User:Mikrobølgeovn/List of wars involving South Africa

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This is a list of wars involving South Africa, since the foundation of the Union of South Africa on 31 May 1910.

Conflict South Africa
and allies
Opponents Results Prime Minister (1912–94)
President (1994–)
Losses
Maritz Rebellion
(1914–1915)
South Africa South Africa South African Republic South African Republic Government victory
  • Rebellion suppressed
Louis Botha
225 killed[1]
(both sides)
World War I
(1914–1918)
France France
 United Kingdom
Russia Russia
 Italy
 United States
 Serbia
 Belgium
 Romania
 Australia
 Canada
 New Zealand
 South Africa
 Greece
 Portugal
 Brazil
 Japan
Nepal
Siam
Hejaz
 Germany
 Austria-Hungary
 Ottoman Empire
 Bulgaria
Victory
9,726 dead[2]
Rand Rebellion
(1921–1922)
South Africa South Africa SACP Government victory
  • Rebellion suppressed
Jan Smuts
153 dead[3]
(both sides)
World War II
(1939–1945)
 Soviet Union
 United States
 United Kingdom
China
 France
 Poland
 Yugoslavia
 Greece
 Australia
 Canada
 New Zealand
 South Africa
 Denmark
 Norway
 Netherlands
 Belgium
 Luxembourg
 Czechoslovakia
Ethiopian Empire Ethiopia
 Brazil
 Mexico
 Colombia
Cuba
Nepal
Philippines
Mongolia
 Germany
 Japan
 Italy
 Romania
 Hungary
 Bulgaria
Slovakia
 Croatia
Thailand
 Iraq
Victory
6,840 dead
1,841 missing
14,589 prisoners
Korean War
(1950–1953)
 South Korea
 United States
 United Kingdom
 Canada
 Turkey
 Australia
Ethiopian Empire Ethiopia
Philippines
 New Zealand
Thailand
Greece
 France
 Colombia
 Belgium
 South Africa
 Netherlands
 Luxembourg
 North Korea
 China
Stalemate
D.F. Malan
34 dead[4]
9 prisoners
Rhodesian Bush War
(1965–1979)
 Rhodesia
 South Africa
ZANU
FRELIMO
ZAPU
ANC
Stalemate
B. J. Vorster
?
Mozambican Civil War
(1979–1985)[5]
RENAMO
 Zimbabwe Rhodesia
 South Africa
Mozambique FRELIMO
ANC
Stalemate
P. W. Botha
?
South African Border War
(1966–1989)[6]
 South Africa
 Portugal
UNITA
FNLA
SWAPO
SWANU
MPLA
 Cuba
ANC
 Zambia
Stalemate
  • Withdrawal of foreign forces from Angola
  • Independence of Namibia
2,038 dead[7]
Operation Boleas
(1998)
 South Africa
 Botswana
Lesotho LDF rebels Victory
  • Suspected coup in Lesotho quelled
Nelson Mandela
11 dead[8]
Battle of Bangui
(2013)
 South Africa
 Central African Republic
Central African Republic Séléka Defeat[9]
Jacob Zuma
15 dead[11]
M23 Rebellion
(2013)
 DR Congo
 South Africa
 Tanzania
 Malawi
M23 Victory
  • M23 rebels surrender
None
ADF Insurgency
(2014–)
 DR Congo
 South Africa
 Tanzania
 Malawi
ADF Ongoing
1 dead
Cabo Delgado Civil War
(2020–)
 Mozambique
 South Africa
 Tanzania
 Rwanda
Ansar al-Sunna
ISIL
Ongoing
  • South African intervention in 2020
Cyril Ramaphosa
None

References[edit]

List
    1. ^ "The First World War: Volume I: To Arms - Hew Strachan - Google Books". Books.google.com. Retrieved 2016-04-23.
    2. ^ Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2013–2014 Archived 2015-11-04 at the Wayback Machine, page 48. Figures include identified burials and those commemorated by name on memorials.
    3. ^ Bendix, S. (2001) Industrial Relations in South Africa. Claremont: Juta. p. 59
    4. ^ "Casualties of Korean War" (in Korean). Ministry of National Defense of Republic of Korea. Archived from the original on 2013-01-20. Retrieved 14 February 2007.
    5. ^ South Africa agreed to withdraw its support for RENAMO in 1984. However, South Africa only withdrew from the Mozambican Civil War in 1985. For more information, see War and Society: The Militarisation of South Africa, edited by Jacklyn Cock and Laurie Nathan, pp.104-115
    6. ^ Note: South Africa was already involved in combating SWAPO insurgents in 1966, but intervention in Angola started in 1975 with Operation Savannah.
    7. ^ "SA Roll of Honour: List of Wars". Justdone.co.za. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
    8. ^ "'A fractious lot': Anatomy of (another) coup in Lesotho". Daily Maverick. 3 July 2015.
    9. ^ References:
      • McGregor, Andrew. "South African military disaster in the Central African Republic." Terrorism Monitor, April 4, 2013. "Zuma’s decision to send a force of 400 men to ostensibly guard a group of 25 military trainers who could have easily been otherwise withdrawn can only be interpreted as an effort to bolster the CAR regime".
      • Wallerstein, Immanuel Maurice, Christopher K. Chase-Dunn, and Christian Suter. Overcoming Global Inequalities Paradigm Publishers, 1. jun. 2014, Chapter 6
      • KAH, Henry Kam. "Central African Republic. Understanding the Séléka Insurrection of March 24 2013." Conflict Studies Quarterly Issue 5, University of Buea, Cameroon, October 2013: pp 47-66. "The presence of South African troops and those of member countries of the Central African union did not deter the Séléka from advancing towards Bangui. In fact, in an attempt to stop the group from advancing on to the capital, South African forces were killed in the process."
    10. ^ Heitman, Helmoed Römer. "The Hard Lessons Learnt in CAR" IOL. March 24, 2015. Accessed February 27, 2016.
    11. ^ "CAR battle claims another SANDF soldier". Enca. South Africa.



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