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Katangese Gendarmerie

The Katangese Gendarmerie (French: Gendarmerie Katangaise), officially the Katangese Armed Forces (French: Forces Armées Katangaises), was the paramilitary force of the unrecognized State of Katanga in Central Africa from 1960 to 1963. The forces were formed upon the secession of Katanga from the Republic of the Congo with help from Belgian soldiers and former officers of the Force Publique. Belgian troops also provided much of the early training for the Gendarmerie, which was mainly composed of Katangese but largely led by Belgians and later European mercenaries.

Katangese Gendarmerie
Forces Armées Katangaises
Member of the Gendarmerie in 1961
Founded11 July 1960
Disbanded21 January 1963
(remnants reconstituted as the FLNC)
Service branches Katangese Army
Katangese Air Force
Leadership
Commander-in-ChiefPresident Moïse Tshombe
Secretary of State of National DefenseJoseph Yav
CommanderJean-Marie Crèvecoeur (1st)
Norbert Muké
Ferdinand Tshipola
Personnel
Active personnel14,000–17,000 (1963)
Related articles
HistoryCongo Crisis

Throughout the existence of the State of Katanga, the gendarmes sporadically fought various tribes and the Armée Nationale Congolaise (ANC). In February 1961 the Gendarmerie initiated a series of operations aimed at suppressing anti-secessionist rebels of the Association Générale des Baluba du Katanga (BALUBAKAT) in North Katanga. The campaign was largely successful, but the fighting led to atrocities and gendarmes were halted by forces of the United Nations Operation in the Congo (ONUC) during the Battle of Kabalo in April 1961. ONUC then initiated efforts to remove foreign mercenaries from the Gendarmerie, and launched Operation Rum Punch to arrest them in August 1961. They came into conflict with ONUC three times after, in Operation Morthor (September 1961), Operation UNOKAT (December 1961), and Operation Grandslam (December 1962). Operation Grandslam marked the end of the Katangese secession in January 1963.

After the secession, many gendarmes returned to civilian life or were integrated with the ANC. However, around 8,000 refused to, and many kept their arms and roamed North Rhodesia, Angola and Katanga. Many crossed the Congo border into Angola, where Portuguese colonial authorities assisted and trained them. They were involved in several mutinies and attempted invasions of the Congo, most notably the Stanleyville mutinies in 1966 and 1967.

After 1967, around 2,500 gendarmes were present in Angola, where they were reorganized as the Congolese National Liberation Front (FLNC) and fought in the Angolan War of Independence on the side of the Portuguese government against the Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola (MPLA) and União Nacional para a Independência Total de Angola (UNITA). When the war ended in 1975, they fought in the Angolan Civil War against the National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA). The FLNC was involved in Shaba I and II, attempted invasions of Katanga. Split into factions after the war, the Tigres emerged and played a decisive role in the First Congo War. There has since been little gendarme presence, but they have emerged as a symbol of secessionist thinking.

Origins

Background

 
Map of the Congo with the State of Katanga in green

The Belgian Congo was established from the Congo Free State in 1908.[1] Belgium held control of the colony until it gained independence as the Republic of the Congo on June 30, 1960. Though the nation had elected officials including Joseph Kasa-Vubu as president, Patrice Lumumba as prime minister, and various bodies including a senate and assembly, upon independence its affairs quickly devolved into chaos. Congolese soldiers mutinied against their white commanders in the Force Publique on July 5. The action signaled the beginning of a large revolt and attacks on white people in the Congo. In response, Belgium sent troops into the region to maintain order and protect their commercial interests, without the permission of the Congolese state.[2][3]

Largely in response to Belgian interference, on July 11, the Katanga Province announced its secession from the Republic of the Congo under the leadership of Moise Tshombe.[4] The state also represented Belgian mining interests.[5] The State of Katanga began establishing the organs necessary for a state to function independently, with a constitution and ministers. Patrice Lumumba called for United Nations intervention to end various secession movements in the country.[3] The UN "called upon" Belgium to leave the Congo in Resolution 143 adopted on July 14 that also authorized the creation of the United Nations Operation in the Congo (ONUC), a multinational peacekeeping force aimed at helping "the Congolese government restore and maintain the political independence and territorial integrity of the Congo."[6][7] By the end of July, 8,400 UN troops had been deployed to the Congo.[8]

Dag Hammarskjöld, the Secretary-General of the United Nations, and Ralph Bunche, his special representative, believed that engaging in Katanga would result in fighting, and refused to allow peacekeepers to enter the region.[8] In reality, Katanga at the time had an ill-trained fighting force, mainly made up of dozens of Belgian officers.[9] United Nations Security Council Resolution 146, passed on August 9, supplemented Resolution 143 and stated that "the entry of the United Nations Force into the province of Katanga is necessary for the full implementation of the present resolution". However, the resolution also mandated that the "United Nations Force in the Congo will not be a party to or in any way intervene in or be used to influence the outcome of any internal conflict, constitutional or otherwise."[10] Frustrated, Lumumba appealed to Eastern Bloc nations for military assistance, resulting in a conflict with Kasa-Vubu and ultimately his removal from power in September and eventual murder in January 1961.[10] In response to Lumumba's removal, his political allies gathered in Stanleyville in the eastern Congo and declared a rival regime to the central government in Léopoldville.[11]

“During the entire month of August, a veritable race against the clock took place with the objective, for Tshombe and his advisers, of building a more or less efficient Katangan gendarmery before the eventual withdrawal of the Belgian troops.”— Belgian historian Jules Gérard-Libois[12]

Formation

In order to develop a stronger fighting force, Katanga (with the help of Belgians)[9] disarmed all Force Publique troops based in Camp Massart except for 350 Katangese soldiers. The first iteration of the army was planned to consist of 1,500 men, all Katangese. The first volunteers were primarily Lunda people from South Katanga, who were organized by the Mwaant Yav and Tshombe's family. Throughout the year additional forces were recruited, including Luba warriors, 2,000 Bazela from Pweto, Bayeke from Bunkeya, and several white volunteers from Kaniama. By November, the Gendarmerie had 7,000 members.[13][14] The army was largely organized, led, and trained by Belgians who were former Force Publique officers;[5] the first commander of the Gendarmerie was Jean-Marie Crèvecoeur, appointed on July 13. The majority of soldiers were Katangese. The forces were first called the "Katangese Armed Forces" in November 1960.[14] Katanga also seized most of the assets of the Force Publique's air service, providing a nucleus for the Katangese Air Force.[15] Joseph Yav, a native Katangese, was made Minister of Defence.[16]

 
Cap Badge

Much of Gendarmerie's early organization was based on the Force Publique's organization, and it was characterized by rapid advancement of many soldiers.[17] By January 1961 there were approximately 250 former Force Publque officers serving in the Gendarmerie. They occupied all senior leadership positions and part of their salaries was paid by the Belgian government under a technical assistance programme. There were also 30–40 officers of the Belgian Army officially on loan to the Katangese government who either held commands in the gendarmerie, staffed the Katangese Ministry of Defence, or served as advisers. Between 50 and 100 mercenaries of various nationalities were initially present,[18] but over the course of 1961 the Katangese government increased recruitment efforts. Three Fouga trainer aircraft were also acquired.[19] In August, most of the Belgian officers returned to Belgium, and mercenaries began training many of the soldiers. From its formation the force struggled with divisions between various white and black commanders.[17] Belgian officers also protested the recruitment of Frenchmen.[20] Though South Africa officially denied Katangese requests for arms, there is evidence of a covert program supplying weapons to the Gendarmerie.[21]

Katangese secession (1960–1963)

Early action and suppressing rebellion in northern Katanga

In the immediate aftermath of the Katangese secession, Katangese forces clashed with the Armée Nationale Congolaise (ANC) in the Kasai region.[22] In August 1960 the region of South Kasai seceded from the Congo. The ANC launched an offensive and successfully occupied it, but the Gendarmerie and South Kasian forces successfully prevented them from making incursions into Katanga.[23]

The Gendarmerie first saw major action in Northern Katanga in efforts to suppress the Association Générale des Baluba du Katanga (BALUBAKAT), a political party which represented the Luba people of the area and rebelled against Katangese authority.[24] Some prominent BALUBAKAT politicians allied themselves with the Stanleyville government.[11] On October 17, 1960, neutral zones were created in the region under a temporary agreement with the United Nations.[25] In theory the region was controlled by ONUC contingents, but in reality the peacekeeping units were too weak to exercise authority.[26] Because the rebellion threatened Katanga's communications, partially-trained soldiers and policemen were dispatched in units of around 60 people to the region to exert Katangese control.[25][27] The inexperienced troops often resorted to pillaging and burning settlements. Political scientist Crawford Young suggested that the tactics were intentional and represented "little more than terrorization carried out by indiscriminate reprisals against whole regions."[28]

 
The Katangese Gendarmerie devoted significant effort to suppressing armed BALUBAKAT militia (pictured).

