Everything about The South African Army totally explained
The
South African Army is the
army of
South Africa, first formed after the
Union of South Africa was created in 1910.
The South African military evolved within the tradition of frontier warfare fought by popular militias and small
irregular commando forces, reinforced by the
Afrikaners' historical distrust of large standing armies. It then fought as part of the wider British effort in
World War II, but afterwards was cut off from its long-standing Commonwealth ties with the introduction of Apartheid in South Africa after 1948. The apartheid policy led to friction with neignbouring states that helped to spark the border wars in South West Africa, now
Namibia, from 1966. The place of the Army was fundamentally changed by the upheavals of the early 1990s and after 1994 the Army became part of the new
South African National Defence Force.
It is now becoming increasingly involved in peacekeeping efforts in southern Africa, often as part of wider
African Union operations.
History
After the
Union of South Africa was formed in
1910,
General Jan Smuts, the Union's first Minister of Defence, placed a high priority on creating a unified military out of the separate armies of the union's four provinces. The Defence Act (No. 13) of
1912 established a
Union Defence Force (UDF) that included a Permanent Force (or standing army) of career soldiers, an Active Citizen Force (ACF) of temporary
conscripts and volunteers as well as a
Cadet organization. The 1912 law also obligated all white males between seventeen and sixty years of age to serve in the military, but the law wasn't strictly enforced as there were a large number of volunteers. Instead, half of the white males aged from 17 to 25 were drafted by lots into the ACF.
Initially, the Permanent Force consisted of five regular
mounted regiments and a small
artillery section. In
1913 and
1914, the new 23,400-member Citizen Force was called on to suppress several industrial strikes on the
Witwatersrand.
World War I
When the
First World War broke out in 1914, the South African government chose to join the war on the side of the
Allies. General
Louis Botha, the then prime minister, faced widespread
Afrikaner opposition to fighting alongside
Great Britain so soon after the
Second Boer War and had to put down a revolt by some of the more militant elements before he could send an expeditionary force of some 67,000 troops to invade
German South-West Africa (now
Namibia). The German troops stationed there eventually surrendered to the South African forces in July
1915. (In
1920 South Africa received a
League of Nations mandate to govern the former German colony and to prepare it for independence within a few years.)
Later, an
infantry brigade and various other supporting units were shipped to
France in order to fight on the
Western Front. The
1st South African Brigade - as this infantry brigade was named - consisted of four infantry
battalions, representing men from all four provinces of the
Union of South Africa as well as
Rhodesia: the 1st Regiment was from the
Cape Province, the 2nd Regiment was from
Natal and the
Orange Free State and the 3rd Regiment was from
Transvaal and Rhodesia. The 4th Regiment was called the
South African Scottish and was raised from members of the
Transvaal Scottish and the
Cape Town Highlanders; they wore the Atholl Murray
tartan.
The supporting units included five
batteries of heavy artillery, a
field ambulance unit, a
Royal Engineers signals
company and a
military hospital.
The most costly action that the South African forces on the Western Front fought in was the
Battle of Delville Wood in
1916 - of the 3,000 men from the brigade who entered the wood, only 768 emerged unscathed.
Another tragic loss of life for the South African forces during the war was
the Mendi sinking on
21 February 1917, when the troopship Mendi - while transporting 607 members of the
802nd South African Native Labour Corps from Britain to France - was struck and cut almost in half by another ship.
In addition, the war against the
German and
Askari forces in
German East Africa also involved more than 20,000 South African troops; they fought under General Jan Smuts's command when he directed the British campaign against there in 1915. (During the war, the army was led by General Smuts, who had rejoined the army from his position as Minister of Defence on the outbreak of the war.)
South Africans also saw action with the
Cape Corps in
Palestine.
More than 146,000 whites, 83,000 blacks and 2,500 people of mixed race ("
Coloureds") and
Asians served in South African military units during the war, including 43,000 in German South-West Africa and 30,000 on the Western Front. An estimated 3,000 South Africans also joined the
Royal Flying Corps.
