Operation Nickel

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Operation Nickel
Part of the Rhodesian Bush War (or Second Chimurenga )
Zimbabwe adm location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Victoria Falls
Red pog.svg
Wankie
Red pog.svg
Wankie Game Reserve
Operation Nickel (Zimbabwe)
Date1 August – 8 September 1967
Location
Result Rhodesian victory
Belligerents
Flag of Rhodesia (1964-1968).svg  Rhodesia
Flag of South Africa (1928-1982).svg  South Africa
Zimbabwe African People's Union flag.svg ZIPRA
Flag of the African National Congress.svg ANC (Umkhonto we Sizwe)
Commanders and leaders
Flag of Rhodesia (1964-1968).svg Lt-Col. Jack Caine
Flag of Rhodesia (1964-1968).svg Lt. Charl Viljoen
Zimbabwe African People's Union flag.svg Dumiso Dabengwa
Flag of the African National Congress.svg Lennox Lagu
Flag of the African National Congress.svg Chris Hani
Units involved

Rhodesian Army flag late 1970s.png Rhodesian Army

BSAP Insignia.svg BSAP
Air Force Ensign of Rhodesia (1964-1968).svg RRAF
Flag of the African National Congress.svg Luthuli Detachment
Strength
Unknown
2 Provost trainers
1 Alouette III
2 Hawker Hunters
79–90
Casualties and losses
8 killed
14 wounded
In Rhodesia:
29 killed
17 arrested
1 missing
In Botswana:
29 arrested (1 later died in custody)
In South Africa:
1 arrested
Total:
77

Operation Nickel or the Wankie Campaign or the Wankie Battles was a military operation launched by the Rhodesian Security Forces on 1 August 1967 in response to the group of ZIPRA and Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) fighters crossing the Zambezi River, which marked the Rhodesian-Zambian border. The operation was a success with only one of the cadres out of a force of seventy-nine making it back to Zambia.

Contents

Background

The RLI continued to grow in strength during the latter part of 1966 and the beginning of 1967; it first began to experiment with parachutes early during this year, borrowing equipment from the SAS to do so. Walls was replaced as CO on 18 June 1967 by Lieutenant-Colonel Jack Caine, formerly of the British Coldstream Guards. [1]

Operation

The next guerrilla incursion came on 1 August 1967, when a combined force of 79 ZIPRA and South African Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) fighters [n 1] crossed the Zambezi about 20 kilometres (12 mi) east of Victoria Falls. Having mislaid 10 men along the way, they based up a week later in the Wankie Game Reserve, in the extreme west of the country, near the border with Botswana. [3] The cadres, whose intention was to recruit local black Rhodesians and subsequently attack white farms and police stations, split into two groups. One headed towards Tjolotjo and the other made for Nkai. [4] One of the members who had become lost earlier was captured by the RAR on the road between Victoria Falls and Wankie on 3 August, and from this captive the police and security forces learned of the two groups and of their intentions. [5] Operation Nickel, described by Ron Reid-Daly as one of "the most significant operations of the war," was launched. [4]

At first, the incursion was countered by the RAR, but after a tactical error in its third engagement with the guerrillas led to casualties, the Rhodesian African Rifles were joined by 2 commandos, RLI on 25 August 1967. [4] The insurgents were consistently undone in their incursions by the suspicion of Rhodesia's rural blacks, whose tribal chiefs and headmen would often work together to inform the police and security forces of the infiltrators' presence. [5] This proved to be no exception: when a cadre visited a local kraal early on 31 August to obtain food, an old woman invited him to stay and kept him there while she sent a young girl to alert the security forces.

Seven troops and two commandos arrived at 07:20 and captured the insurgent, who then guided seven troops, led by Lieutenant Charl Viljoen, and a platoon of RAR men to where his five comrades were encamped. The combined force surrounded the guerrillas and opened fire, killing four; the fifth escaped and returned to Zambia.

The next day, on 1 September, two commando troops in ambush were informed by a tractor driver that he had been given money by 14 guerrillas the previous night to buy mielie-meal for them and that they would be collecting it from him at his kraal that evening. A sweep was planned; the tractor driver was briefed and returned to the kraal with the mielie-meal while two commandos and the RAR formed a cordon around it. The following morning the soldiers performed their sweep but failed to find the enemy, who were already gone. The insurgents, who were actually 17 in number and all South African Umkhonto fighters, crossed the border into Botswana and were arrested there on 3 September.

Aftermath

Of the 79 cadres who had crossed the border on 1 August, 29 were killed and 17 captured within Rhodesia, 29 were arrested in Botswana, where one also died, one was arrested in Durban and one escaped back to Zambia. One remained unaccounted for. Nickel was officially closed at 06:00 on 8 September 1967. [6]

Prime Minister Ian Smith attended the RLI's Annual Regimental Sundowner on 1 February 1968, commemorating the founding of the Battalion seven years earlier. Smith stood and proposed a toast to the Regiment and the health of "the incredible Rhodesian Light Infantry". The toast was widely publicized by the Rhodesian press and had such an impact that "The Incredibles" became a second nickname of the RLI alongside "The Saints". Captain F. Sutton, who had three years earlier composed the Battalion's slow march, The Rhodesian Light Infantry, renamed the march The Incredibles. [7]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. Umkhonto we Sizwe ("Spear of the Nation" in both Xhosa and Zulu) was the military wing of the African National Congress (ANC) of South Africa and was commonly referred to in abbreviation as "MK". A military alliance between MK and ZIPRA guerrillas was announced on 19 August 1967 by ANC Deputy-President Oliver Tambo and James Chikerema, Vice-President of ZAPU. [2]

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References

  1. Binda 2008 , p. 54
  2. Thomas 1995, pp. 16–17
  3. SADET 2005 , pp. 494–495
  4. 1 2 3 Binda 2008 , p. 60
  5. 1 2 SADET 2005 , p. 497
  6. Binda 2008 , pp. 60–62
  7. Streak 1980 , p. 21

Biography