On 7 January 1961 troops from Stanleyville occupied Manono in northern Katanga. Accompanying BALUBAKAT leaders declared the establishing of a new "Province of Lualaba" that extended throughout the region.[29] The ONUC contingents were completely surprised by the takeover in Manono. Tshombe and his government accused ONUC of collaborating with the Stanleyville regime and declared that they would no longer respect the neutral zone.[26] By late January groups of Baluba were launching attacks on railways. UN officials appealed for them to stop, but the Baluba leaders stated that they aimed to do everything within their power to weaken the Katangese government and disrupt the Katangese Gendarmerie's offensive potential.[30] On 21 February 1961 the UN Security Council passed a resolution permitting ONUC to use military force as a last resort to prevent civil war. As the Congo was already more-or-less in a state of civil war, the resolution gave ONUC significant latitude to act. It also called for the immediate departure of all foreign military personnel and mercenaries from the country, though the use of force was not authorised to carry out the measure. Therefore, force could only be used to remove foreign soldiers and mercenaries if it was justified under the reasoning that such action would be necessary to prevent civil war.[31]

By February 1961 the Gendarmerie was composed of around 8,600 soldiers—8,000 Katangese and 600 Europeans.[25] On 11 February, the Katangese government announced that it would begin an offensive to eliminate the Baluba opposition in northern Katanga. Approximately 5,000 troops were earmarked for the operation, which focused on a northward offensive from Lubudi. At the same time, they were to recapture the town of Manono, secure the area south of it, and launch attacks on Kabalo from Albertville to the east and Kongolo to the north.[32] The Katangese Gendarmerie subsequently launched operations Banquise, Mambo, and Lotus against the BALUBAKAT rebels.[25] In March the army seized Manono.[32]

The Gendarmerie then shifted their focus to Kabalo, where they chiefly intended to secure the railway.[33] The town was garrisoned by two companies of an Ethiopian battalion serving with ONUC.[32][34] On 7 April a Katangese plane carrying 30 mercenaries landed to secure the airstrip in the town but they were promptly arrested by the ONUC troops.[34] Katangese forces moving by land attacked ONUC soldiers and fought with BALUBAKAT militia. The next day they sent an armed ferry up the river to seize the town, but ONUC forces destroyed it with a mortar, inflicting heavy casualties.[35] The ONUC garrison played no further role in the fighting after 8 April. The Katangese made numerous attempts to enter Kabalo during the following days, but were bogged down by heavy resistance from Baluba militia. On 11 April Katangese troops withdrew from the area to focus their operations further south.[32]

The captured mercenaries were interrogated by UN officials, and the information they provided revealed to ONUC the extent to which Katanga had been recruiting mercenaries in southern Africa;[36] recruiting stations were present in both the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland and South Africa.[37] Following questioning, the mercenaries were transferred to Léopoldville before being deported from the Congo to Brazzaville.[35] The capture of the mercenaries was given a great deal of public attention and affirmed that British nationals had been working in Katanga's employ.[38] Due to the action of the ONUC garrison, Kabalo remained the only major town in northern Katanga not controlled by the Katangese Gendarmerie at the conclusion of their offensive.[39][40] Though ONUC was able to retain control of the locale, it lacked the ability to patrol the surrounding area to intervene in further conflicts. Having been defeated, Katangese forces began conducting punitive attacks on Baluba villages. Opposed only by poorly armed bands of Baluba, the conflict resulted in both belligerents committing numerous atrocities.[38]

Conflict with the United Nations

During the dissolution of the Lumumba Government, the Belgian government determined that their interests could be protected through negotiations with the Congolese government and began to gradually withdraw from Katanga.[41] The state still had support from several Belgian politicians, such as René Clemens, the author of Katanga's constitution, and George Thyssens, who had drafted the Katangese declaration of independence and continued to serve as an important adviser.[42][43] Additionally, companies such as Union Minière du Haut Katanga maintained relations with the state. Despite these interactions, the Belgian government gradually adopted a strategy of privately pressuring the Katangese to accept reintegration. Such efforts largely failed.[42]

 
ANC and Katangese Gendarmerie officers with Congolese President Joseph Kasa-Vubu in 1961. Norbert Muké, future commander of the Gendarmerie, stands second from the left.

After being pressured by the United States and United Nations, Belgium removed many of its forces from the region from August to September 1961. However, many officers remained, without official Belgian endorsement, or became mercenaries. To support the Katangese, Belgium organized hundreds of Europeans to fight with Katanga as mercenaries. At the same time the United Nations attempted to suppress foreign support to the Gendarmerie; 338 mercenaries and 443 political advisers were expelled from the region by August. That same month, war veterans were first honored by the Katangese government. Dead soldiers were also remembered in ceremonies at the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul in Élisabethville.[44]

On August 2, 1961, Cyrille Adoula was appointed to replace Lumumba as prime minister of the Congo.[45] He began a far more aggressive policy of ending Katanga's secession than the interim Congolese government, and Belgium continued to pressure the Katangese authorities to begin negotiations. Young suggested that "from this point onward, Katanga fought a mainly diplomatic and partly military rearguard action against what was in retrospect the inevitable end to the secession."[46] After Adoula's appointment, sporadic violence continued between tribes and the government, but Katanga was relatively peaceful for several months.[47]

The battle at Kabalo led to heightened tensions between the UN and the Katangese government.[38] The failure of the UN to convince the Katangese to dispel mercenaries from its forces led ONUC to begin Operation Rum Punch in late August 1961 to peacefully arrest foreign members of the Gendarmerie.[48] The operation was conducted successfully without violence, and by its end 81 foreign personnel of the Katangese Gendarmerie had been arrested in Katanga and brought to Kamina base to await deportation.[49] Most of the remaining Belgian mercenaries reported to their consulate in Élisabethville.[50] In addition to the arrests, two Sikorsky helicopters, three Aloutte helicopters, three Dakotas, four Doves, and two Herons of the Katangese Air Force were seized.[51] The Belgian government agreed facilitate the repatriation of its nationals serving in the Gendarmerie, but in practice was only able to order the former Force Publique officers to return to Belgium under threat of losing their official ranks in the Belgian Army. The operation also did not extend to all military centers in Katanga. Thus, many foreign officers, particularly the highly-committed "ultras" were able to avoid deportation.[52] Further mercenary forces arrived in Katanga after the operation.[53] British, Rhodesian, and South African fighters enlisted mostly for money and adventure, while the French mercenaries were regarded by UN officials as politically extreme.[54] Colonel Norbert Muké, a native Katangese, was made commander of the Katangese Gendarmerie, but in practice its leadership was still heavily influenced by European mercenaries.[55] Lieutenant Colonel Roger Faulques, a Frenchman, was made chief of staff,[56] and he established a new headquarters near Kolwezi to coordinate anti-UN guerilla operations.[54] The Gendarmerie continued to sporadically fight BALUBAKAT rebels until around September 1961.[57]

 
Katangese gendarmes in battle with ONUC troops, 1961

Relations between the UN and Katanga rapidly deteriorated in early September, and Katangese forces were placed on alert.[58] Growing frustrated with Katanga's lack of cooperation and its continued employ of mercenaries, several ONUC officials planned a more forceful operation to establish their authority in Katanga.[59] With the ultras in command and with its African members fearing their own disarmament in addition to that of the European mercenaries, the Gendarmerie moved additional troops to Élisabethville and began stockpiling weapons in private homes and offices for a defence.[60] On September 13, 1961, ONUC launched Operation Morthor, a second attempt to expel remaining Belgians, without consulting any Western powers. The forces seized various outposts around Élisabethville, and attempted to arrest Tshombe.[53] The operation quickly turned violent after a sniper shot an ONUC soldier outside the post office while other peacekeepers were attempting to negotiate its surrender, and heavy fighting ensued there and at the radio station in which over 20 gendarmes were killed under disputed circumstances. Due to miscommunication between ONUC commanders, Tshombe was able to avoid capture and flee to Northern Rhodesia.[61]

Hammarskjöld and other top UN officials who had been not fully ware of the intentions of their subordinates were deeply embarrassed by the violence, which troubled Western powers who had supported the UN. Realising that the UN was in a precarious situation, Katangese leaders encouraged the Gendarmerie to increase its efforts and the conflict intensified over the following days.[62] Strengthened with weapons provided by Rhodesia,[53] the gendarmes launched mortar and sniper assaults on ONUC troops in Élisabethville, attacked ONUC garrisons throughout Katanga, and deployed the Katangese Air Force's single remaining Fouga to strafe and bomb ONUC positions. Gendarmes led by European officers besieged an Irish detachment in Jadotville and defeated UN relief efforts.[56] Supporters of Katanga then began a propaganda campaign, accusing ONUC of various human rights violations, and there were reports of UN attacks on civilian institutions.[63] As Hammarskjöld was flying to Ndola to meet with Tshombe to negotiate a peaceful end to the fighting, his plane crashed on September 18, 1961, and he was killed.[64] A few days later a cease-fire was reached.[65] That month, Gendarmerie forces were estimated to number 13,000; mainly deployed in North Katanga, troops were also present in Manono, Albertville, Kongolo, Kolwezi, and Jadotville.[57]

Katangese leaders hailed the cease-fire as a military victory; Muké was promoted to general, and the exploits of the native Katangese gendarmes were widely celebrated, though some soldiers became disgruntled over the fact that they did not control the army like the foreign personnel.[65] A formal agreement between Katanga and the UN ensured the exchange of prisoners and forced ONUC to relinquish some of its positions in Élisabethville.[66] With his government threatened by the UN's failure, Adoula ordered two battalions of the ANC to launch an offensive, but the Katangese forces repulsed them with a bombardment.[67]