The total South African casualties during the war was about 18,600 with over 12,452 killed - more than 4,600 in the European theater alone.
The interwar period
Wartime casualties and postwar demobilization weakened the UDF. New legislation in
1922 re-established conscription for white males over the age of 21 for four years of military training and service. UDF troops assumed internal security tasks in South Africa and quelled several revolts against South African domination in South-West Africa. South Africans suffered high casualties, especially in 1922, when an independent group of
Khoikhoi - known as the Bondelswart-
Herero for the black bands that they wore into battle - led one of numerous revolts; in 1925, when a mixed-race population - the Basters - demanded cultural autonomy and political independence; and in
1932, when the
Ovambo (Vambo) population along the border with
Angola demanded an end to South African domination.
As a result of its conscription policies, the UDF increased its active-duty forces to 56,000 by the late
1930s; 100,000 men also belonged to the National Riflemen's Reserve, which provided weapons training and practice.
World War II
World War II consisted mainly of supplying troops, men and material for the
North African and
Italian campaigns. Numerous volunteers also flew for the Royal Air Force.
The
South African 1st Infantry Division took part in several actions in North Africa in
1941 and
1942, including the
Battle of El Alamein, before being withdrawn to South Africa.
The
South African 2nd Infantry Division also took part in a number of actions in North Africa during 1942, but on
21 June 1942 two complete infantry brigades of the division as well as most of the supporting units were captured at the fall of
Tobruk.
The
South African 3rd Infantry Division never took an active part in any battles but instead organised and trained the South African home defence forces, performed garrison duties and supplied replacements for the South African 1st Infantry Division and the South African 2nd Infantry Division. However, one of this division's constituent brigades -
7 SA Motorised Brigade - did take part in the invasion of
Madagascar in 1942.
The
South African 6th Armoured Division fought in numerous actions in
Italy from
1944 to
1945.
Of the 334,000 men volunteered for full time service in the South African Army during the war (including some 211,000 whites, 77,000 blacks and 46,000 "coloureds" and Asians), nearly 9,000 were killed in action.
The postwar period
Wartime expansion was again followed by rapid demobilization after World War II. By then, a century of Anglo-Boer clashes followed by decades of growing British influence in South Africa had fueled Afrikaner resentment. Resurgent Afrikaner nationalism was an important factor in the growth of the
National Party (NP) as the
1948 elections approached.
After the narrow election victory by the NP in 1948, the government began the steady Afrikanerization of the military; it expanded military service obligations and enforced conscription laws more strictly. Most UDF conscripts underwent three months of Citizen Force training in their first year of service, and an additional three weeks of training each year for four years after that. The Defence Act (No. 44) of
1957 renamed the UDF the
South African Defence Force (SADF) and established within it some quick-reaction units, or Commandos, to respond to localized threats. The SADF, numbering about 20,000 in
1958, would grow to almost 80,000 in the next two decades.
Following the declaration of the Republic of South Africa in
1961, the "Royal" title was dropped from the names of army regiments like the Natal Carbineers, and the Crown removed from regimental badges.
The "Border War" (1966 - 1989)
The
1960s ushered in a new era in military history. South Africa's growing international isolation and the intensified black resistance to apartheid prompted the government to increase military service obligations repeatedly and to extend periods of active duty. The Defence Act (No. 12) of
1961 authorized the minister of defense to deploy Citizen Force troops and Commandos for "riot" control, often to quell anti-
apartheid demonstrations. The Defence Act (No. 85) of
1967 also expanded military obligations, requiring white male citizens to perform national service, including an initial period of training, a period of active duty, and several years in reserve status, subject to immediate call-up.
From
1966 to
1989 the SADF, with its
SWATF auxiliary, fought a counter-insurgency campaign against
SWAPO rebels in South-West Africa (Namibia). These operations included the raising of special units such as the
South African 32 Battalion. They also carried out operations in support of
UNITA rebels in Angola and against the Cuban troops that supported the Angolan government.
