Operation Phoenix (South Africa)

Operation Phoenix was an operation in 1983 by the South African Defence Force and South West African Territorial Force in response to a major incursion by PLAN fighters from Angola into the white farming areas of northern South West Africa.

Operation Phoenix
Part of the South African Border War
Location
Namibia

Operation Phoenix (South Africa) is located in Namibia
Tsumeb
Tsumeb
Grootfontein
Grootfontein
Windhoek
Windhoek
Rundu
Rundu
Oshakati
Oshakati
Eenhana
Eenhana
Otjiwarongo
Otjiwarongo
Operation Phoenix (South Africa) (Namibia)
ObjectiveSADF forces hunt a large incursion of PLAN fighters into the farmlands of northern South West Africa.
Date15 February – 15 April 1983

Background

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SWAPO's military wing PLAN had created a specialised infiltration unit called Volcano. Members of this unit had spent the second half of 1982 receiving training from East German, Cuban and Russian instructors and were regarded as best PLAN soldiers.[1]: 107  By January 1983, 1000 to 1700 members of Volcano began the journey south to the Angolan/South West Africa border.[1]: 107 [2]: 200  They were then formed into fourteen companies of 50 to 70 soldiers. The mission was for thirteen of those companies, to cross the border and engage the SWATF and SADF forces while the last company would not engage those forces but instead head southwards to the white farming areas of northern South West Africa.[1]: 107 

Operation

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On the 13 February 1983, the thirteen companies headed into Kaokoland, Ovamboland and Kavango.[1]: 107  The fourteenth company headed for the white farmers in Kamanjab, Outjo, Tsumeb and Otjiwarongo areas.[1]: 107  The South African forces operation began on 15 February when the incursions came to their attention. By the beginning of March the PLAN soldiers in the main force, who were kept busy by the SADF/SWATF forces, had taken 155 casualties but had succeeded in laying mines and attacking and kidnapping civilians.[1]: 108  The small PLAN force, being chased by the South Africans, were now 50 km from the white farming areas.[1]: 108  By early March, the smaller force had reached the farmlands and had attacked a homestead. But by early April, SADF/SWATF soldiers had caught up to the group and no PLAN fighters from the fourteenth unit were alive and had failed to achieve their objectives.[1]: 108  The operation wound down with mopping-up operations and ended on 15 April.[1]: 108 

Aftermath

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In the two-month operation 27 members of the SADF and SWATF lost their lives with PLAN's Volcano unit losing 309 fighters.[1]: 108  Civilian casualties totalled 33 dead and 161 kidnapped and taken back to SWAPO bases in Angola.[2]: 107 

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Steenkamp, Willem (1989). South Africa's border war, 1966-1989. Gibraltar: Ashanti Pub. ISBN 0620139676.
  2. ^ a b Scholtz, Leopold (2013). The SADF in the Border War 1966-1989. Cape Town: Tafelberg. ISBN 978-0-624-05410-8.