U Thant replaced Hammarskjöld as UN Secretary-General, and declared his support for the expulsion of the remaining mercenaries in the Katangese Gendarmerie.[68] Security Council Resolution 169 was passed on November 24, 1961, affirming that the United Nations would "take vigorous action, including the use of the requisite measure of force, if necessary," to remove all "foreign military and paramilitary personnel and political advisers not under the United Nations Command, and mercenaries".[69]

"Certainly every reasonable step should be taken to prevent the gendarmerie from becoming a lawless and undisciplined military organization." — United States Officer in Charge of U.N. Congo Affairs Charles S. Whitehouse[70]

Throughout October and November the Gendarmerie was reinforced with additional mercenaries, munitions, and aircraft.[71] As tensions rose, gendarmes harassed UN officials and murdered an ONUC officer.[72] Skirmishes occurred in early December, and the Gendarmerie began isolating ONUC detachments around Élisabethville via a series of large roadblocks.[73] On 5 December 1961, ONUC launched Operation Unokat, aimed at ensuring freedom of movement for ONUC personnel. Reinforced by additional troops and aircraft, UN forces quickly secured Élisabethville and destroyed four Katangese planes.[74] Approximately 80 gendarmes were killed and 250 wounded in the fighting.[75] Military pressure applied by the operation forced Tshombe to agree to negotiate with Adoula. Tshombe signed the Kitona Declaration on 21 December, 1961, agreeing that Katanga was part of the Congo, and announcing plans to re-integrate the state with the Congo. Even as negotiations were in progress, the Gendarmerie continued to skirmish with the ANC. Throughout the year, the ANC made continuous inroads in North Katanga.[76][77]

The United States began increasing efforts in retraining or reorganizing the Gendarmerie, as the Central Intelligence Agency feared that "Katanga forces are likely to resort to guerrilla type operations and could severely harass UN forces for some time" if the situation was not resolved peacefully. It was suggested that the gendarmes could be integrated into the ANC, but Tshombe resisted such efforts, complicating negotiations. Tshombe continually stalled, drawing out negotiations until October 1962, when ONUC intelligence indicated the Gendarmes were preparing for war.[76][77]

Operation Grandslam

"There would have been no fighting at all [in Katanga] if the Katangese Gendarmerie had not made it unavoidable by indulging in senseless firing for several days."

Statement by Secretary-General Thant before the UN Security Council on 31 December concerning ONUC's actions in Katanga[78]

On 24 December 1962, Katangese forces in Élisabethville attacked ONUC troops with small arms fire and shot down an unarmed ONUC helicopter. Firing continued over the following days.[79] After conversation with UN officials, Tshombe made an initial promise to end the fighting, but he subsequently ordered the Katangese Air Force to raid ONUC positions.[80] Radio intercepts also revealed to the UN that Muké had ordered the air force to bomb the Élisabethville airport on the night of 29 December. With the failure to enact a ceasefire, Major General Dewan Prem Chand of India convinced Thant to authorise a strong, decisive offensive to pre-emptively eliminate Katangese forces.[81]

ONUC launched Operation Grandslam on 28 December. On the first day, UN forces killed 50 Katangese gendarmes before securing downtown Élisabethville,[a] the local Gendarmerie headquarters,[83] the radio station,[84] and Tshombe's presidential palace.[85] Early on 29 December, the ONUC Air Division launched a surprise assault on the Kolwezi airfield, inflicting serious damage to the installation's facilities. Further sorties resulted in the destruction of seven Katangese aircraft,[81] though the Katangese Air Force managed to evacuate several planes to Portuguese Angola. The Air Force remained grounded for the rest of the operation.[85] At midday an ONUC formation advanced down the Kipushi road to sever the Katangese lines to Rhodesia. Gendarmes were well positioned in wooded heights overlooking the route, but following heavy mortar bombardment they surrendered with little opposition.[86] Other ONUC forces seized the town of Kipushi[86] without facing any resistance.[87] Tshombe ordered his troops to offer determined resistance to ONUC and threatened to have bridges and dams blown up if the operation was not halted within 24 hours.[88]

 
A wounded Katangese gendarme is treated by Swedish medics near Kamina

In Kamina, the gendarmes had expected an attack on 30 December, but when one failed to occur they began to drink beer and fire flares at random, possibly to boost morale. Rogue bands of gendarmes subsequently conducted random raids around the city and looted the local bank. They were attacked by Swedish and Ghanaian troops two or three kilometers northeast of Kamina the following day, and were defeated. The Katangese Gendamerie conducted a disorganised withdrawal to two camps southeast of the locale. The Swedes successfully took several gendarmerie camps and began working to stabilise the situation.[89] Late that night a company of the Indian Rajputana Rifles encountered entrenched gendarmes and mercenaries along Jadotville Road and a gunfight ensued.[90] Two mercenaries captured during the clash revealed that confusion and desertion were occurring among the Katangese forces.[91] Altogether the Indian forces faced unexpectedly light resistance and reached the east bank of the Lufira on 3 January 1963.[92] Mercenaries withdrew to Jadotville the next day after destroying a bridge over the Lufira River.[93] UN forces found a bridge upstream and used rafts and helicopters to cross and neutralised Katangese opposition on the far side of the river, occupying Jadotville.[92]

Muké attempted to organise a defence of the town, but Katangese forces were in disarray,[91] being completely caught off-guard by the UN troops' advance.[92] UN forces briefly stayed in Jadotville to regroup before advancing on Kolwezi, Sakania, and Dilolo.[94] Between 31 December 1962 and 4 January 1963,[80] international opinion rallied in favour of ONUC. Belgium and France strongly urged Tshombe to accept Thant's Plan for National Reconciliation and resolve the conflict.[95] On 8 January, Tshombe reappeared in Élisabethville. The same day Prime Minister Adoula received a letter from the chiefs of the most prominent Kantangese tribes pledging allegiance to the Congolese government and calling for Tshombe's arrest.[96] Thant expressed interest in negotiating with Tshombe, saying "If we could convince [Tshombe] that there is no more room for maneuvering and bargaining, and no one to bargain with, he would surrender and the gendarmerie would collapse."[97] Tshombe soon expressed his willingness to negotiate after being briefly detained and released,[96] but warned that any advance on Kolwezi would result in the enactment of a scorched earth policy.[98] Tshombe fled to Northern Rhodesia on a Rhodesian Air Force plane,[99] and managed to reach Kolwezi,[99] the only significant location that remained under Katangese control.[100]

On 12 January a Swedish ONUC battalion surprised two gendarmerie battalions in Kabundji, seized their weapons, and directed them to return to their civilian livelihoods.[101] Meanwhile, mercenaries in the Kolwezi area had taken Tshombe's threats about a scorched earth policy seriously and had planted explosives on all nearby bridges, the Nzilo Dam (which provided most of Katanga's electricity), and most of the UMHK mining facilities. UMHK officials privately told Tshombe they were withdrawing their support for succession.[91] Muké vainly attempted to organise the 140 mercenaries and 2,000 gendarmes under his command to prepare a final defence of Kolwezi. His efforts, undermined by the force's low morale and indiscipline, were further hampered by an influx of refugees. Tshombe ordered the Katangese garrison of Baudouinville to surrender to besieging UN and ANC forces. Instead, they and most of the population deserted the city while a handful of gendarmes near Kongolo laid down their arms to Nigerian and Malaysian soldiers. On 14 January, Indian troops found the last intact bridge into Kolwezi. After a brief fight with gendarmes and mercenaries they secured it and crossed over, stopping at the city outskirts to await further instruction.[91] At a final meeting with his mercenary commanders, Tshombe ordered all remaining Katangese armed forces to withdraw to Portuguese Angola. Mercenary Jean Schramme was appointed to be commander of an army in exile, while mercenary Jeremiah Puren was ordered to evacuate what remained of the Katangese Air Force, along with necessary military equipment and the Katangese treasury. This was accomplished via air and railway. Rhodesian operatives assisted in smuggling the gold reserves out of the country. The last of Schramme's mercenaries and gendarmes were evacuated on 25 January.[91]

On 15 January, Tshombe sent a formal message to Thant, "I am ready to proclaim immediately before the world that the Katanga's secession is ended."[99] He offered to return to Élisabethville to oversee the implementation of Thant's proposal for reunification if Prime Minister Adoula granted amnesty to himself and his government. At a press conference, Adoula accepted Tshombe's proposition and announced that what remained of the Katangese Gendarmerie would be integrated into the ANC.[96] Total statistics on Katangese Gendarmerie and mercenary casualties from Operation Grandslam are unknown. Following the operation the UN was able to confirm that Portuguese Angola, South Africa, and Northern Rhodesia had assisted the Katangese in arming their air force.[102]

Angola and the Congo (1963–1967)

Exile, return, and fighting the Simba rebellion

After the defeat of the State of Katanga, plans to disarm or integrate the gendarmes were made. On 8 February 1963, General Muké and several of his officers pledged their allegiance to President Kasa-Vubu.[96] However, of the estimated 14,000–17,000 gendarmes, only 3,500 registered for integration, and only around 2,000–3,000 became part of the ANC. Those who integrated suffered threats and violence, and were given lower ranks. An estimated 7,000 returned to civilian life, and a further 8,000 escaped disarmament. Of the 8,000, some found work in security, and thousands of others were reported to be roaming "in the bush in South Katanga". Many could not return to their homes, and were considered outcasts.[103]

