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Zambian Defence Force

The Zambian Defence Force is the military of Zambia. It consists of the Zambian Army, the Zambian Air Force, and the Zambia National Service.[2] The defence forces were formed at Zambian independence on 24 October 1964, from constituent units of the dissolved Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland Armed Forces.[3] During the 1970s and 1980s, it played a key role in a number of regional conflicts, namely the South African Border War and Rhodesian Bush War.[4] Being a landlocked country Zambia has no navy, although the Zambian Army maintains a maritime patrol unit for maintaining security on inland bodies of water.[5]

Defence Force of Zambia
Service branchesZambian Army
Zambian Air Force
Zambia National Service
Leadership
Commander-in-chiefHakainde Hichilema
Minister of DefenceAmbrose Lufuma
Personnel
Available for
military service
2,477,494, age 15–49 (2004 est.)
Fit for
military service
1,310,814, age 15–49 (2004 est.)
Reaching military
age annually
(2004 est.)
Active personnel15,150 (2022)[1]
Expenditures
Budget$283 million (2023)
Percent of GDP1.3 (2023)
Related articles
HistoryRhodesian Bush War
South African Border War
Mozambican Civil War
RanksMilitary ranks of Zambia
Rank insignia of Warrant Officer Class 2 for the army of Zambia

History edit

Background and independence edit

The Zambian Defence Force had its roots in the Northern Rhodesia Regiment, a multi-ethnic military unit which was raised by the British colonial government and had served with distinction during World War II.[2] In 1960, the constituent colonies of Northern Rhodesia, Southern Rhodesia, and Nyasaland were amalgamated into a self-governing British dependency known as the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland.[6] When the federation was dissolved three years later, the assets and personnel of its armed forces were integrated with those of its successor states, including Northern Rhodesia, which subsequently gained independence as Zambia.[6] For example, Zambia received half the federal armoured car squadron as well as some light patrol aircraft.[7] Zambia also inherited the command structures of the Northern Rhodesia Regiment as well as the Northern Rhodesian Air Wing, which formed the basis for the new Zambian Army and Zambian Air Force, respectively.[6]

Relations almost immediately soured between Zambia and Southern Rhodesia, now known simply as Rhodesia, which had issued its own unilateral declaration of independence (UDI) in 1965.[8] Reports that Rhodesian security forces had occupied Kariba Dam prompted Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda to mobilise the ZDF for the first time and deploy troops to the border.[8] The ZDF was withdrawn when Kaunda received a guarantee that Zambia's supply of Kariba power would not be interrupted.[9] Nevertheless, military tension between the two nations remained high, and border incidents resulting in civilian deaths occurred.[10] In November 1966, Rhodesian troops fired across the border and killed a Zambian woman on the north bank of the Zambezi River.[10] In January 1973, Zambian troops fired on a South African police patrol boat on the Zambezi.[10] Shortly afterwards, Defence Minister Grey Zulu ordered that the ZDF return to the border in force.[10] Later in the month Kaunda brought the first of several complaints before the United Nations Security Council charging that Rhodesian security forces were violating Zambia's sovereignty and territorial integrity with South African support.[10] Tensions flared again when Zambian troops fired across the border and killed two Canadian tourists on the Rhodesian side of Victoria Falls in May 1973.[11]

The increasing prospect of war with Rhodesia posed several unique security dilemmas for the ZDF.[10] Firstly, Zambia lacked the manpower or conventional hardware necessary to provide a suitable deterrent to a Rhodesian incursion.[10] It also remained dependent on a relatively small pool of white senior officers and technical personnel.[10] After 1967 Kaunda's government began replacing them with foreign officers on contract, ostensibly to minimise the potential for conflicts of loyalty.[10] Between 1967 and 1970 the majority of officers in the ZDF were seconded from the British Army.[10] In 1971, the ZDF was finally prepared to appoint its first black army and air force commanders.[6] Due to the white community's close ties with Rhodesia and South Africa, white Zambians were subsequently barred from voluntary enlistment and granted a blanket exemption from conscription.[12]

Around September 1967, Kaunda made two requests to the United States for equipment for the Zambian Army, including long-range missile systems, but was rebuffed.[13] More successful were Zambia's attempts to acquire its first combat aircraft, a number of Aermacchi MB-326 and SIAI-Marchetti SF.260s sourced from Italy;[7] the first black Zambian Air Force pilots were trained by Italian instructors between 1966 and 1969.[13] Italy also sold the ZDF helicopters and towed artillery.[7]

Involvement in regional conflicts, 1968–80 edit

During the 1970s, Zambia began providing sanctuary for a number of revolutionary and militant political movements dedicated to overthrowing colonial and white minority rule elsewhere on the African continent.[14] Guerrilla armies based in exile in Zambia included the People's Liberation Army of Namibia (PLAN)[4] and the Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA).[14] These movements ultimately embroiled the ZDF in their own internal power struggles[15] as well as direct clashes with foreign troops carrying out preemptive strikes.[14] In 1968, the ZDF skirmished with Portuguese troops which had pursued a number of Angolan or Mozambican insurgents into Zambia.[10] In September 1975, Zambian troops became locked in a firefight with insurgents of the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA).[16] The ZDF killed eleven ZANLA insurgents and later expelled that movement from Zambian soil.[16] A year later, nearly two thousand[17] disaffected PLAN insurgents in Zambia launched a mutiny which became known as the "Shipanga Affair".[18] The army was forced to marshal several battalions to subdue the dissidents.[15]

In response to Zambia's increasingly open support for PLAN, South Africa sponsored a force of Kaonde-speaking dissidents under Adamson Mushala, known as the Zambian Democratic Supreme Council (DSC).[19] The DSC maintained a low level insurgency in Zambia's North-Western and Western Provinces.[20] Mushala's guerrillas sabotaged infrastructure, skirmished with the ZDF, and collected intelligence on PLAN movements inside Zambia.[21] They were trained by South African special forces and instructors recruited from the Portuguese Directorate-General of Security.[22] In 1973, an army unit killed a hundred of the guerrillas by ambushing them as they attempted to cross the Zambezi near the Caprivi Strip.[22] Mushala was largely inactive until early 1976, when his guerrillas skirmished twice with the ZDF and hijacked an army payroll.[19]

As a result of the new challenges posed by the Mushala insurgency and the presence of foreign militants, the ZDF underwent an extensive reorganisation and adopted a new unified command structure.[6] It was renamed the Zambian National Defence Force (ZNDF) in 1976.[6] A prevailing feature of the new ZNDF was its adoption of a third branch known as the Zambian National Service.[6] The objective of the Zambian National Service was to provide basic military instruction to all Zambian citizens in the event they needed to be mobilised as reservists during wartime.[2] The ZNDF became increasingly politicised, with the ruling United National Independence Party (UNIP) forming party branches in the barracks and introducing a number of political education programs for military personnel.[23] Under the UNIP, the ZNDF was not subject to public audit or parliamentary oversight.[23] This was justified under the pretext that the ZNDF's development was tied to the exigencies of wartime.[23]

