda a la construcción de un relato histórico más amplio. Esto es especialmente interesante a la vista de la creación de una “historia de los vencidos” que aporta visiones que chocan con la interpretación doctrinaria del pasado. Para ello nos basaremos en los documentales de “Alfaro vive, del sueño al caos “(sabel Dávalos, 2007) y "Alfaro Vive Carajo" (Mauricio Samaniego, 2015) como ejemplos del rescate de otras miradas referentes al conflicto guerrillero de Alfaro Vive Carajo (AVC) durante el Ecuador de la década de los 80. Abstract The use of the documentary as a historical testimony helps to build a larger historical narration. This is especially interesting in view of the creation of a history of the defeated that brings visions against the doctrinal interpretation of the past. For this we will be based on the documentaries of Isabel Dávalos Alfaro vive, del sueño al caos (2007) and Mauricio Samaniego Alfaro Vive Carajo (2015) as examples of the rescue of other glances referring to the guerrilla conflict of Alfaro Vive Carajo (AVC ) at ecuador during the 80’s. Ending with a criticism of the topic of binary “East-West” speeches during the Cold War era.


Ñawi ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 41
Author(s):  
Rubén Garrido Sanchis

La utilización del documental como un testimonio histórico ayuda a la construcción de un relato histórico más amplio. Esto es especialmente interesante a la vista de la creación de una “historia de los vencidos” que aporta visiones que chocan con la interpretación doctrinaria del pasado. Para ello nos basaremos en los documentales de “Alfaro vive, del sueño al caos “(sabel Dávalos, 2007) y "Alfaro Vive Carajo" (Mauricio Samaniego, 2015) como ejemplos del rescate de otras miradas referentes al conflicto guerrillero de Alfaro Vive Carajo (AVC) durante el Ecuador de la década de los 80. Abstract The use of the documentary as a historical testimony helps to build a larger historical narration. This is especially interesting in view of the creation of a history of the defeated that brings visions against the doctrinal interpretation of the past. For this we will be based on the documentaries of Isabel Dávalos Alfaro vive, del sueño al caos (2007) and Mauricio Samaniego Alfaro Vive Carajo (2015) as examples of the rescue of other glances referring to the guerrilla conflict of Alfaro Vive Carajo (AVC ) at ecuador during the 80’s. Ending with a criticism of the topic of binary “East-West” speeches during the Cold War era.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document