Meanwhile, the Congolese government seized documents revealing that Tshombe was maintaining contact with foreign mercenaries. Fearing arrest and claiming political persecution, he fled to Paris, France, in June 1963, eventually settling in Madrid, Spain. From there he developed plans with his gendarmerie commanders for a return to power, further complicating the central government's efforts to absorb the force.[104] United Nations efforts at reconciliation were ended as ONUC focused on withdrawing its own forces from Katanga in December 1963. The ANC began raiding pro-secession communities, as gendarmes continued to roam Northern Rhodesia, Angola and Katanga.[103] The gendarmes in the Congo-Rhodesia border region would go into Rhodesian communities to barter for food and sometimes raid and steal supplies. Since most of the local Rhodesian residents were Lunda, many of the Lunda Katangese avoided the ANC security operations by simply disguising themselves in the indigenous communities.[105]

Tshombe's Katangese government had enjoyed close relations with the administrators of Portuguese Angola, particularly since both were opposed to communism. Nevertheless, the Portuguese were initially overwhelmed by the large number of gendarmes and mercenaries that arrived under Schramme. As the Congolese government had given backing to the National Liberation Front of Angola, a nationalist anti-colonial rebel group, the Portuguese concluded that the gendarmes could serve as a counterweight to nationalist agitation and accommodated them in Luso. As more gendarmes gathered in Angola in late 1963, additional camps were established at Cazambo, Cazage, Lutai, and Lunguebungo. Mindful of the international ramifications of harbouring an armed group, the Portuguese portrayed the gendarmes and mercenaries as "refugees".[106] While most of the standard personnel lived in squalor and lacked basic necessities, the officers were kept in hotel rooms paid for by Tshombe.[106] Many were not paid while in exile.[107] A new command structure was established for the Gendarmerie in Angola under Major Ferdinand Tshipola with Antoine Mwambu as chief of staff. Four groups operated autonomously under their own mercenary commanders. Schramme completely rejected Tshipola's authority.[106] By 1964, two of the camps had become dedicated training facilities. Mercenaries traveled from Katanga to Angola via Rhodesia to relay messages between Tshombe, the gendarmes, and the mercenaries, with logistical support from Southern Rhodesia.[108]

From exile, Tshombe continued to plot his return to power in Katanga by use of the mercenaries and ex-gendarmes. He made entreaties to leftist Congolese dissidents in Brazzaville, causing consternation in the Congolese government. By April 1964 an additional 3,000–4,000 Katangese had crossed into Angola and joined the gendarmes, and Tshombe was directing the re-mobilization of the force.[109] However, that year two leftist rebellions overtook the Congolese government; one in the Kwilu region and another in the east, waged by the "Simbas."[110] With the ANC lacking cohesion, Adoula's government was unable to handle the insurrections. Tshombe was invited to return to the Congo to assist in negotiating a political solution, and in July 1964 he was installed as Prime Minister with the hope that he could reach an agreement with the rebels and that his presence would ensure no new secession attempts in Katanga.[111]

Immediately after becoming Prime Minister, Tshombe recalled some of the gendarmes in Angola back to the Congo to suppress the insurrections.[112] These gendarmes, expecting to reignite the secession, were surprised by their new task and only took orders directly from Tshombe. Some of the units also clashed with one another, due to rivalries between Katangese and mercenary officers.[107] A couple thousand remained in Angola.[113] Tsombe's government also recruited former gendarmes in Jadotville and Élisabethville, who reenlisted primarily to regain their pay. These forces formed their own units which were then tendentiously integrated into the ANC.[107] At least 6,000 additional ex-gendarmes were integrated into the police force of the new province of South Katanga.[114] With support from Belgium and the United States, the gendarmes made steady progress in recapturing territory in late 1964. By 1965 they were deployed in mopping-up operations.[115] The use of mercenaries bothered President Kasa-Vubu, which created divisions with the commander of the ANC, Joseph-Désiré Mobutu, who appreciated their effectiveness. Kasa-Vubu also developed a rivalry with Tshombe, and in October 1965 dismissed him from the premiership. Political deadlock ensued as Parliament refused to approve Kasa-Vubu's new appointee to the premiership, and in November Mobutu launched a coup and assumed the presidency.[116] Tshombe returned to exile in Spain and resumed planning for a return to power.[117] New mercenaries were recruited for the purpose with Portuguese support.[118]

Rebellions and return to exile

By mid-1966 the Katangese forces in the Congo were still serving in the ANC in standalone units. About 1,000 mercenaries and 3,000 former gendarmes were deployed in South Kivu and Kisangani (formerly Stanleyville), tasked with suppressing the remaining Simba rebels. They were militarily effective, but retained significant political distance from Mobutu's new regime and had tense relations with the regular ANC units. In July 1966 roughly 3,000 gendarmes and 240 mercenaries, upset about irregular pay, rebelled in Kisangani.[114] Led by Tshipola, since made a colonel, the force seized control of the city and killed several ANC officers including Colonel Joseph-Damien Tshatshi, the commander responsible for Congolese police operations in Katanga in 1963. Tshipola issued a memo accusing Tshatshi of discriminating against the ex-gendarmes and denouncing Mobutu's coup. Other mercenaries revolted in Isiro and Watso before joining Tshipola's force in Kisangani.[119] The insurrection was suppressed in September with the assistance of units led by mercenary Bob Denard and Schramme. Following this, several ex-gendarmes—including members of the Katangese police—fled to Angola.[118]

In March 1967 Mobutu convened a military tribunal to try the ex-gendarmes responsible for the mutiny. Tshombe was also tried in absentia. The tribunal sentenced Tshombe to death and criminalized the Katangese Gendarmerie retrospectively as an "irregular army".[120] Mobutu held the Gendarmerie to be a criminal organization for the remainder of his rule. After the trial, all the gendarmes were referred to as 'mercenaries' by Congolese press.[120] Tshombe's plans to use the remaining gendarmes and mercenaries to stage a rebellion were disrupted by the hijacking of his plane in June and ultimate detention in Algiers. A second wave of mutinies broke out on July 5, 1967 in Bukavu and Kisangani after it was revealed that the ANC planned to disband its mercenary units. The mutinies were led by European mercenaries. An estimated 600 former gendarmes led by Schramme were present in Kisangani during the mutiny. Under pressure from the ANC, Schramme was forced to evacuate the city with 300 mercenaries and a few thousand gendarmes. They reached Bukavu, and a secessionist state was declared.[121][122] A plan was proposed by the International Red Cross to evacuate 950 gendarmes and around 650 of their dependents to Zambia. Schramme and Mobutu objected, and the plan did not go forward. Though the ANC continued fighting, around 900 gendarmes gave up their arms and crossed into Rwanda. At the end of the mutinies, the gendarmes agreed to a cease-fire proposed by Organisation of African Unity Secretary General Diallo Telli under which they could gain amnesty by returning to the Congo. The mercenaries were expelled from Africa and returned to Europe.[121][123] A brief diversionary raid was executed by Denard from November 1 to 5, 1967. Called "Operation Luciver", ex-gendarmes crossed from Angola to Katanga and occupied Kisenge and Mutshatsha before being defeated by the ANC. In the Congo, reprisal raids against former gendarmes then occurred; the ANC killed several of their leaders.[124]

Later history (1967-present)

"We cannot by any means support a political and military adventure in Katanga without it being useful to our own policy. [...] [W]ithout this we will be in difficulty in our own fight against subversion." - PIDE statement, June 1968

The straggling gendarmes who returned to Angola after the defeats in the Congo initially maintained hope of being able to fight for their return within a few years. Their designs were nevertheless disrupted by Tshombe's detention, the departure of many of their mercenary commanders, and the increasing strength of Mobutu.[125] The gendarmes were instead deployed by the Portuguese government in the Eastern Military Zone where they were led by Nathaniel Mbumba and fought the Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola (MPLA) and União Nacional para a Independência Total de Angola (UNITA) during the Angolan War of Independence. The Portuguese had high respect for the gendarme's abilities— they were called Fiéis or "the faithful". However, historian Pedro Aires Oliveira notes that the gendarmes cared more about fighting the Democratic Republic of the Congo than participating in the Angolan war and as a result were closely watched by the Portuguese authorities.[126][127] 1,130 ex-gendarmes were deployed at Gafaria, and a further 1,555 at Camissombo.[128] Some of the gendarmes were also given bounties by the De Beers diamond company to disrupt smuggling operations in Angola.[129]

Efforts began to formalize the presence of exiled gendarmes in Angola. In March 1968, the Fédération Nationale Congolaise was created to represent Katangese in exile.[130] In June 1969, the Congolese National Liberation Front (FLNC) was founded.[131] They were given further military training and in May 1971, many gendarmes began formally receiving compensation for fighting. Mbumba negotiated better conditions, training, and salaries for the soldiers in the early 1970s. In February 1971 they were formally made part of the Portuguese irregular forces.[132] By 1974 there were an estimated 2,400 gendarmes in 16 companies.[126][127]