Between 1977 and 1980 military tension with South Africa and Rhodesia continued to escalate, resulting in a renewed spate of border incidents.[24] In 1977, the ZNDF bombarded Rhodesian positions near Victoria Falls with rocket and mortar fire.[24] The reasons for the attack were disputed but the Zambian government maintained that the troops involved had been deliberately provoked by Rhodesian forces into firing.[24] Around March 1978, the ZNDF claimed to have been involved in repelling a Rhodesian raid on a ZIPRA training camp.[25] It also assisted PLAN insurgents during a raid on a South African military base in the Caprivi Strip.[4] South Africa retaliated by shelling several ZNDF positions near the border,[26] and Rhodesia began targeting ZNDF outposts.[27] Growing Zambian war weariness was a significant factor in Kaunda's influencing the guerrilla movements in Rhodesia to seek peace, resulting in a negotiated end to that conflict.[14] Kaunda also bowed to South African pressure and ordered PLAN to close its rear base facilities in Zambia by 1979.[28] At the same time, the ZNDF embarked on a 70 million kwacha modernisation program with assistance from the Soviet Union.[29] The Soviets provided the Zambian Army with tanks, wheeled armored vehicles, and technical instruction on especially generous terms; the Zambian Air Force received its first fighter aircraft in the form of a Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 squadron at the same time.[29]

End of the Cold War and reforms edit

In October 1980, two ZNDF officers, Brigadier Godfrey Miyanda and Colonel Patrick Mkandawire were arrested for planning a coup d'état with the support of an exiled Congolese insurgent movement, the Front for Congolese National Liberation (FLNC).[13] The plot involved arming the FLNC with ZNDF weaponry and later providing that movement with rear operating bases in Zambia as a reward for their efforts if the coup succeeded.[13] The ZNDF and the police apprehended the conspirators before they had opportunity to set the coup in motion and later raided the FLNC's base camp, detaining most of the insurgents.[13]

Due in part to the extreme secrecy surrounding the ZNDF's budget and the refusal of the UNIP to allow parliamentary debate on the topic, a number of problems concerning military funding were covered up rather than addressed.[23] For example, the facilities at ZNS training camps were so inadequate that typhoid outbreaks became common among recruits.[23] This was due to lack of funds to filter the camps' drinking water.[23] After a particularly serious typhoid outbreak between 1980 and 1981, the government was forced to suspend and later stop the compulsory national service programme.[23]

In November 1982, the ZNDF killed Adamson Mushala in an ambush outside Solwezi, although his followers continued to carry out operations under the leadership of Alexander Saimbwende.[19] The DSC continued to pose a sufficient threat that an Italian mineral survey team had to be evacuated from Northwestern Province in 1984 after being targeted by the guerrillas.[20] Nevertheless, the erosion of South African support ensured that its forces remained small and poorly armed.[19] Mushala and later Saimbwende turned to ivory poaching to sustain their war effort against the ZNDF.[19]

As the Mozambican Civil War intensified, the ZNDF had to contend with a number of armed incursions by Mozambican National Resistance (RENAMO) insurgents, who raided Zambian border towns in search of food and other supplies.[30] The ZNDF made it a policy to pursue RENAMO into neighbouring Mozambique in hot pursuit if necessary.[30]

In 1988, a second coup d'état attempt was planned, this time by Lieutenant General Christian Tembo and at least three other senior army officers.[31] The conspirators were detained before they could carry it out, but this temporarily jeopardised relations between the Zambian government and the army.[6]

The end of the Cold War brought a number of changes to the Zambian political situation and the ZNDF.[32] The ZNDF remained heavily in debt with the former Soviet bloc for military equipment it had purchased in the 1980s, as well as interest accrued.[32] The army in particular was badly affected by the collapse of its Soviet technical training program, which left much of its heavy weapons unserviceable.[33]

Following mass protests over President Kaunda's decision to cut subsidies for maize meal and double maize prices in 1990,[34] Captain Mwamba Luchembe single-handedly seized the national radio station and announced a coup d'état.[31] Luchembe held the radio station for only two hours before being arrested.[35] Kaunda's unpopularity led to demonstrations in support of Luchembe, however, and the same day the president announced he would seek a referendum on democratic multi-party elections.[34] Kaunda granted a blanket amnesty to his political opponents as he prepared to accept the return of multi-party elections, which would shortly thereafter end his term of almost three decades.[19] Among those who received amnesty was Alexander Saimbwende, who surrendered to the government and ended the DSC insurgency.[19]

The 1991 general elections brought Frederick Chiluba and his opposition Movement for Multi-Party Democracy to power and ushered in a period of reforms for the ZNDF.[6] The Chiluba government dismantled the ZNDF's unified command structure and allowed the army, ZNS, and air force to revert to independent commands.[6] The system of political patronage introduced to the ZNDF by Kaunda was also abandoned.[23] A general demobilisation programme was instituted in the army, and parliament gained the ability to debate defence expenditure.[23] The Chiluba government immediately formed a Public Accounts Committee to reduce financial irregularities in the ZNDF, most of which were linked to corruption and abuse of the ministerial tender system.[23] Zambia's 1991 constitution formally reinstated the title Zambian Defence Force for the armed forces.[36]

In October 1997, Captain Steven Lungu seized control of the national radio station and announced a coup d'état.[35] Lungu dismissed the chiefs of the army and police and announced that he was forming a new Government of National Redemption.[37] He gave President Chiluba an ultimatum of three hours to surrender or face death.[37] Loyal ZDF troops responded by storming the radio station, capturing Lungu and five other coup plotters.[37]

In early August 2022, the government announced that it would recruit up to 5,000 military personnel by October of the same year.[38]

Command edit

In 1976 Zambia adopted a unified command system, in which the three Service Chiefs reported to a Commander of the 'Zambian National Defence Force' (ZNDF). The Commander of Zambia Air Force at the time, Air Commodore Peter Zuze, was promoted to Lieutenant-General and appointed as Deputy Commander of the ZNDF.[39] However, the Zambia Air Force and Zambia National Service resented this system because Army officers filled most senior appointments in the ZNDF and the system was ended in 1980. The country then reverted to the command system inherited at independence where Service Chiefs report to the Head of State through a Minister of Defence.[40]

The current (2021) Command is:

- President and Commander-in-Chief: Hakainde Hichilema (from 24th August 2021)

- Defence Minister: Ambrose Lwiji Lufuma (from 27 August 2021)

- Permanent Secretary for Defence: Norman Chipakupaku

- Commander Zambia Army: Lieut.-General Dennis Sitali Alibuzwi (from 29th August 2021)

- Deputy Commander Zambia Army: Major-General Geoffrey Zyeele (from 29th August 2021)

- Commander Zambia Air Force: Lieut.-General Collins Barry ((from 29th August 2021)

- Deputy Commander Zambia Air Force: Major General Oscar Nyoni

- Commandant Zambia National Service: Lieut.-General Patrick Kayombo Solochi

- Deputy Commandant Zambia National Service: Major-General Reuben Mwewa

- Commandant Defence Services and Staff Training College: Brigadier General Benson Musonda.[41]

Zambia Army edit

Organisation edit

The current Army organisation is:[40][42][43]

Three infantry brigades -

  • 1 Brigade, Lusaka[44]
  • 2 Brigade, Kabwe (during July 2016 the Brigade Commander was Brigadier Martin Banda)
  • 3 Brigade, Ndola (during March 2017 the Brigade Commander was Brigadier Laston Chabinga)

With the following units:

  • 64 Armoured Regiment (tank). U.S. State Department International Military Education and Training records from FY-2006 indicate a Zambian officer attended from 64 Armoured Regiment at Mikango Barracks, east Lusaka.[45]
  • 17 Cavalry Regiment (armoured reconnaissance)
  • 10 Medium Regiment, Kalewa Barracks, Ndola (also given as an artillery regiment/brigade of two Fire Direction Artillery Battalions and one Multiple Rocket Launchers battalion)
  • 1 Engineer Regiment, Mufulira
  • 6 Construction Regiment, raised March 2017?[46]
  • 1 mechanised battalion
  • 6 light infantry battalions, titled 1 to 6 Battalions Zambia Regiment
  • 1 Commando Battalion (special forces), Ndola
  • 48 Marine Unit, Kawambwa, raised July 2015.[5][47]
  • 3 reserve infantry battalions (7 to 9 Battalions Zambia Regiment[48])
  • Support units (logistics, transport, medical, ordnance, electrical and mechanical engineering)
  • Specialist schools (armour, artillery, engineers and signals)

