Angola ARMED FORCES
Government recruits learning the mechanics of an AK-47
assault rifle
Courtesy United Nations (J.P. Laffont)
Constitutional and Political Context
The Angolan Constitution provides a framework for both
international and national security policies. Article 16
establishes the country's official policy of military
nonalignment
and prohibits the construction of foreign military bases
on Angolan
territory. Reflecting its concern for territorial unity
and the
status of Cabinda Province as an integral part of the
national
homeland, Article 4 also provides that "any attempt to
separate or
dismember" any territory will be "forcefully combated."
The
president, under Article 6, is designated commander in
chief of the
armed forces and in Article 53 is also given extraordinary
powers
to declare a state of emergency or a state of siege, to
declare
war, and to make peace.
The government's organization for security and defense
reflected both ideological and national security
considerations in
its interlocking network of party, government, and
military
officials. The Council of the Revolution, which performed
both
executive and legislative functions before 1980, included
the
minister of defense, the chief of the general staff, and
regional
military commanders. In the first national People's
Assembly
(national legislature), which in 1980 replaced the Council
of the
Revolution as the supreme organ of state, defense and
security
personnel constituted 10 percent of the membership
(see Structure of Government
, ch. 4).
Since the early days of the liberation struggle, the
MPLA had
recognized the need for firm political direction of FAPLA.
Political control was established and maintained by two
complementary means: political indoctrination and
institutional
penetration and subordination. Political education was an
integral
part of FAPLA's military training, and political
commissars were
attached to guerrilla units to ensure compliance with
party
directives.
MPLA politicization and controls were formalized and
expanded
after the transformation of FAPLA into a conventional army
during
1975 and 1976. Many of the independence leaders continued
to hold
concurrent positions in the party, government, and
military
establishment. At the regional level, the overlaying of
military
and political leadership was also common, as many of the
provincial
commissars were both MPLA Central Committee members and
FAPLA
lieutenant colonels. Within the armed forces, political
commissars
in each unit reported not to the military chain of command
but to
the political leadership of the region or province.
Extensive politicization of the military by
institutional means
did not preclude the possibility of military intervention
in
politics. In 1977 Nito Alves led an abortive coup in which
several
MPLA and FAPLA leaders were killed. In the aftermath,
Alves's
supporters were executed or purged, and the top military
and
political posts in the armed forces were assigned to
loyalists:
David António Moises was appointed FAPLA chief of the
general
staff, and Julião Mateus Paulo (nom de guerre Dino
Matross) became
FAPLA national political commissar.
The interpenetration of the MPLA and FAPLA was
maintained
throughout both organizations' hierarchies. In 1983, six
years
after the MPLA had designated itself a "workers' party"
(Partido de
Trabalho; henceforth the party was known as the MPLA-PT),
a series
of party committee seminars for the political organs of
the defense
and security forces was inaugurated by Paulo, then Central
Committee secretary for defense and security. The purpose
of these
seminars was to review the implementation of party
directives and
structures within the armed forces. In 1985 seminar
members
recommended that the party's provincial departments of
defense and
security implement the 1984 directive to award membership
to armed
forces veterans and disabled soldiers and that the local
party and
the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola Youth
Movement
(Juventude do Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola --
JMPLA)
participate more actively in defense and security. For its
part,
FAPLA had a political directorate that maintained party
liaison and
supervision.
In the 1980s, the need for total mobilization and
coordination
of the nation's resources to combat the escalating UNITA
insurgency
and South African intervention led to reorganizations of
both the
central and the provincial governments. President José
Eduardo dos
Santos created the Defense and Security Council under his
chairmanship in April 1984 to plan and coordinate national
security
policy. Originally, the council included the ministers of
defense,
state security, and interior; the FAPLA chief of the
general staff;
and the party Central Committee secretary for ideology,
information, and culture as an ex officio member. In May
1986, the
Defense and Security Council expanded to include the
ministers of
state for inspection and control, for the productive
sphere, and
for economic and social spheres, posts that had been
created in a
February 1986 government reorganization. In effect, the
Defense and
Security Council became the standing body of the Council
of
Ministers when the latter was not in session. The Defense
and
Security Council met in two sessions: a weekly meeting on
defense
and security matters, and a biweekly meeting on economic
issues.
In July 1983, the MPLA-PT Political Bureau decided to
form
regional military councils as an "exceptional and
temporary
measure" to coordinate political, military, economic, and
social
leadership in areas "affected by armed acts of aggression,
vandalism and banditry." The councils reported directly to
the
president as FAPLA commander in chief, who was empowered
to
determine which areas warranted such councils and to
appoint
council members. The councils were authorized to
requisition and
restrict the movement of people and goods, and their newly
created
military tribunals tried crimes "against state security,
economic
sabotage, speculation and disobedience of directives from
the
regional military councils, as well as those who may
damage or
endanger the interests of collective defense and security"
(see Criminal Justice System
, this ch.). Eleven of Angola's
eighteen
provinces were immediately made subject to regional
military
councils, whose chairmen were FAPLA colonels.
Before 1988 FAPLA's areas of operations were divided
into ten
military regions
(see
fig. 13). In early 1988, however,
calling
this structure inadequate, the Ministry of Defense
announced the
formation of northern, eastern, southern, and central
fronts. The
northern front encompassed Zaire, Uíge, Malanje, Cuanza
Norte, and
Bengo provinces. The eastern front covered Lunda Norte,
Lunda Sul,
and Moxico provinces. No official information on the other
fronts
was available in late 1988, but presumably the southern
front
included Cuando Cubango, Huíla, and Namibe provinces, and
the
central front may have comprised Bié, Huambo, Benguela,
and Cuanza
Sul provinces. There was no information on the status of
Cabinda
and Luanda provinces, but perhaps they remained separate
regions
because of their strategic importance and small size.
Because of
the uncertain boundaries of these fronts, most news
accounts
referred to the military regions when describing FAPLA's
areas of
operation.
Data as of February 1989
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