During the Angolan Civil War (from 1975 to 2002), the FLNC, composed of ex-gendarmes called the "Tigres", fought on the side of the MPLA against the National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA).[133] The FLNC was then involved in the Shaba Wars. The Katanga Province had been renamed Shaba Province during the rule of Mobutu, when the Congo was known as Zaire.[134] Shaba I began on March 8, 1977, when ex-gendarmes invaded the province. Western nations came to the aid of Mobutu,[135] and the invasion was crushed by May 26, 1977.[136] On May 11, 1978, a second invasion, known as Shaba II began. About 3,000 to 4,000 FLNC members were involved. Western nations again supported Mobutu, and the FLNC was largely defeated by May 27.[137] After the invasion failed, the FLNC lost support from Angola, and promptly collapsed. Some former gendarmes were incorporated into the Angolan army, were they were occasionally deployed militarily. Various groups were formed to succeed the FLNC, including the FAPAK, the MCS, and the FLNC II. The factions were divided by their goals.[138]

The Tigres were involved in the First Congo War, supporting a rebellion against Mobutu. In February 1997, 2,000 to 3,000 were airlifted to Kigali and driven to Goma and Bukavu. Their fighting contributed heavily towards the capture of Kisangani and "sped up" the rebellion.[139] Historian Gérard Prunier concludes that the Tigres played a "decisive role in the war."[140] In May 1997 Mobutu was overthrown and replaced by Laurent-Désiré Kabila.[141] After the war, the Tigres were largely incorporated into the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The concept of the Tigres has emerged in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as a symbolic force representing secessionist thinking.[142]

Order of Battle

  • 21er–24e, 33e & 34e Battalions de Gendarmerie,
  • 1er Battalion d’Inf Portée,
  • 1er Para-Commando Battalion (aka: 1er Commando)
  • 1er Police Militaire (3 companies)
  • 1er Garde Mobile Battalion
  • Four ‘mobile groups’ lettered A–D,
  • Peloton de Garde Présidentielle
  • Unité Européen (50 men)
  • sundry service units,
  • ‘Tanganyika Flotilla’

Source:[143]

Equipment inventory (1960-1963)

 
A captured Katangese M8 Greyhound

Small arms

Machine guns

Mortars

Artillery

Anti-Aircraft

Vehicles

Source:[143]