Equipment edit

Small arms edit

Vehicles and towed artillery edit

Origin Type Versions In service Notes
T-54/55   Soviet Union Main Battle Tank 25[50] Deliveries in 1976 and 1981.
PT-76   Soviet Union Light tank 50[50]
BTR-80   Russia Armoured Personnel Carrier 20[51]
BTR-70   Soviet Union Armoured Personnel Carrier 20[50]
BTR-60   Soviet Union Armoured Personnel Carrier 13[50]
WZ551   China Armoured Personnel Carrier 6X6 WZ551B variant.[50] 20
Buffel   South Africa Armoured Personnel Carrier Rhino variant. 1[50]
Ratel   South Africa Infantry Fighting Vehicle 14[52]
GAZ Tigr   Russia Infantry Mobility Vehicle 22[53]
Ferret   United Kingdom Armoured car 28 Inherited from Northern Rhodesian security forces.[50]
BRDM-2   Soviet Union Scout car 44 Acquired in 1981.[50]
BRDM-1   Soviet Union Scout car 44 Acquired in 1980.[50]
D-30   Soviet Union Howitzer 24[50]
M-46   China Howitzer Type 59 18[50]
Elbit Spear MK2   Israel self-propelled Mortar Elbit Spear MK2 6[54] self-propelled variant of the Cardom mortar
ATMOS M46   Israel self-propelled Howitzer Elbit Spear MK2 6[55] mounted on Tatra trucks
BM-21   Soviet Union MLRS 50[50]

Zambia Air Force edit

The Zambia Air Force is a small air force that developed from the Northern Rhodesian Air Wing as well as the former Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland Air Force. In recent years the aircraft inventory has largely been updated with Chinese aircraft reflecting the increasing closeness between the Zambian Defence Force and China. During 1999 eight Karakorum-8 jet trainers were delivered and in 2006 the Zambia Air Force received two Xian MA60 and five Yakovlev Yak-12 transport aircraft from China. During March 2012 a further eight K-8 were received.[56] Four Harbin Z-9 helicopters were delivered in June 2012, with a further four delivered by March 2013 (when one of the new aircraft was lost in an accident, see below).[57]

In April 2014 six Hongdu L-15 Falcon supersonic lead-in fighter/trainer jets were ordered from China, the first arriving in December 2015. Around the same time orders were placed for six SIAI-Marchetti SF.260TW trainer aircraft, one Alenia C-27J Spartan transport aircraft, and a number of Russian-made Mil Mi-17 helicopters.[58] These orders were expected to be delivered during 2016.[59]

Recent aircraft losses edit

  • On 13 March 2013 a Harbin Z-9 helicopter crashed while attempting to land at Lusaka City Airport. The pilot, Major Misapa Mukupa, was killed, and the co-pilot, Lieutenant Kenneth Chilala, was injured. The helicopter was taking part in Youth Day celebrations and it was suggested the accident was caused by a national flag attached to the aircraft coming loose and then entangled in the tail rotor.[57]
  • On 15 January 2014 a Saab MFI.17 Supporter trainer crashed some 40 km from Livingstone. Both crew were killed.[60][61]
  • On 19 May 2014 a Saab MFI.15 crashed in Lusaka West. Both crew were killed. The crew were the Deputy Commander ZAF, Major-General Muliokela Muliokela, and Colonel Brian Mweene.[62][61]
  • On 14 September 2015 an Agusta-Bell AB.205 helicopter crashed near Sinazongwe, apparently while returning from taking Defence Minister Richwell Siamunene on a private trip.[63] Five people were injured.[64]
  • On 28 March 2022 two Zambian Air Force pilots, Colonel Lyson Siame, and Second Lieutenant Kalasa Bwalya, were killed when their SF-260TW aircraft (registration AF-545) crashed 38 kilometres north of Harry Mwaanga Nkumbula International Airport near Livingstone.[65]

Zambia National Service edit

The Zambia National Service is a defence wing that is mandated to train citizens to serve the republic, develop infrastructure and enhance national food security and contribute to the social economic development. Zambia National Service (ZNS) personnel have been included in peacekeeping contingents deployed by Zambia to the United Nation's MINUSCA mission in the Central African Republic.[66]

Six months of training for 400 youths was planned for 2016. This was to include 200 males to be trained at Chiwoko ZNS Training Centre, Katete, Eastern Province, and 200 females to be trained at the Kitwe ZNS training camp.[67][68]

United Nations Peacekeeping Missions edit

Zambia has been an active participant in several UN peacekeeping operations, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. Zambian personnel have been fated to be caught up in some of the more dramatic incidents of recent UN Peacekeeping in Africa: witnessing the Kibeho Massacre in Rwanda during April 1995; having large numbers of Zambian peacekeepers taken hostage by rebels in Sierra Leone during 2000;[69] and with troops caught up in fighting between Sudanese and South Sudanese forces in the contested Abyei area during May 2011.[70] Despite these crises Zambian forces have generally performed well and earned a reputation as effective peacekeepers.[71][40]

UN missions which have seen the deployment of battalions of Zambian troops, or other significant contingents, include the following.

UNAVEM III (United Nations Angola Verification Mission III, February 1995 to June 1997)

A Zambian battalion was deployed to southern Angola, based in the town of Menongue.[72] Seven Zambian peacekeepers died during the UNAVEM III deployment.[73]


UNAMIR (United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda)

Three Zambian fatalities.[74]


UNAMSIL (United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone)

Thirty-four Zambian fatalities.[74]

  • Zambatt 1, deployed April 2000. Shortly after deployment some 200 Zambian peacekeepers were taken hostage by rebels and some were later murdered.[75]
  • Zambatt 2.
  • Zambatt 3 (Lt. Col. MS Sitwala). On 5 January 2002 six personnel were killed and another 12 injured in an accidental explosion while transferring surrendered mortar bombs to storage.[76]
  • Zambatt 4, deployed mid-2002, 830 strong.[77]
  • Zambatt 5.
  • Zambatt 6.
  • Zambatt 7 (Col. John Siame) – 821 personnel; deployed February 2004 to ...[78] (Note: Sgt [Ms] Megani Forry died of natural causes during deployment, early 2004).[78]


UNMIS (United Nations Mission in the Sudan)

Three Zambian fatalities.[79] Four Zambian peacekeepers were wounded on 10 May 2011,[80] shortly before the independence of South Sudan and before an outbreak of fighting when the Zambians were criticised for not better protecting civilians.[70]

  • Zambatt 1 - Deployed for six months, to June 2010.
  • Zambatt 2 - 523 personnel strong; deployed June 2010.[81]


MINUSCA (United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic)