As the military expanded during the
1970s, the SADF general staff was organized into six sections - finance, intelligence, logistics, operations, personnel, and planning; uniquely, the
South African Medical Service (SAMS) was made co-equal with the South African Army, the
South African Navy and the
South African Air Force. Also during the 1970s, the SADF began accepting "non-whites" and women into the military as career soldiers, not only as temporary volunteers or reservists; however, the former served mostly, if not exclusively, in segregated units while the latter were not assigned to combat roles. By the end of the 1970s, the army had become the principal defender of the apartheid regime against the rising tide of African nationalism in South Africa and the region.
In 1973 two new infantry units were established: 7 Infantry Battalion (Bourke's Luck) and 8 SA Infantry Battalion (Upington), as well as 11 Commando (Kimberley), which to a great extent took over the functions of the Danie Theron Combat School's training wing. In 1973 the SADF also took over responsibility for the defence of SWA from the SA Police, and during the succeeding months the SA Army became involved in combat operations for the first time since the Second World War, clashing with groups of SWAPO terrorists infiltrating into South West Africa. It was decided in 1974 to organize the Army's conventional force into two divisions: 7 SA Infantry Division (71, 72 and 73 Motorized Brigades) and 8 SA Armoured Division (
Durban) (81 Armoured Brigade, 82 Mechanized Brigade and 84 Motorized Brigade). The HQ's of the two divisions were established on 1 August 1974.
During the
1980s, the legal requirements for national service were to register for service at age sixteen and to report for duty when called up, which usually occurred at some time after a man's eighteenth birthday. National service obligations could be fulfilled by volunteering for active-duty military service for two years and by serving in the reserves, generally for ten or twelve years. Reservists generally underwent fifty days per year of active duty or training, after their initial period of service. The requirements for national service changed several times during the 1980s and the early
1990s in response to national security needs, and they were suspended in
1993.
From the early 1990s (after 1992) to 1 April 1997, the SA Army maintained three small divisions, the 7th, 8th and 9th. They consisted of a reconnaissance battalion, two anti-aircraft defence battalions (AA guns), two battalions of artillery (G-5s and G-6s), a battalion of 127mm MRLs, an engineer battalion, two battalions of Olifant MBTs, two battalions mounted in Ratel ICVs, and finally two battalions mounted in Buffel APCs. They were all amalgamated into the 7th Division on 1 April 1997, and became the 73rd, 74th and 75th Brigades respectively.
Though non-white personnel did serve as unarmed labourers with the army in both World Wars, and a number of units were completely desegregated during the Border War, it wasn't until
1994 - when South Africa achieved full democracy - that the army as a whole was made open to all races. Today the
South African National Defence Force (SANDF) has racial quotas to make sure that White, Black, Coloured, and Indian South Africans are equally represented in the armed forces.
Current Status
The current commander of the South African Army is Lt. General
Solly Shoke.
The South African Army is composed of roughly 30 500 regular uniformed personnel, augmented by 4 500 civilians. The rankage structure of the army that deteriorated desperately during the
1990's is greatly improving through the
MSDS voluntary national service system. Through this system young healthy members are being inducted into the regular and reserve forces every year.
Due the restructuring of the Reserves the exact number of reserves is difficult to ascertain. However
Defence Minister Mosiuoa Lekota in his
2007 budget speech to the National Assembly indicated there currently are roughly 11 000 reserve force members in the army regular reserve.
There are several thousand other members in the army territorial reserve(commandos), however these units are being disbanded and the process should be complete by
2009.
A budget of approximately
R6.8 billion(roughly US$860 million in
2008 exchange rates) was allocated for fiscal year
20082009.
(External Link
)
Included in this amount is payments for new acquisitions.
The vast majority of army equipment is nearing the end of its service life, with some items (like the
Olifant Main Battle Tank) dating from decades ago.
The
South African National Defence Force has however started to remedy the situation with the procurement of 264
Patria AMV infantry fighting vehicles under the Hoefyster programme. Other procurements are planned and should follow in line with the guideline document - Army Vision 2020.
Most of the post-1994 military involvement of the South African Army has been with
peacekeeping operations under
United Nations and
African Union command in other
African countries such as
Burundi and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Future Plans
The
South African Army released its ARMY VISION 2020 guidelines document during
2006.