See also

References

Notes
  1. ^ This statistic is derived from the discovery of 50 bodies of Africans in the area after the fighting was over.[82]
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katangese, gendarmerie, french, gendarmerie, katangaise, officially, katangese, armed, forces, french, forces, armées, katangaises, paramilitary, force, unrecognized, state, katanga, central, africa, from, 1960, 1963, forces, were, formed, upon, secession, kat. The Katangese Gendarmerie French Gendarmerie Katangaise officially the Katangese Armed Forces French Forces Armees Katangaises was the paramilitary force of the unrecognized State of Katanga in Central Africa from 1960 to 1963 The forces were formed upon the secession of Katanga from the Republic of the Congo with help from Belgian soldiers and former officers of the Force Publique Belgian troops also provided much of the early training for the Gendarmerie which was mainly composed of Katangese but largely led by Belgians and later European mercenaries Katangese GendarmerieForces Armees KatangaisesMember of the Gendarmerie in 1961Founded11 July 1960Disbanded21 January 1963 remnants reconstituted as the FLNC Service branchesKatangese Army Katangese Air ForceLeadershipCommander in ChiefPresident Moise TshombeSecretary of State of National DefenseJoseph YavCommanderJean Marie Crevecoeur 1st Norbert MukeFerdinand TshipolaPersonnelActive personnel14 000 17 000 1963 Related articlesHistoryCongo CrisisThroughout the existence of the State of Katanga the gendarmes sporadically fought various tribes and the Armee Nationale Congolaise ANC In February 1961 the Gendarmerie initiated a series of operations aimed at suppressing anti secessionist rebels of the Association Generale des Baluba du Katanga BALUBAKAT in North Katanga The campaign was largely successful but the fighting led to atrocities and gendarmes were halted by forces of the United Nations Operation in the Congo ONUC during the Battle of Kabalo in April 1961 ONUC then initiated efforts to remove foreign mercenaries from the Gendarmerie and launched Operation Rum Punch to arrest them in August 1961 They came into conflict with ONUC three times after in Operation Morthor September 1961 Operation UNOKAT December 1961 and Operation Grandslam December 1962 Operation Grandslam marked the end of the Katangese secession in January 1963 After the secession many gendarmes returned to civilian life or were integrated with the ANC However around 8 000 refused to and many kept their arms and roamed North Rhodesia Angola and Katanga Many crossed the Congo border into Angola where Portuguese colonial authorities assisted and trained them They were involved in several mutinies and attempted invasions of the Congo most notably the Stanleyville mutinies in 1966 and 1967 After 1967 around 2 500 gendarmes were present in Angola where they were reorganized as the Congolese National Liberation Front FLNC and fought in the Angolan War of Independence on the side of the Portuguese government against the Movimento Popular de Libertacao de Angola MPLA and Uniao Nacional para a Independencia Total de Angola UNITA When the war ended in 1975 they fought in the Angolan Civil War against the National Liberation Front of Angola FNLA The FLNC was involved in Shaba I and II attempted invasions of Katanga Split into factions after the war the Tigres emerged and played a decisive role in the First Congo War There has since been little gendarme presence but they have emerged as a symbol of secessionist thinking Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Background 1 2 Formation 2 Katangese secession 1960 1963 2 1 Early action and suppressing rebellion in northern Katanga 2 2 Conflict with the United Nations 2 3 Operation Grandslam 3 Angola and the Congo 1963 1967 3 1 Exile return and fighting the Simba rebellion 3 2 Rebellions and return to exile 4 Later history 1967 present 5 Order of Battle 6 Equipment inventory 1960 1963 7 See also 8 References 9 BibliographyOrigins EditBackground Edit Main article Congo Crisis Map of the Congo with the State of Katanga in green The Belgian Congo was established from the Congo Free State in 1908 1 Belgium held control of the colony until it gained independence as the Republic of the Congo on June 30 1960 Though the nation had elected officials including Joseph Kasa Vubu as president Patrice Lumumba as prime minister and various bodies including a senate and assembly upon independence its affairs quickly devolved into chaos Congolese soldiers mutinied against their white commanders in the Force Publique on July 5 The action signaled the beginning of a large revolt and attacks on white people in the Congo In response Belgium sent troops into the region to maintain order and protect their commercial interests without the permission of the Congolese state 2 3 Largely in response to Belgian interference on July 11 the Katanga Province announced its secession from the Republic of the Congo under the leadership of Moise Tshombe 4 The state also represented Belgian mining interests 5 The State of Katanga began establishing the organs necessary for a state to function independently with a constitution and ministers Patrice Lumumba called for United Nations intervention to end various secession movements in the country 3 The UN called upon Belgium to leave the Congo in Resolution 143 adopted on July 14 that also authorized the creation of the United Nations Operation in the Congo ONUC a multinational peacekeeping force aimed at helping the Congolese government restore and maintain the political independence and territorial integrity of the Congo 6 7 By the end of July 8 400 UN troops had been deployed to the Congo 8 Dag Hammarskjold the Secretary General of the United Nations and Ralph Bunche his special representative believed that engaging in Katanga would result in fighting and refused to allow peacekeepers to enter the region 8 In reality Katanga at the time had an ill trained fighting force mainly made up of dozens of Belgian officers 9 United Nations Security Council Resolution 146 passed on August 9 supplemented Resolution 143 and stated that the entry of the United Nations Force into the province of Katanga is necessary for the full implementation of the present resolution However the resolution also mandated that the United Nations Force in the Congo will not be a party to or in any way intervene in or be used to influence the outcome of any internal conflict constitutional or otherwise 10 Frustrated Lumumba appealed to Eastern Bloc nations for military assistance resulting in a conflict with Kasa Vubu and ultimately his removal from power in September and eventual murder in January 1961 10 In response to Lumumba s removal his political allies gathered in Stanleyville in the eastern Congo and declared a rival regime to the central government in Leopoldville 11 During the entire month of August a veritable race against the clock took place with the objective for Tshombe and his advisers of building a more or less efficient Katangan gendarmery before the eventual withdrawal of the Belgian troops Belgian historian Jules Gerard Libois 12 Formation Edit In order to develop a stronger fighting force Katanga with the help of Belgians 9 disarmed all Force Publique troops based in Camp Massart except for 350 Katangese soldiers The first iteration of the army was planned to consist of 1 500 men all Katangese The first volunteers were primarily Lunda people from South Katanga who were organized by the Mwaant Yav and Tshombe s family Throughout the year additional forces were recruited including Luba warriors 2 000 Bazela from Pweto Bayeke from Bunkeya and several white volunteers from Kaniama By November the Gendarmerie had 7 000 members 13 14 The army was largely organized led and trained by Belgians who were former Force Publique officers 5 the first commander of the Gendarmerie was Jean Marie Crevecoeur appointed on July 13 The majority of soldiers were Katangese The forces were first called the Katangese Armed Forces in November 1960 14 Katanga also seized most of the assets of the Force Publique s air service providing a nucleus for the Katangese Air Force 15 Joseph Yav a native Katangese was made Minister of Defence 16 Cap Badge Much of Gendarmerie s early organization was based on the Force Publique s organization and it was characterized by rapid advancement of many soldiers 17 By January 1961 there were approximately 250 former Force Publque officers serving in the Gendarmerie They occupied all senior leadership positions and part of their salaries was paid by the Belgian government under a technical assistance programme There were also 30 40 officers of the Belgian Army officially on loan to the Katangese government who either held commands in the gendarmerie staffed the Katangese Ministry of Defence or served as advisers Between 50 and 100 mercenaries of various nationalities were initially present 18 but over the course of 1961 the Katangese government increased recruitment efforts Three Fouga trainer aircraft were also acquired 19 In August most of the Belgian officers returned to Belgium and mercenaries began training many of the soldiers From its formation the force struggled with divisions between various white and black commanders 17 Belgian officers also protested the recruitment of Frenchmen 20 Though South Africa officially denied Katangese requests for arms there is evidence of a covert program supplying weapons to the Gendarmerie 21 Katangese secession 1960 1963 EditEarly action and suppressing rebellion in northern Katanga Edit Further information Battle of Kabalo In the immediate aftermath of the Katangese secession Katangese forces clashed with the Armee Nationale Congolaise ANC in the Kasai region 22 In August 1960 the region of South Kasai seceded from the Congo The ANC launched an offensive and successfully occupied it but the Gendarmerie and South Kasian forces successfully prevented them from making incursions into Katanga 23 The Gendarmerie first saw major action in Northern Katanga in efforts to suppress the Association Generale des Baluba du Katanga BALUBAKAT a political party which represented the Luba people of the area and rebelled against Katangese authority 24 Some prominent BALUBAKAT politicians allied themselves with the Stanleyville government 11 On October 17 1960 neutral zones were created in the region under a temporary agreement with the United Nations 25 In theory the region was controlled by ONUC contingents but in reality the peacekeeping units were too weak to exercise authority 26 Because the rebellion threatened Katanga s communications partially trained soldiers and policemen were dispatched in units of around 60 people to the region to exert Katangese control 25 27 The inexperienced troops often resorted to pillaging and burning settlements Political scientist Crawford Young suggested that the tactics were intentional and represented little more than terrorization carried out by indiscriminate reprisals against whole regions 28 The Katangese Gendarmerie devoted significant effort to suppressing armed BALUBAKAT militia pictured On 7 January 1961 troops from Stanleyville occupied Manono in northern Katanga Accompanying BALUBAKAT leaders declared the establishing of a new Province of Lualaba that extended throughout the region 29 The ONUC contingents were completely surprised by the takeover in Manono Tshombe and his government accused ONUC of collaborating with the Stanleyville regime and declared that they would no longer respect the neutral zone 26 By late January groups of Baluba were launching attacks on railways UN officials appealed for them to stop but the Baluba leaders stated that they aimed to do everything within their power to weaken the Katangese government and disrupt the Katangese Gendarmerie s offensive potential 30 On 21 February 1961 the UN Security Council passed a resolution permitting ONUC to use military force as a last resort to prevent civil war As the Congo was already more or less in a state of civil war the resolution gave ONUC significant latitude to act It also called for the immediate departure of all foreign military personnel and mercenaries from the country though the use of force was not authorised to carry out the measure Therefore force could only be used to remove foreign soldiers and mercenaries if it was justified under the reasoning that such action would be necessary to prevent civil war 31 By February 1961 the Gendarmerie was composed of around 8 600 soldiers 8 000 Katangese and 600 Europeans 25 On 11 February the Katangese government announced that it would begin an offensive to eliminate the Baluba opposition in northern Katanga Approximately 5 000 troops were earmarked for the operation which focused on a northward offensive from Lubudi At the same time they were to recapture the town of Manono secure the area south of it and launch attacks on Kabalo from Albertville to the east and Kongolo to the north 32 The Katangese Gendarmerie subsequently launched operations Banquise Mambo and Lotus against the BALUBAKAT rebels 25 In March the army seized Manono 32 The Gendarmerie then shifted their focus to Kabalo where they chiefly intended to secure the railway 33 The town was garrisoned by two companies of an Ethiopian battalion serving with ONUC 32 34 On 7 April a Katangese plane carrying 30 mercenaries landed to secure the airstrip in the town but they were promptly arrested by the ONUC troops 34 Katangese forces moving by land attacked ONUC soldiers and fought with BALUBAKAT militia The next day they sent an armed ferry up the river to seize the town but ONUC forces destroyed it with a mortar inflicting heavy casualties 35 The ONUC garrison played no further role in the fighting after 8 April The Katangese made numerous attempts to enter Kabalo during the following days but were bogged down by heavy