  • Zambatt 1 (Lt. Col. Kelvin Chiyangi[82]), 750 personnel, including 50 Special Forces, deployed 30 April 2015 to April 2016.[83]
  • Zambatt 2, deployed 22 April 2016.[84]
  • Zambatt 3 (Lt. Col. John Banda), 750 personnel. Undertook pre-deployment training under Zambian, United States and British instructors,[85] before deploying in April 2017.[86]
  • Zambatt 4 (Lt. Col. Ngosa), deployed during April 2018.[87]
  • Zambatt 5 (Lt. Col. Tembo [88]) was to deploy in mid-2019.[89]
  • Zambatt 6 (Lt. Col. Paul Sapezo[90]) was scheduled to deploy to the Central African Republic in 2020.[91]
  • Zambatt 7 (Lt. Col Jeff Mwanahing’ombe) deployed in 2021 and returned home during September 2022.[92]
  • Zambatt 8 deployed to the CAR during September 2022. [93]


During 2017 Warrant Officer 2 Boyd Chibuye died whilst deployed in the Central African Republic.[94]

On 4 December 2017 a Zambian police member of the UN mission was reported injured in an attack by anti-Balaka fighters in Bria, northern CAR. One Mauritanian policeman was killed and two others injured in this attack.[95]

Staff Sergeant Derrick Sichilyango of the Zambian Contingent was killed in a road traffic accident in November 2018.[96]

Staff Sergeant Patrick Simasiku Wamunyima and Staff Sergeant Alex Mudenda Musanda, both serving with MINUSCA, died during 2019 and were honoured on the 2020 International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers with the posthumous award of the Dag Hammarskjöld Medal.[97]

SADC Missions edit

SAPMIL (SADC Preventive Mission in the Kingdom of Lesotho)

During November 2017 a small Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) standby force was deployed to Lesotho to assist that country through an internal security crisis following the assassination of the Lesotho Defence Force Commander, Lieut.-General Khoantle Motšomotšo, on 5 September 2017. This SADC force included a 207-strong military element which had a Zambian Deputy Commander and which included 36 infantry and nine logistics personnel from Zambia.[98][99] The mission wrapped up in November 2018 after successfully stabilising the Kingdom.[100][101][102]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