According to this, the army plans a return to a division based structure, from the current formation structure where units are simply provided as needed and assigned to the two active brigades. (
43 SA Brigade and
46 SA Brigade) The last
South African division, 7 Division, was disbanded in mid 1999.
In many respects the restructuring is an attempt to undo the effects of a force design that came into effect in 2001. That force structure was implemented in accordance with the recommendations of auditing firm Deloitte and Touche, who were contracted to draw up a plan to make the SA Army more economically efficient. The Deloitte and Touche plan had the army separate its combat forces into ‘silo’ style formations for armour, infantry, artillery, and engineers. Deane-Peter Baker of the South African
Institute for Security Studies said that the earlier D&T plan, while alleviating, to an extent, the mistrust of the new South African leadership of the remaining apartheid-era
South African Defence Force personnel in middle management positions, reduced the combat effectiveness of the Army, which is now being seen as a mistake.
The new plan is to create two divisions, a
Mechanised Division for home defence and a
Motorised Division to be used primarily for external peacekeeping operations. Additional to this, a
Special Operations Brigade will be created to conduct mountain, jungle, airborne and amphibious operations.
Mostly this will require only administrative changes as the units already exist. Specialised training will have to be carried out though, as and when funds become available.
A works regiment is to be created also, to help with the maintenance of army and Defence Force buildings and infrastructure. Older troops will be used for this, supplying them with work, whilst at the same time saving on contractor fees and catching up on the backlog of building maintenance.
The technical support for certain vehicles is also to be brought back in house, to save on contractor fees.
On 19 September 2007
Jane's Defence Weekly published more details of the implementation plan for Vision 2020, which is to be carried out in four stages. Phase 1, to be carried out in 2008, will see the army HQ reorganised in standard NATO-style staff divisions (G1, G2, etc), and the Works Regiment established. The Works Regiment will be created under the Army's Engineering Corps, and will have one squadron in each of the country's nine provinces. Phase 2, in 2009-10, will include the establishment of three Pretoria-based commands, Land, Support, and Training, and ten brigades (Contingency, Armoured, Mechanised, and seven Motorised) which will incorporate regular and some reserve units.
In 2011 under Phase 3 the two division HQs and their divisional troops will be established. The Mechanised Division, the core deterrent force, will be headquartered at Mafikeng, with an armoured brigade at Bloemfontein, a mechanised brigade at
Kimberley, and a motorised brigade at
Potchefstroom. The Mechanised Division will be the primary home defence formation and the Motorised Division will provide troops for peacekeeping operations. Its HQ will be at
Pretoria, with brigades at Polokwane (formerly Pietersburg), Nelspruit, Johannesburg, Durban, Port Elizabeth and Cape Town. Finally in Phase 4 from 2011 onwards the remaining reserve units required for the army's combat force will be rejuvenated.