resistance from Baluba militia On 11 April Katangese troops withdrew from the area to focus their operations further south 32 The captured mercenaries were interrogated by UN officials and the information they provided revealed to ONUC the extent to which Katanga had been recruiting mercenaries in southern Africa 36 recruiting stations were present in both the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland and South Africa 37 Following questioning the mercenaries were transferred to Leopoldville before being deported from the Congo to Brazzaville 35 The capture of the mercenaries was given a great deal of public attention and affirmed that British nationals had been working in Katanga s employ 38 Due to the action of the ONUC garrison Kabalo remained the only major town in northern Katanga not controlled by the Katangese Gendarmerie at the conclusion of their offensive 39 40 Though ONUC was able to retain control of the locale it lacked the ability to patrol the surrounding area to intervene in further conflicts Having been defeated Katangese forces began conducting punitive attacks on Baluba villages Opposed only by poorly armed bands of Baluba the conflict resulted in both belligerents committing numerous atrocities 38 Conflict with the United Nations Edit During the dissolution of the Lumumba Government the Belgian government determined that their interests could be protected through negotiations with the Congolese government and began to gradually withdraw from Katanga 41 The state still had support from several Belgian politicians such as Rene Clemens the author of Katanga s constitution and George Thyssens who had drafted the Katangese declaration of independence and continued to serve as an important adviser 42 43 Additionally companies such as Union Miniere du Haut Katanga maintained relations with the state Despite these interactions the Belgian government gradually adopted a strategy of privately pressuring the Katangese to accept reintegration Such efforts largely failed 42 ANC and Katangese Gendarmerie officers with Congolese President Joseph Kasa Vubu in 1961 Norbert Muke future commander of the Gendarmerie stands second from the left After being pressured by the United States and United Nations Belgium removed many of its forces from the region from August to September 1961 However many officers remained without official Belgian endorsement or became mercenaries To support the Katangese Belgium organized hundreds of Europeans to fight with Katanga as mercenaries At the same time the United Nations attempted to suppress foreign support to the Gendarmerie 338 mercenaries and 443 political advisers were expelled from the region by August That same month war veterans were first honored by the Katangese government Dead soldiers were also remembered in ceremonies at the Cathedral of St Peter and St Paul in Elisabethville 44 On August 2 1961 Cyrille Adoula was appointed to replace Lumumba as prime minister of the Congo 45 He began a far more aggressive policy of ending Katanga s secession than the interim Congolese government and Belgium continued to pressure the Katangese authorities to begin negotiations Young suggested that from this point onward Katanga fought a mainly diplomatic and partly military rearguard action against what was in retrospect the inevitable end to the secession 46 After Adoula s appointment sporadic violence continued between tribes and the government but Katanga was relatively peaceful for several months 47 The battle at Kabalo led to heightened tensions between the UN and the Katangese government 38 The failure of the UN to convince the Katangese to dispel mercenaries from its forces led ONUC to begin Operation Rum Punch in late August 1961 to peacefully arrest foreign members of the Gendarmerie 48 The operation was conducted successfully without violence and by its end 81 foreign personnel of the Katangese Gendarmerie had been arrested in Katanga and brought to Kamina base to await deportation 49 Most of the remaining Belgian mercenaries reported to their consulate in Elisabethville 50 In addition to the arrests two Sikorsky helicopters three Aloutte helicopters three Dakotas four Doves and two Herons of the Katangese Air Force were seized 51 The Belgian government agreed facilitate the repatriation of its nationals serving in the Gendarmerie but in practice was only able to order the former Force Publique officers to return to Belgium under threat of losing their official ranks in the Belgian Army The operation also did not extend to all military centers in Katanga Thus many foreign officers particularly the highly committed ultras were able to avoid deportation 52 Further mercenary forces arrived in Katanga after the operation 53 British Rhodesian and South African fighters enlisted mostly for money and adventure while the French mercenaries were regarded by UN officials as politically extreme 54 Colonel Norbert Muke a native Katangese was made commander of the Katangese Gendarmerie but in practice its leadership was still heavily influenced by European mercenaries 55 Lieutenant Colonel Roger Faulques a Frenchman was made chief of staff 56 and he established a new headquarters near Kolwezi to coordinate anti UN guerilla operations 54 The Gendarmerie continued to sporadically fight BALUBAKAT rebels until around September 1961 57 Katangese gendarmes in battle with ONUC troops 1961 Relations between the UN and Katanga rapidly deteriorated in early September and Katangese forces were placed on alert 58 Growing frustrated with Katanga s lack of cooperation and its continued employ of mercenaries several ONUC officials planned a more forceful operation to establish their authority in Katanga 59 With the ultras in command and with its African members fearing their own disarmament in addition to that of the European mercenaries the Gendarmerie moved additional troops to Elisabethville and began stockpiling weapons in private homes and offices for a defence 60 On September 13 1961 ONUC launched Operation Morthor a second attempt to expel remaining Belgians without consulting any Western powers The forces seized various outposts around Elisabethville and attempted to arrest Tshombe 53 The operation quickly turned violent after a sniper shot an ONUC soldier outside the post office while other peacekeepers were attempting to negotiate its surrender and heavy fighting ensued there and at the radio station in which over 20 gendarmes were killed under disputed circumstances Due to miscommunication between ONUC commanders Tshombe was able to avoid capture and flee to Northern Rhodesia 61 Hammarskjold and other top UN officials who had been not fully ware of the intentions of their subordinates were deeply embarrassed by the violence which troubled Western powers who had supported the UN Realising that the UN was in a precarious situation Katangese leaders encouraged the Gendarmerie to increase its efforts and the conflict intensified over the following days 62 Strengthened with weapons provided by Rhodesia 53 the gendarmes launched mortar and sniper assaults on ONUC troops in Elisabethville attacked ONUC garrisons throughout Katanga and deployed the Katangese Air Force s single remaining Fouga to strafe and bomb ONUC positions Gendarmes led by European officers besieged an Irish detachment in Jadotville and defeated UN relief efforts 56 Supporters of Katanga then began a propaganda campaign accusing ONUC of various human rights violations and there were reports of UN attacks on civilian institutions 63 As Hammarskjold was flying to Ndola to meet with Tshombe to negotiate a peaceful end to the fighting his plane crashed on September 18 1961 and he was killed 64 A few days later a cease fire was reached 65 That month Gendarmerie forces were estimated to number 13 000 mainly deployed in North Katanga troops were also present in Manono Albertville Kongolo Kolwezi and Jadotville 57 Katangese leaders hailed the cease fire as a military victory Muke was promoted to general and the exploits of the native Katangese gendarmes were widely celebrated though some soldiers became disgruntled over the fact that they did not control the army like the foreign personnel 65 A formal agreement between Katanga and the UN ensured the exchange of prisoners and forced ONUC to relinquish some of its positions in Elisabethville 66 With his government threatened by the UN s failure Adoula ordered two battalions of the ANC to launch an offensive but the Katangese forces repulsed them with a bombardment 67 U Thant replaced Hammarskjold as UN Secretary General and declared his support for the expulsion of the remaining mercenaries in the Katangese Gendarmerie 68 Security Council Resolution 169 was passed on November 24 1961 affirming that the United Nations would take vigorous action including the use of the requisite measure of force if necessary to remove all foreign military and paramilitary personnel and political advisers not under the United Nations Command and mercenaries 69 Certainly every reasonable step should be taken to prevent the gendarmerie from becoming a lawless and undisciplined military organization United States Officer in Charge of U N Congo Affairs Charles S Whitehouse 70 Throughout October and November the Gendarmerie was reinforced with additional mercenaries munitions and aircraft 71 As tensions rose gendarmes harassed UN officials and murdered an ONUC officer 72 Skirmishes occurred in early December and the Gendarmerie began isolating ONUC detachments around Elisabethville via a series of large roadblocks 73 On 5 December 1961 ONUC launched Operation Unokat aimed at ensuring freedom of movement for ONUC personnel Reinforced by additional troops and aircraft UN forces quickly secured Elisabethville and destroyed four Katangese planes 74 Approximately 80 gendarmes were killed and 250 wounded in the fighting 75 Military pressure applied by the operation forced Tshombe to agree to negotiate with Adoula Tshombe signed the Kitona Declaration on 21 December 1961 agreeing that Katanga was part of the Congo and announcing plans to re integrate the state with the Congo Even as negotiations were in progress the Gendarmerie continued to skirmish with the ANC Throughout the year the ANC made continuous inroads in North Katanga 76 77 The United States began increasing efforts in retraining or reorganizing the Gendarmerie as the Central Intelligence Agency feared that Katanga forces are likely to resort to guerrilla type operations and could severely harass UN forces for some time if the situation was not resolved peacefully It was suggested that the gendarmes could be integrated into the ANC but Tshombe resisted such efforts complicating negotiations Tshombe continually stalled drawing out negotiations until October 1962 when ONUC intelligence indicated the Gendarmes were preparing for war 76 77 Operation Grandslam Edit Main article Operation Grandslam There would have been no fighting at all in Katanga if the Katangese Gendarmerie had not made it unavoidable by indulging in senseless firing for several days Statement by Secretary General Thant before the UN Security Council on 31 December concerning ONUC s actions in Katanga 78 On 24 December 1962 Katangese forces in Elisabethville attacked ONUC troops with small arms fire and shot down an unarmed ONUC helicopter Firing continued over the following days 79 After conversation with UN officials Tshombe made an initial promise to end the fighting but he subsequently ordered the Katangese Air Force to raid ONUC positions 80 Radio intercepts also revealed to the UN that Muke had ordered the air force to bomb the Elisabethville airport on the night of 29 December With the failure to enact a ceasefire Major General Dewan Prem Chand of India convinced Thant to authorise a strong decisive offensive to pre emptively eliminate Katangese forces 81 ONUC launched Operation Grandslam on 28 December On the first day UN forces killed 50 Katangese gendarmes before securing downtown Elisabethville a the local Gendarmerie headquarters 83 the radio station 84 and Tshombe s presidential palace 85 Early on 29 December the ONUC Air Division launched a surprise assault on the Kolwezi airfield inflicting serious damage to the installation s facilities Further sorties resulted in the destruction of seven Katangese aircraft 81 though the Katangese Air Force managed to evacuate several planes to Portuguese Angola The Air Force remained grounded for the rest of the operation 85 At midday an ONUC formation advanced down the Kipushi road to sever the Katangese lines to Rhodesia Gendarmes were well positioned in wooded heights overlooking the route but following heavy mortar bombardment they surrendered with little opposition 86 Other ONUC forces seized the town of Kipushi 86 without facing any resistance 87 Tshombe ordered his troops to offer determined resistance to ONUC and threatened to have bridges and dams blown up if the operation was not halted within 24 hours 88 A wounded Katangese gendarme is treated by Swedish medics near Kamina In Kamina the gendarmes had expected an attack on 30 December but when one failed to occur they began to drink beer and fire flares at random possibly to boost morale Rogue bands of gendarmes subsequently conducted random raids around the city and looted the local bank They were attacked by Swedish and Ghanaian troops two or three kilometers northeast of Kamina the following day and were defeated The Katangese Gendamerie conducted a disorganised withdrawal to two camps southeast of the locale The Swedes successfully took several gendarmerie camps and began working to stabilise the situation 89 Late that night a company of the Indian Rajputana Rifles encountered entrenched gendarmes and mercenaries along Jadotville Road and a gunfight ensued 90 Two mercenaries captured during the clash revealed that confusion and desertion were