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zambian, defence, force, military, zambia, consists, zambian, army, zambian, force, zambia, national, service, defence, forces, were, formed, zambian, independence, october, 1964, from, constituent, units, dissolved, federation, rhodesia, nyasaland, armed, for. The Zambian Defence Force is the military of Zambia It consists of the Zambian Army the Zambian Air Force and the Zambia National Service 2 The defence forces were formed at Zambian independence on 24 October 1964 from constituent units of the dissolved Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland Armed Forces 3 During the 1970s and 1980s it played a key role in a number of regional conflicts namely the South African Border War and Rhodesian Bush War 4 Being a landlocked country Zambia has no navy although the Zambian Army maintains a maritime patrol unit for maintaining security on inland bodies of water 5 Defence Force of ZambiaService branchesZambian ArmyZambian Air ForceZambia National ServiceLeadershipCommander in chiefHakainde HichilemaMinister of DefenceAmbrose LufumaPersonnelAvailable formilitary service2 477 494 age 15 49 2004 est Fit formilitary service1 310 814 age 15 49 2004 est Reaching militaryage annually 2004 est Active personnel15 150 2022 1 ExpendituresBudget 283 million 2023 Percent of GDP1 3 2023 Related articlesHistoryRhodesian Bush WarSouth African Border WarMozambican Civil WarRanksMilitary ranks of ZambiaRank insignia of Warrant Officer Class 2 for the army of Zambia Contents 1 History 1 1 Background and independence 1 2 Involvement in regional conflicts 1968 80 1 3 End of the Cold War and reforms 2 Command 3 Zambia Army 3 1 Organisation 3 2 Equipment 3 2 1 Small arms 3 2 2 Vehicles and towed artillery 4 Zambia Air Force 4 1 Recent aircraft losses 5 Zambia National Service 6 United Nations Peacekeeping Missions 7 SADC Missions 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesHistory editBackground and independence edit The Zambian Defence Force had its roots in the Northern Rhodesia Regiment a multi ethnic military unit which was raised by the British colonial government and had served with distinction during World War II 2 In 1960 the constituent colonies of Northern Rhodesia Southern Rhodesia and Nyasaland were amalgamated into a self governing British dependency known as the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland 6 When the federation was dissolved three years later the assets and personnel of its armed forces were integrated with those of its successor states including Northern Rhodesia which subsequently gained independence as Zambia 6 For example Zambia received half the federal armoured car squadron as well as some light patrol aircraft 7 Zambia also inherited the command structures of the Northern Rhodesia Regiment as well as the Northern Rhodesian Air Wing which formed the basis for the new Zambian Army and Zambian Air Force respectively 6 Relations almost immediately soured between Zambia and Southern Rhodesia now known simply as Rhodesia which had issued its own unilateral declaration of independence UDI in 1965 8 Reports that Rhodesian security forces had occupied Kariba Dam prompted Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda to mobilise the ZDF for the first time and deploy troops to the border 8 The ZDF was withdrawn when Kaunda received a guarantee that Zambia s supply of Kariba power would not be interrupted 9 Nevertheless military tension between the two nations remained high and border incidents resulting in civilian deaths occurred 10 In November 1966 Rhodesian troops fired across the border and killed a Zambian woman on the north bank of the Zambezi River 10 In January 1973 Zambian troops fired on a South African police patrol boat on the Zambezi 10 Shortly afterwards Defence Minister Grey Zulu ordered that the ZDF return to the border in force 10 Later in the month Kaunda brought the first of several complaints before the United Nations Security Council charging that Rhodesian security forces were violating Zambia s sovereignty and territorial integrity with South African support 10 Tensions flared again when Zambian troops fired across the border and killed two Canadian tourists on the Rhodesian side of Victoria Falls in May 1973 11 The increasing prospect of war with Rhodesia posed several unique security dilemmas for the ZDF 10 Firstly Zambia lacked the manpower or conventional hardware necessary to provide a suitable deterrent to a Rhodesian incursion 10 It also remained dependent on a relatively small pool of white senior officers and technical personnel 10 After 1967 Kaunda s government began replacing them with foreign officers on contract ostensibly to minimise the potential for conflicts of loyalty 10 Between 1967 and 1970 the majority of officers in the ZDF were seconded from the British Army 10 In 1971 the ZDF was finally prepared to appoint its first black army and air force commanders 6 Due to the white community s close ties with Rhodesia and South Africa white Zambians were subsequently barred from voluntary enlistment and granted a blanket exemption from conscription 12 Around September 1967 Kaunda made two requests to the United States for equipment for the Zambian Army including long range missile systems but was rebuffed 13 More successful were Zambia s attempts to acquire its first combat aircraft a number of Aermacchi MB 326 and SIAI Marchetti SF 260s sourced from Italy 7 the first black Zambian Air Force pilots were trained by Italian instructors between 1966 and 1969 13 Italy also sold the ZDF helicopters and towed artillery 7 Involvement in regional conflicts 1968 80 edit During the 1970s Zambia began providing sanctuary for a number of revolutionary and militant political movements dedicated to overthrowing colonial and white minority rule elsewhere on the African continent 14 Guerrilla armies based in exile in Zambia included the People s Liberation Army of Namibia PLAN 4 and the Zimbabwe People s Revolutionary Army ZIPRA 14 These movements ultimately embroiled the ZDF in their own internal power struggles 15 as well as direct clashes with foreign troops carrying out preemptive strikes 14 In 1968 the ZDF skirmished with Portuguese troops which had pursued a number of Angolan or Mozambican insurgents into Zambia 10 In September 1975 Zambian troops became locked in a firefight with insurgents of the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army ZANLA 16 The ZDF killed eleven ZANLA insurgents and later expelled that movement from Zambian soil 16 A year later nearly two thousand 17 disaffected PLAN insurgents in Zambia launched a mutiny which became known as the Shipanga Affair 18 The army was forced to marshal several battalions to subdue the dissidents 15 In response to Zambia s increasingly open support for PLAN South Africa sponsored a force of Kaonde speaking dissidents under Adamson Mushala known as the Zambian Democratic Supreme Council DSC 19 The DSC maintained a low level insurgency in Zambia s North Western and Western Provinces 20 Mushala s guerrillas sabotaged infrastructure skirmished with the ZDF and collected intelligence on PLAN movements inside Zambia 21 They were trained by South African special forces and instructors recruited from the Portuguese Directorate General of Security 22 In 1973 an army unit killed a hundred of the guerrillas by ambushing them as they attempted to cross the Zambezi near the Caprivi Strip 22 Mushala was largely inactive until early 1976 when his guerrillas skirmished twice with the ZDF and hijacked an army payroll 19 As a result of the new challenges posed by the Mushala insurgency and the presence of foreign militants the ZDF underwent an extensive reorganisation and adopted a new unified command structure 6 It was renamed the Zambian National Defence Force ZNDF in 1976 6 A prevailing feature of the new ZNDF was its adoption of a third branch known as the Zambian National Service 6 The objective of the Zambian National Service was to provide basic military instruction to all Zambian citizens in the event they needed to be mobilised as reservists during wartime 2 The ZNDF became increasingly politicised with the ruling United National Independence Party UNIP forming party branches in the barracks and introducing a number of political education programs for military personnel 23 Under the UNIP the ZNDF was not subject to public audit or parliamentary oversight 23 This was justified under the pretext that the ZNDF s development was tied to the exigencies of wartime 23 Between 1977 and 1980 military tension with South Africa and Rhodesia continued to escalate resulting in a renewed spate of border incidents 24 In 1977 the ZNDF bombarded Rhodesian positions near Victoria Falls with rocket and mortar fire 24 The reasons for the attack were disputed but the Zambian government maintained that the troops involved had been deliberately provoked by Rhodesian forces into firing 24 Around March 1978 the ZNDF claimed to have been involved in repelling a Rhodesian raid on a ZIPRA training camp 25 It also assisted PLAN insurgents during a raid on a South African military base in the Caprivi Strip 4 South Africa retaliated by shelling several ZNDF positions near the border 26 and Rhodesia began targeting ZNDF outposts 27 Growing Zambian war weariness was a significant factor in Kaunda s influencing the guerrilla movements in Rhodesia to seek peace resulting in