Regular Formations and Units
- 43 SA Brigade Headquarters
- 46 SA Brigade Headquarters
- Each of these units are organised to provide four headquarters groups
- two of these should be available for deployment at any one time whilst the other two are on leave and in training
South African Armoured Corps
1 Special Service Battalion(Bloemfontein)
1 South African Tank Regiment(Bloemfontein)
South African Infantry Corps
Regiments
44 Parachute Regiment (South Africa)(Bloemfontein) - a multi-battalion unit
Battalions
1 South African Infantry Battalion(Bloemfontein)
3 Infantry Battalion Training Depot - (training only)(Kimberly)
4 South African Infantry Battalion
5 South African Infantry Battalion
6 South African Infantry Battalion(Grahamstown)
7 South African Infantry Battalion(Phalaborwa)
9 South African Infantry Battalion (Cape Town) (Preparing to convert to an amphibious battalion)
10 South African Infantry Battalion
14 South African Infantry Battalion
15 South African Infantry Battalion
61 Mechanised Infantry Battalion Group (merged with 8 SAI) (Upington)
115 South African Infantry Battalion
116 South African Infantry Battalion
118 South African Infantry Battalion
121 South African Infantry Battalion(Mtubatuba)
South African Artillery
4 Artillery Regiment (Potchefstroom)
10 Air Defence Regiment
South African Engineers
2 Field Engineer Regiment
14 Engineer Regiment
35 Engineer Support Regiment
1 Construction Engineer Regiment
1 Military Printing Regiment
4 Survey and Mapping Regiment
Reserve units
Armour
Light Horse Regiment
Natal Mounted Rifles
Umvoti Mounted Rifles
Pretoria Regiment
Regiment Mooirivier
Regiment Oranjerivier
Regiment President Steyn
Infantry
Cape Town Highlanders
Cape Town Rifles
Durban Light Infantry
Durban Regiment
Johannesburg Regiment
Buffalo Volunteer Rifles
Kimberley Regiment
Natal Carbineers
Prince Alfred's Guard
Rand Light Infantry
Regiment Bloemspruit
Regiment Boland
Regiment De La Rey
Regiment Skoonspruit
Regiment Westelike Provinsie
South African Irish Regiment
Transvaal Scottish
Witwatersrand Rifles
First City Regiment
Regiment Piet Retief
Artillery
Cape Field Artillery
Natal Field Artillery
Transvaal Horse Artillery
Regiment Potchefstroom Universiteit
Transvaalse Staatsartillerie
Vrystaatse Artillerie Regiment
Pretoria Highlanders
6 Light AA Regiment
Cape Garrison Artillery
Regiment Oos Transvaal
Regiment Vaalriver
Cape Garrison Artillery
Engineers
3 Field Engineer Regiment
6 Field Engineer Regiment
19 Field Engineer Regiment
Special Forces
South African Special Forces Brigade - this unit is under the command of the Chief of Joint Operations and is strictly speaking independent from the army.
Weapons
Star 9 mm automatic pistol (being replaced with the Vector Z88 (licence-built Beretta) and/or the Vector SP1)
Vektor R4 5.56 mm assault rifle (similar to the Israeali Galil) replaced the R1 (license-built FN FAL) 7.62 mm assault rifle.
Vektor R5 and R6 assault rifles (shortened barrel R4)
Vektor SS-77 7.62 mm general purpose lightweight machine gun replaced the 7.62 mm FN MAG
Milkor MGL Mk-1 six round 40 mm grenade launcher
A new lightweight Anti-tank guided missile launcher replacing the RPG-7
MILAN 3 - Anti-tank guided missile with the ADT launcher
Starstreak man portable surface to air missiles
Denel BXP 9mm parabellum sub machine gun
Combat vehicles
Olifant 1A/1B series main battle tank (250 total) (38 active)
Rooikat 76 wheeled armoured fighting vehicle (160 total) (80 active)
Ratel 20/60/90 family of infantry fighting vehicles (1200). Will be replaced by Badger IFVs (264)
Mamba MKIII and RG-32 Nyala Mine protected patrol vehicles - used on large scale for internal operations and on a small scale on peacekeeping duties in Sudan's Darfur region
Casspir Mark III mine protected patrol vehicles - used on peacekeeping duties in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Burundi
Various air deployable paratroop and South African Special Forces Brigade vehicles
Artillery
GV6 155 mm self-propelled howitzer (20)
GV5 155 mm howitzer (75) replaced the G4 155 mm gun and the G2 140 mm gun
G7 105 mm gun(still under development - a contract was awarded to Denel for this during April 2007) to replace the G1 88 mm gun
Bateleur 127 mm 40 tube multiple rocket launcher
Valkiri-22 24 tube self-propelled multiple rocket launcher
Non-combat vehicles
SAMIL 20 upgraded Magirus Deutz 130M7FAL 4x4 truck
SAMIL 50 upgraded Magirus Deutz 192D12AL 4x4 truck
SAMIL 100 upgraded Magirus Deutz 320D22AL 6x6 truck
MAN heavy duty trucks
Various engineer vehicles (combat bridgelayers etc.)
Bases
13 General Support Bases (to be reduced to 10 by 2009)Further Information
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