a negotiated end to that conflict 14 Kaunda also bowed to South African pressure and ordered PLAN to close its rear base facilities in Zambia by 1979 28 At the same time the ZNDF embarked on a 70 million kwacha modernisation program with assistance from the Soviet Union 29 The Soviets provided the Zambian Army with tanks wheeled armored vehicles and technical instruction on especially generous terms the Zambian Air Force received its first fighter aircraft in the form of a Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 21 squadron at the same time 29 End of the Cold War and reforms edit In October 1980 two ZNDF officers Brigadier Godfrey Miyanda and Colonel Patrick Mkandawire were arrested for planning a coup d etat with the support of an exiled Congolese insurgent movement the Front for Congolese National Liberation FLNC 13 The plot involved arming the FLNC with ZNDF weaponry and later providing that movement with rear operating bases in Zambia as a reward for their efforts if the coup succeeded 13 The ZNDF and the police apprehended the conspirators before they had opportunity to set the coup in motion and later raided the FLNC s base camp detaining most of the insurgents 13 Due in part to the extreme secrecy surrounding the ZNDF s budget and the refusal of the UNIP to allow parliamentary debate on the topic a number of problems concerning military funding were covered up rather than addressed 23 For example the facilities at ZNS training camps were so inadequate that typhoid outbreaks became common among recruits 23 This was due to lack of funds to filter the camps drinking water 23 After a particularly serious typhoid outbreak between 1980 and 1981 the government was forced to suspend and later stop the compulsory national service programme 23 In November 1982 the ZNDF killed Adamson Mushala in an ambush outside Solwezi although his followers continued to carry out operations under the leadership of Alexander Saimbwende 19 The DSC continued to pose a sufficient threat that an Italian mineral survey team had to be evacuated from Northwestern Province in 1984 after being targeted by the guerrillas 20 Nevertheless the erosion of South African support ensured that its forces remained small and poorly armed 19 Mushala and later Saimbwende turned to ivory poaching to sustain their war effort against the ZNDF 19 As the Mozambican Civil War intensified the ZNDF had to contend with a number of armed incursions by Mozambican National Resistance RENAMO insurgents who raided Zambian border towns in search of food and other supplies 30 The ZNDF made it a policy to pursue RENAMO into neighbouring Mozambique in hot pursuit if necessary 30 In 1988 a second coup d etat attempt was planned this time by Lieutenant General Christian Tembo and at least three other senior army officers 31 The conspirators were detained before they could carry it out but this temporarily jeopardised relations between the Zambian government and the army 6 The end of the Cold War brought a number of changes to the Zambian political situation and the ZNDF 32 The ZNDF remained heavily in debt with the former Soviet bloc for military equipment it had purchased in the 1980s as well as interest accrued 32 The army in particular was badly affected by the collapse of its Soviet technical training program which left much of its heavy weapons unserviceable 33 Following mass protests over President Kaunda s decision to cut subsidies for maize meal and double maize prices in 1990 34 Captain Mwamba Luchembe single handedly seized the national radio station and announced a coup d etat 31 Luchembe held the radio station for only two hours before being arrested 35 Kaunda s unpopularity led to demonstrations in support of Luchembe however and the same day the president announced he would seek a referendum on democratic multi party elections 34 Kaunda granted a blanket amnesty to his political opponents as he prepared to accept the return of multi party elections which would shortly thereafter end his term of almost three decades 19 Among those who received amnesty was Alexander Saimbwende who surrendered to the government and ended the DSC insurgency 19 The 1991 general elections brought Frederick Chiluba and his opposition Movement for Multi Party Democracy to power and ushered in a period of reforms for the ZNDF 6 The Chiluba government dismantled the ZNDF s unified command structure and allowed the army ZNS and air force to revert to independent commands 6 The system of political patronage introduced to the ZNDF by Kaunda was also abandoned 23 A general demobilisation programme was instituted in the army and parliament gained the ability to debate defence expenditure 23 The Chiluba government immediately formed a Public Accounts Committee to reduce financial irregularities in the ZNDF most of which were linked to corruption and abuse of the ministerial tender system 23 Zambia s 1991 constitution formally reinstated the title Zambian Defence Force for the armed forces 36 In October 1997 Captain Steven Lungu seized control of the national radio station and announced a coup d etat 35 Lungu dismissed the chiefs of the army and police and announced that he was forming a new Government of National Redemption 37 He gave President Chiluba an ultimatum of three hours to surrender or face death 37 Loyal ZDF troops responded by storming the radio station capturing Lungu and five other coup plotters 37 In early August 2022 the government announced that it would recruit up to 5 000 military personnel by October of the same year 38 Command editIn 1976 Zambia adopted a unified command system in which the three Service Chiefs reported to a Commander of the Zambian National Defence Force ZNDF The Commander of Zambia Air Force at the time Air Commodore Peter Zuze was promoted to Lieutenant General and appointed as Deputy Commander of the ZNDF 39 However the Zambia Air Force and Zambia National Service resented this system because Army officers filled most senior appointments in the ZNDF and the system was ended in 1980 The country then reverted to the command system inherited at independence where Service Chiefs report to the Head of State through a Minister of Defence 40 The current 2021 Command is President and Commander in Chief Hakainde Hichilema from 24th August 2021 Defence Minister Ambrose Lwiji Lufuma from 27 August 2021 Permanent Secretary for Defence Norman Chipakupaku Commander Zambia Army Lieut General Dennis Sitali Alibuzwi from 29th August 2021 Deputy Commander Zambia Army Major General Geoffrey Zyeele from 29th August 2021 Commander Zambia Air Force Lieut General Collins Barry from 29th August 2021 Deputy Commander Zambia Air Force Major General Oscar Nyoni Commandant Zambia National Service Lieut General Patrick Kayombo Solochi Deputy Commandant Zambia National Service Major General Reuben Mwewa Commandant Defence Services and Staff Training College Brigadier General Benson Musonda 41 Zambia Army editOrganisation edit The current Army organisation is 40 42 43 Three infantry brigades 1 Brigade Lusaka 44 2 Brigade Kabwe during July 2016 the Brigade Commander was Brigadier Martin Banda 3 Brigade Ndola during March 2017 the Brigade Commander was Brigadier Laston Chabinga With the following units 64 Armoured Regiment tank U S State Department International Military Education and Training records from FY 2006 indicate a Zambian officer attended from 64 Armoured Regiment at Mikango Barracks east Lusaka 45 17 Cavalry Regiment armoured reconnaissance 10 Medium Regiment Kalewa Barracks Ndola also given as an artillery regiment brigade of two Fire Direction Artillery Battalions and one Multiple Rocket Launchers battalion 1 Engineer Regiment Mufulira 6 Construction Regiment raised March 2017 46 1 mechanised battalion 6 light infantry battalions titled 1 to 6 Battalions Zambia Regiment 1 Commando Battalion special forces Ndola 48 Marine Unit Kawambwa raised July 2015 5 47 3 reserve infantry battalions 7 to 9 Battalions Zambia Regiment 48 Support units logistics transport medical ordnance electrical and mechanical engineering Specialist schools armour artillery engineers and signals Equipment edit Small arms edit RPG 7 49 FN FAL 49 Heckler amp Koch G3 49 AKM 49 AK 47 49 Sterling submachine gun 49 DShK 49 PK machine gun 49 Vehicles and towed artillery edit Origin Type Versions In service NotesT 54 55 nbsp Soviet Union Main Battle Tank 25 50 Deliveries in 1976 and 1981 PT 76 nbsp Soviet Union Light tank 50 50 BTR 80 nbsp Russia Armoured Personnel Carrier 20 51 BTR 70 nbsp Soviet Union Armoured Personnel Carrier 20 50 BTR 60 nbsp Soviet Union Armoured Personnel Carrier 13 50 WZ551 nbsp China Armoured Personnel Carrier 6X6 WZ551B variant 50 20Buffel nbsp South Africa Armoured Personnel Carrier Rhino variant 1 50 Ratel nbsp South Africa Infantry Fighting Vehicle 14 52 GAZ Tigr nbsp Russia Infantry Mobility Vehicle 22 53 Ferret nbsp United Kingdom Armoured car 28 Inherited from Northern Rhodesian security forces 50 BRDM 2 nbsp Soviet Union Scout car 44 Acquired in 1981 50 BRDM 1 nbsp Soviet Union Scout car 44 Acquired in 1980 50 D 30 nbsp Soviet Union Howitzer 24 50 M 46 nbsp China Howitzer Type 59 18 50 Elbit Spear MK2 nbsp Israel self propelled Mortar Elbit Spear MK2 6 54 self propelled variant of the Cardom mortarATMOS M46 nbsp Israel self propelled Howitzer Elbit Spear MK2 6 55 mounted on Tatra trucksBM 21 nbsp Soviet Union MLRS 50 50 Zambia Air Force editMain article Zambian Air Force The Zambia Air Force is a small air force that developed from the Northern Rhodesian Air Wing as well as the former Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland Air Force In recent years the aircraft inventory has largely been updated with Chinese aircraft reflecting the increasing closeness between the Zambian Defence Force and China During 1999 eight Karakorum 8 jet trainers were delivered and in 2006 the Zambia Air Force received two Xian MA60 and five Yakovlev Yak 12 transport aircraft from China During March 2012 a further eight K 8 were received 56 Four Harbin Z 9 helicopters were delivered in June 2012 with a further four delivered by March 2013 when one of the new aircraft was lost in an accident see below 57 In April 2014 six Hongdu L 15 Falcon supersonic lead in fighter trainer jets were ordered from China the first arriving in December 2015 Around the same time orders were placed for six SIAI Marchetti SF 260TW trainer aircraft one Alenia C 27J Spartan transport aircraft and a number of Russian made Mil Mi 17 helicopters 58 These orders were expected to be delivered during 2016 59 Recent aircraft losses edit On 13 March 2013 a Harbin Z 9 helicopter crashed while attempting to land at Lusaka City Airport The pilot Major Misapa Mukupa was killed and the co pilot Lieutenant Kenneth Chilala was injured The helicopter was taking part in Youth Day celebrations and it was suggested the accident was caused by a national flag attached to the aircraft coming loose and then entangled in the tail rotor 57 On 15 January 2014 a Saab MFI 17 Supporter trainer crashed some 40 km from Livingstone Both crew were killed 60 61 On 19 May 2014 a Saab MFI 15 crashed in Lusaka West Both crew were killed The crew were the Deputy Commander ZAF Major General Muliokela Muliokela and Colonel Brian Mweene 62 61 On 14 September 2015 an Agusta Bell AB 205 helicopter crashed near Sinazongwe apparently while returning from taking Defence Minister Richwell Siamunene on a private trip 63 Five people were injured 64 On 28 March 2022 two Zambian Air Force pilots Colonel Lyson Siame and Second Lieutenant Kalasa Bwalya were killed when their SF 260TW aircraft registration AF 545 crashed 38 kilometres north of Harry Mwaanga Nkumbula International Airport near Livingstone 65 Zambia National Service editMain article Zambia National Service The Zambia National Service is a defence wing that is mandated to train citizens to serve the republic develop infrastructure and enhance national food security and contribute to the social economic development Zambia National Service ZNS personnel have been included in peacekeeping contingents deployed by Zambia to the United Nation s MINUSCA mission in the Central African Republic 66 Six months of training for 400 youths was planned for 2016 This was to include 200 males to be trained at Chiwoko ZNS Training Centre Katete Eastern Province and 200 females to be trained at the Kitwe ZNS training camp 67 68 United Nations Peacekeeping Missions editZambia has been an active participant in several UN peacekeeping operations mostly in sub Saharan Africa Zambian personnel have been fated to be caught up in some of the more dramatic incidents of recent UN Peacekeeping in Africa witnessing the Kibeho Massacre in Rwanda during April 1995 having large numbers of Zambian peacekeepers taken hostage by rebels in Sierra Leone during 2000 69 and with troops caught up in fighting between Sudanese and South Sudanese forces in the contested Abyei area during May 2011 70 Despite these crises Zambian forces have generally performed well and earned a reputation as effective peacekeepers 71 40 UN missions which have seen the deployment of battalions of Zambian troops or other significant contingents include the following UNAVEM III United Nations Angola Verification Mission III February 1995 to June 1997 A Zambian battalion was deployed to southern Angola based in the town of Menongue 72 Seven Zambian peacekeepers died during the UNAVEM III deployment 73 UNAMIR United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda Three Zambian fatalities 74 UNAMSIL United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone Thirty four Zambian fatalities 74 Zambatt 1 deployed April 2000 Shortly after deployment some 200 Zambian peacekeepers were taken hostage by rebels and some were later murdered 75 Zambatt 2 Zambatt 3 Lt Col MS Sitwala On 5 January 2002 six personnel were killed and another 12 injured in an accidental explosion while transferring surrendered mortar bombs to storage 76 Zambatt 4 deployed mid 2002 830 strong 77 Zambatt 5 Zambatt 6 Zambatt 7 Col John Siame 821 personnel deployed February 2004 to 78 Note Sgt Ms Megani Forry died of natural causes during deployment early 2004 78 UNMIS United Nations Mission in the Sudan Three Zambian fatalities 79 Four Zambian peacekeepers were wounded on 10 May 2011 80 shortly before the independence of South Sudan and before an outbreak of fighting when the Zambians were criticised for not better protecting civilians 70 Zambatt 1 Deployed for six months to June 2010 Zambatt 2 523 personnel strong deployed June 2010 81 MINUSCA United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic Zambatt 1 Lt Col Kelvin Chiyangi 82 750 personnel including 50 Special Forces deployed 30 April 2015 to April 2016 83 Zambatt 2 deployed 22 April 2016 84 Zambatt 3 Lt Col John Banda 750 personnel Undertook pre deployment training under Zambian United States and British instructors 85 before deploying in April 2017 86 Zambatt 4 Lt Col Ngosa deployed during April 2018 87 Zambatt 5 Lt Col Tembo 88 was to deploy in mid 2019 89 Zambatt 6 Lt Col Paul Sapezo 90 was scheduled to deploy to the Central African Republic in 2020 91 Zambatt 7 Lt Col Jeff Mwanahing ombe deployed in 2021 and returned home during September 2022 92 Zambatt 8 deployed to the CAR during September 2022 93 During 2017 Warrant Officer 2 Boyd Chibuye died whilst deployed in the Central African Republic 94 On 4 December 2017 a Zambian police member of the UN mission was reported injured in an attack by anti Balaka fighters in Bria northern CAR One Mauritanian policeman was killed and two others injured in this attack 95 Staff Sergeant Derrick Sichilyango of the Zambian Contingent was killed in a road traffic accident in November 2018 96 Staff Sergeant Patrick Simasiku Wamunyima and Staff Sergeant Alex Mudenda Musanda both serving with MINUSCA died during 2019 and were honoured on the 2020 International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers with the posthumous award of the Dag Hammarskjold Medal 97 SADC Missions editSAPMIL SADC Preventive Mission in the Kingdom of Lesotho During November 2017 a small Southern Africa Development Community SADC standby force was deployed to Lesotho to assist that country through an internal security crisis following the assassination of the Lesotho Defence Force Commander Lieut General Khoantle Motsomotso on 5 September 2017 This SADC force included a 207 strong military element which had a Zambian Deputy Commander and which included 36 infantry and nine logistics personnel from Zambia 98 99 The mission wrapped up in November 2018 after successfully stabilising the Kingdom 100 101 102 See also editZambia Zambia Air Force Zambia ArmyNotes editReferences edit The Military Balance 2022 a b c Abrahams Diane Cawthra Gavin Williams Rocklyn 2003 Ourselves To Know Civil military Relations and Defence Transformation in Southern Africa Pretoria Institute for Security Studies South Africa pp 3 6 ISBN 978 0812216202 Wele Patrick 1995 Zambia s most famous dissidents from Mushala to Luchembe Solwezi Zambia PMW pp 150 159 OCLC 37615501 a b c Stiff P 2000 The Covert War Koevoet Operations in Namibia 1979 1989 Galago Publishihg Pty Ltd pp 43 49 ISBN 978 1 919854 03 8 a b Zambia Army Commando Unit splits forms Marine Unit Lusaka Voice 18 February 2015 accessed 5 February 2017 lt http lusakavoice com 2015 02 18 zambia army commando unit splits forms marine unit Archived 2017 03 23 at the Wayback Machine gt a b c d e f g h i j Shapwaya Moses 2013 Implications for a Non Unified Command System and the Need For a Unified Command System in Zambia MsC thesis United States Army Command and General Staff College Archived from the original on 26 June 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2015 a b c Trade Registers Armstrade sipri org Archived from the original on 2010 04 14 Retrieved 2013 06 20 a b Ashton S R Roger Louis Wm 2004 East of Suez and the Commonwealth 1964 1971 Europe Rhodesia Commonwealth British Documents on the End of Empire Vol Series A Vol 5 Part II The Stationery Office pp 221 222 ISBN 9780112905837 Archived from the original on 28 June 2014 Retrieved 17 January 2013 Brecher Michael Wilkenfeld Jonathan 1997 A Study of Crisis Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press pp 105 107 ISBN 978 0472087075 a b c d e f g h i j k Tordoff William 1974 Politics in Zambia North Manchester Manchester University Press pp 358 362 ISBN 978 0719005510 Scully Pat 1984 Exit Rhodesia Ladysmith Cottswold Press p 162 ISBN 978 0620078023 Southern Africa Political amp Economic Monthly Southern African Political Economy Series SAPES Publications Project Feb 16 1994 Retrieved Feb 16 2019 via Google Books a b c d e DeRoche Andrew 2008 Gewald Jan Bert Hinfelaar Marja Macola Giacomo eds One Zambia Many Histories Towards a History of Post colonial Zambia Leiden 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Southern Africa Bloomington Indiana University Press p 244 ISBN 978 0253331311 Dreyer Ronald 1994 Namibia and Southern Africa Regional Dynamics of Decolonization 1945 90 London Kegan Paul International p 140 ISBN 978 0710304711 a b Kangumu Bennett 2011 Contesting Caprivi A History of Colonial Isolation and Regional Nationalism in Namibia Basel Basler Afrika Bibliographien Namibia Resource Center and Southern Africa Library pp 155 156 ISBN 978 3905758221 a b c d e f g h i j Phiri Bizeck Jube 2007 Cawthra Gavin Du Pisani Andre Omari Abillah eds Security and Democracy in Southern Africa Johannesburg University of Witwatersrand Press pp 206 220 ISBN 978 1 86814 453 2 a b c Africa Africa Journal Limited Feb 16 1977 Retrieved Feb 16 2019 via Google Books Ottaway David 8 March 1978 Rhodesia Mounts Biggest Raid Yet Against Zambia The Washington Post Washington D C Archived from the original on 14 March 2018 Retrieved 30 June 2020 Steenkamp Willem 2006 Borderstrike South Africa Into Angola 1975 1980 2006 ed Just Done Productions pp 132 226 ISBN 1 920169 00 8 Rhodesia Destroys Zambian Base The Daily Journal Franklin Indiana 31 October 1978 Archived from the original on 4 March 2018 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Vines Alex 1997 Still Killing Landmines in Southern Africa New York Human Rights Watch pp 104 115 143 144 ISBN 978 1564322067 a b DeRoche Andrew 2016 Kenneth Kaunda the United States and Southern Africa London Bloomsbury Publishing pp 322 342 ISBN 978 1350054424 a b Patterns of Global Terrorism PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 29 Retrieved 2018 03 28 a b Chan Stephen 1992 Kaunda and Southern Africa London I B Tauris pp 8 15 ISBN 978 1850434900 a b MacDonald Brian 1997 Military Spending in Developing Countries Ottawa Carleton University Press pp 79 92 ISBN 978 0886293147 Howe Herbert 2004 Ambiguous Order Military Forces in African States Boulder Colorado Lynne Reinner Publishers pp 59 60 ISBN 978 1588263155 a b Brancati Dawn 2016 Democracy Protests Origins Features and Significance Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 52 ISBN 978 1107137738 a b Onwumechili Chuka 1998 African Democratization and Military Coups Westport Connecticut Praeger Books pp 31 32 ISBN 978 0275963255 Zambia 1991 rev 2009 Austin Texas Comparative Constitutions Project 2009 Archived from the original on 4 November 2016 Retrieved 15 July 2017 a b c McNeil Donald 29 October 1997 Zambia Says a Coup Is Over In 3 Hours Without Injury The New York Times New York City Archived from the original on 2 September 2017 Retrieved 19 December 2017 Times 4 August 2022 Govt to recruit 5 000 military personnel by October 2022 times co zm Retrieved 4 August 2022 Lungu H amp Ngoma N 2005 The Zambian military trials tribulations and hope In Rupiya M ed Evolutions and Revolutions A Contemporary History of Militaries in Southern Africa Institute for Security Studies Pretoria 331 329 ISBN 1 919913 82 3 a b c Chewe Innocent 2014 An Examination of Professionalism in the Zambia Army thesis presented to the Faculty of the U S Army Command and General Staff College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master Of Military Art and Science Fort Leavenworth Kansas www dtic mil cgi bin GetTRDoc AD ADA613529 Zande S 2017 SADC Joint Military Training Vital Chama Times of Zambia Ndola 29 August 2017 Griffiths J L 2014 Zambia Defence Force Defenceweb com 8 October 2014 accessed 10 January 2017 lt http www defenceweb co za index php option com content amp view article amp id 36502 zambia defence force amp catid 119 african militaries Archived 2017 02 27 at the Wayback Machine gt Lungu H amp Ngoma N 2005 The Zambian military trials tribulations and hope In Rupiya M ed Evolutions and Revolutions A Contemporary History of Militaries in Southern Africa Institute for Security Studies Pretoria 331 329 ISBN 1 919913 82 3 Sakala Y 2014 64 Armoured Regiment Win 2014 Army Athletics Times of Zambia 28 March 2014 IV Country Training Activities Africa U S Department of State Retrieved February 16 2019 Zambia Army establishes a Construction brigade Lusaka Times 11 March 2017 accessed 24 March 2017 lt https www lusakatimes com 2017 03 11 zambia army establishes construction brigade Archived 2017 03 23 at the Wayback Machine gt Siame N 2015 Marine Unit Launched Times of Zambia Lusaka 27 July 2015 For example see Banda G 2009 Ninth Battalion Zambia Zambia Post Friday 25 December 2009 http www postzambia com post read article php articleId 3598 Archived 2010 01 02 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g h Jones Richard D Jane s Infantry Weapons 2009 2010 Jane s Information Group 35 edition January 27 2009 ISBN 978 0 7106 2869 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l Arms Trade Register SIPRI Archived from the original on 14 April 2010 Retrieved 22 June 2012 Analysis Zambia Defence Forces unveil new armored vehicles and military equipment weapons defence industry military technology UK analysis focus army defence military industry army BusinessLIVE www businesslive co za Archived from the original on February 17 2019 Retrieved February 16 2019 Tiger armored vehicles armed with German machine guns in Zambia Zambian military parades new equipment Zambian military parades new equipment Zambian Air Force receives more K 8 trainers DefenceWeb 16 April 2012 a b Zambian Air Force Z 9 crashes DefenceWeb 14 March 2013 Nkala O 2015 Hongdu Prepares to Deliver First Light Attack Trainer Jet to Zambia Defensenews com 31 December 2015 As Zambia Air Force Grows it Plays a Regional Role Africa Defence Forum 19 July 2016 accessed 25 April 2017 lt http adf magazine com p 6306 Archived 2016 11 13 at the Wayback Machine gt Zambian Air Force MFI 17 crashes DefenceWeb 20 January 2014 a b Deputy Zambian Air Force Chief killed in MFI 15 crash DefenceWeb 20 May 2014 Zambia s Deputy Air Force Chief Killed in Plane Crash Agence France Presse via Defensenews com 19 May 2014 Crashed ZAF Chopper Was Returning From Taking Minister to His Village Zambian Watchdog Lusaka 15 September 2015 No Fatalities as ZAF Chopper Plunges Zambia Reports Lusaka 15 September 2015 Two dead in Zambian SF 260 crash DefenceWeb 29 March 2022 https www defenceweb co za aerospace aerospace aerospace two dead in zambian sf 260 crash Mwenya G 2014 Zambian Peacekeeping Troops Lack Funds to Deploy to CAR Zambia Reports 25 November 2014 400 Youths to Undergo ZNS Training Times of Zambia 27 July 2015 Musonda A 2015 Zambian UN Troops to Central African Republic Zambia Reports 29 April 2015 Ashby Phil 2003 Unscathed Escape from Sierra Leone Pan Macmillan Ltd London a b Mbao E 2011 Zambia defends Abyei peacekeepers Africa Review Kenya 6 June 2011 accessed 20 December 2016 lt http www africareview com news Zambia defends Abyei peacekeepers 979180 1176182 format xhtml abqrq0 index html Unknown Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved July 19 2020 gt Lungu H amp Ngoma N 2005 The Zambian military trials tribulations and hope In Rupiya M ed Evolutions and Revolutions A Contemporary History of 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Keepers Times of Zambia 30 June 2010 US Embassy Zambia 2016 Zambian Battalion in Central African Republic Part 1 YouTube video 2 August 2016 accessed 24 November 2017 lt https www youtube com watch v EV60HbhY5RA gt Nkala O 2015 Zambia Begins Delayed UN Mission to CAR Defence News web site 20 May 2015 Cancio F 2016 Zambia 500 Soldiers off for Peace Keeping in CAR Centrafrican News Agency 23 April 2016 accessed 17 December 2016 lt http www lanouvellecentrafrique org 2016 01 21 rwanda rdf officers in car decorated Archived 2017 02 07 at the Wayback Machine gt UK Government Supports Training of Zambia Peacekeeping Defence Forces UK Foreign amp Commonwealth Office press release via PR Newswire New York 24 March 2017 accessed 25 March 2017 lt http allafrica com stories 201703250093 html Archived 2017 04 21 at the Wayback Machine gt March M 2017 U S Army Africa chaplains conduct training for deploying Zambian counterparts United States Africa Command 17 April 2017 lt http www africom mil 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Wayback Machine gt Fallen Zambian Peacekeeper honored at ceremony in the Central African Republic Lusaka Times 23 November 2018 lt https www lusakatimes com 2018 11 23 fallen zambian peacekeeper honored at ceremony in the central african republic gt accessed 20 September 2020 UN Observes International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers on 29 May 2020 press release United Nations Information Centre Lusaka 27 May 2020 lt https lusaka sites unicnetwork org tag peacekeeping gt accessed 20 September 2020 Kabi P 2017 SADC Standby Force Deployment Delayed Lesotho Times 25 November 2017 SADC Contingent Force from Zambia Arrives in Lesotho Government statement Kingdom of Lesotho Maseru 25 November 2017 Kabi Pascalinah 2018 SADC Standby Force Has Stabilised Lesotho Lesotho Times Maseru 3 March 2018 SADC Troops to Go Lesotho Times Maseru 24 August 2018 AU conducts an Assessment on the SADC Preventive Mission in Lesotho SAPMIL Relief Web 9 February 2018 https reliefweb int report lesotho au conducts assessment sadc preventive mission lesotho sapmil Archived 2019 03 06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zambian Defence Force amp oldid 1171764983 Army, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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