occurring among the Katangese forces 91 Altogether the Indian forces faced unexpectedly light resistance and reached the east bank of the Lufira on 3 January 1963 92 Mercenaries withdrew to Jadotville the next day after destroying a bridge over the Lufira River 93 UN forces found a bridge upstream and used rafts and helicopters to cross and neutralised Katangese opposition on the far side of the river occupying Jadotville 92 Muke attempted to organise a defence of the town but Katangese forces were in disarray 91 being completely caught off guard by the UN troops advance 92 UN forces briefly stayed in Jadotville to regroup before advancing on Kolwezi Sakania and Dilolo 94 Between 31 December 1962 and 4 January 1963 80 international opinion rallied in favour of ONUC Belgium and France strongly urged Tshombe to accept Thant s Plan for National Reconciliation and resolve the conflict 95 On 8 January Tshombe reappeared in Elisabethville The same day Prime Minister Adoula received a letter from the chiefs of the most prominent Kantangese tribes pledging allegiance to the Congolese government and calling for Tshombe s arrest 96 Thant expressed interest in negotiating with Tshombe saying If we could convince Tshombe that there is no more room for maneuvering and bargaining and no one to bargain with he would surrender and the gendarmerie would collapse 97 Tshombe soon expressed his willingness to negotiate after being briefly detained and released 96 but warned that any advance on Kolwezi would result in the enactment of a scorched earth policy 98 Tshombe fled to Northern Rhodesia on a Rhodesian Air Force plane 99 and managed to reach Kolwezi 99 the only significant location that remained under Katangese control 100 On 12 January a Swedish ONUC battalion surprised two gendarmerie battalions in Kabundji seized their weapons and directed them to return to their civilian livelihoods 101 Meanwhile mercenaries in the Kolwezi area had taken Tshombe s threats about a scorched earth policy seriously and had planted explosives on all nearby bridges the Nzilo Dam which provided most of Katanga s electricity and most of the UMHK mining facilities UMHK officials privately told Tshombe they were withdrawing their support for succession 91 Muke vainly attempted to organise the 140 mercenaries and 2 000 gendarmes under his command to prepare a final defence of Kolwezi His efforts undermined by the force s low morale and indiscipline were further hampered by an influx of refugees Tshombe ordered the Katangese garrison of Baudouinville to surrender to besieging UN and ANC forces Instead they and most of the population deserted the city while a handful of gendarmes near Kongolo laid down their arms to Nigerian and Malaysian soldiers On 14 January Indian troops found the last intact bridge into Kolwezi After a brief fight with gendarmes and mercenaries they secured it and crossed over stopping at the city outskirts to await further instruction 91 At a final meeting with his mercenary commanders Tshombe ordered all remaining Katangese armed forces to withdraw to Portuguese Angola Mercenary Jean Schramme was appointed to be commander of an army in exile while mercenary Jeremiah Puren was ordered to evacuate what remained of the Katangese Air Force along with necessary military equipment and the Katangese treasury This was accomplished via air and railway Rhodesian operatives assisted in smuggling the gold reserves out of the country The last of Schramme s mercenaries and gendarmes were evacuated on 25 January 91 On 15 January Tshombe sent a formal message to Thant I am ready to proclaim immediately before the world that the Katanga s secession is ended 99 He offered to return to Elisabethville to oversee the implementation of Thant s proposal for reunification if Prime Minister Adoula granted amnesty to himself and his government At a press conference Adoula accepted Tshombe s proposition and announced that what remained of the Katangese Gendarmerie would be integrated into the ANC 96 Total statistics on Katangese Gendarmerie and mercenary casualties from Operation Grandslam are unknown Following the operation the UN was able to confirm that Portuguese Angola South Africa and Northern Rhodesia had assisted the Katangese in arming their air force 102 Angola and the Congo 1963 1967 EditExile return and fighting the Simba rebellion Edit Further information Simba rebellion After the defeat of the State of Katanga plans to disarm or integrate the gendarmes were made On 8 February 1963 General Muke and several of his officers pledged their allegiance to President Kasa Vubu 96 However of the estimated 14 000 17 000 gendarmes only 3 500 registered for integration and only around 2 000 3 000 became part of the ANC Those who integrated suffered threats and violence and were given lower ranks An estimated 7 000 returned to civilian life and a further 8 000 escaped disarmament Of the 8 000 some found work in security and thousands of others were reported to be roaming in the bush in South Katanga Many could not return to their homes and were considered outcasts 103 Meanwhile the Congolese government seized documents revealing that Tshombe was maintaining contact with foreign mercenaries Fearing arrest and claiming political persecution he fled to Paris France in June 1963 eventually settling in Madrid Spain From there he developed plans with his gendarmerie commanders for a return to power further complicating the central government s efforts to absorb the force 104 United Nations efforts at reconciliation were ended as ONUC focused on withdrawing its own forces from Katanga in December 1963 The ANC began raiding pro secession communities as gendarmes continued to roam Northern Rhodesia Angola and Katanga 103 The gendarmes in the Congo Rhodesia border region would go into Rhodesian communities to barter for food and sometimes raid and steal supplies Since most of the local Rhodesian residents were Lunda many of the Lunda Katangese avoided the ANC security operations by simply disguising themselves in the indigenous communities 105 Tshombe s Katangese government had enjoyed close relations with the administrators of Portuguese Angola particularly since both were opposed to communism Nevertheless the Portuguese were initially overwhelmed by the large number of gendarmes and mercenaries that arrived under Schramme As the Congolese government had given backing to the National Liberation Front of Angola a nationalist anti colonial rebel group the Portuguese concluded that the gendarmes could serve as a counterweight to nationalist agitation and accommodated them in Luso As more gendarmes gathered in Angola in late 1963 additional camps were established at Cazambo Cazage Lutai and Lunguebungo Mindful of the international ramifications of harbouring an armed group the Portuguese portrayed the gendarmes and mercenaries as refugees 106 While most of the standard personnel lived in squalor and lacked basic necessities the officers were kept in hotel rooms paid for by Tshombe 106 Many were not paid while in exile 107 A new command structure was established for the Gendarmerie in Angola under Major Ferdinand Tshipola with Antoine Mwambu as chief of staff Four groups operated autonomously under their own mercenary commanders Schramme completely rejected Tshipola s authority 106 By 1964 two of the camps had become dedicated training facilities Mercenaries traveled from Katanga to Angola via Rhodesia to relay messages between Tshombe the gendarmes and the mercenaries with logistical support from Southern Rhodesia 108 From exile Tshombe continued to plot his return to power in Katanga by use of the mercenaries and ex gendarmes He made entreaties to leftist Congolese dissidents in Brazzaville causing consternation in the Congolese government By April 1964 an additional 3 000 4 000 Katangese had crossed into Angola and joined the gendarmes and Tshombe was directing the re mobilization of the force 109 However that year two leftist rebellions overtook the Congolese government one in the Kwilu region and another in the east waged by the Simbas 110 With the ANC lacking cohesion Adoula s government was unable to handle the insurrections Tshombe was invited to return to the Congo to assist in negotiating a political solution and in July 1964 he was installed as Prime Minister with the hope that he could reach an agreement with the rebels and that his presence would ensure no new secession attempts in Katanga 111 Immediately after becoming Prime Minister Tshombe recalled some of the gendarmes in Angola back to the Congo to suppress the insurrections 112 These gendarmes expecting to reignite the secession were surprised by their new task and only took orders directly from Tshombe Some of the units also clashed with one another due to rivalries between Katangese and mercenary officers 107 A couple thousand remained in Angola 113 Tsombe s government also recruited former gendarmes in Jadotville and Elisabethville who reenlisted primarily to regain their pay These forces formed their own units which were then tendentiously integrated into the ANC 107 At least 6 000 additional ex gendarmes were integrated into the police force of the new province of South Katanga 114 With support from Belgium and the United States the gendarmes made steady progress in recapturing territory in late 1964 By 1965 they were deployed in mopping up operations 115 The use of mercenaries bothered President Kasa Vubu which created divisions with the commander of the ANC Joseph Desire Mobutu who appreciated their effectiveness Kasa Vubu also developed a rivalry with Tshombe and in October 1965 dismissed him from the premiership Political deadlock ensued as Parliament refused to approve Kasa Vubu s new appointee to the premiership and in November Mobutu launched a coup and assumed the presidency 116 Tshombe returned to exile in Spain and resumed planning for a return to power 117 New mercenaries were recruited for the purpose with Portuguese support 118 Rebellions and return to exile Edit By mid 1966 the Katangese forces in the Congo were still serving in the ANC in standalone units About 1 000 mercenaries and 3 000 former gendarmes were deployed in South Kivu and Kisangani formerly Stanleyville tasked with suppressing the remaining Simba rebels They were militarily effective but retained significant political distance from Mobutu s new regime and had tense relations with the regular ANC units In July 1966 roughly 3 000 gendarmes and 240 mercenaries upset about irregular pay rebelled in Kisangani 114 Led by Tshipola since made a colonel the force seized control of the city and killed several ANC officers including Colonel Joseph Damien Tshatshi the commander responsible for Congolese police operations in Katanga in 1963 Tshipola issued a memo accusing Tshatshi of discriminating against the ex gendarmes and denouncing Mobutu s coup Other mercenaries revolted in Isiro and Watso before joining Tshipola s force in Kisangani 119 The insurrection was suppressed in September with the assistance of units led by mercenary Bob Denard and Schramme Following this several ex gendarmes including members of the Katangese police fled to Angola 118 In March 1967 Mobutu convened a military tribunal to try the ex gendarmes responsible for the mutiny Tshombe was also tried in absentia The tribunal sentenced Tshombe to death and criminalized the Katangese Gendarmerie retrospectively as an irregular army 120 Mobutu held the Gendarmerie to be a criminal organization for the remainder of his rule After the trial all the gendarmes were referred to as mercenaries by Congolese press 120 Tshombe s plans to use the remaining gendarmes and mercenaries to stage a rebellion were disrupted by the hijacking of his plane in June and ultimate detention in Algiers A second wave of mutinies broke out on July 5 1967 in Bukavu and Kisangani after it was revealed that the ANC planned to disband its mercenary units The mutinies were led by European mercenaries An estimated 600 former gendarmes led by Schramme were present in Kisangani during the mutiny Under pressure from the ANC Schramme was forced to evacuate the city with 300 mercenaries and a few thousand gendarmes They reached Bukavu and a secessionist state was declared 121 122 A plan was proposed by the International Red Cross to evacuate 950 gendarmes and around 650 of their dependents to Zambia Schramme and Mobutu objected and the plan did not go forward Though the ANC continued fighting around 900 gendarmes gave up their arms and crossed into Rwanda At the end of the mutinies the gendarmes agreed to a cease fire proposed by Organisation of African Unity Secretary General Diallo Telli under which they could gain amnesty by returning to the Congo The mercenaries were expelled from Africa and returned to Europe 121 123 A brief diversionary raid was executed by Denard from November 1 to 5 1967 Called Operation Luciver ex gendarmes crossed from Angola to Katanga and occupied Kisenge and Mutshatsha before being defeated by the ANC In the Congo reprisal raids against former gendarmes then occurred the ANC killed several of their leaders 124 Later history 1967 present EditFurther information Congolese National Liberation Front We cannot by any means support a political and military adventure in Katanga without it being useful to our own policy W ithout this we will be in difficulty in our own fight against subversion PIDE statement June 1968 The straggling gendarmes who returned to Angola after the defeats in the Congo initially maintained hope of being able to fight for their return within a few years Their designs were nevertheless disrupted by Tshombe s detention the departure of many of their mercenary commanders and the increasing strength of Mobutu 125 The gendarmes were instead deployed by the Portuguese government in the Eastern Military Zone where they were led by Nathaniel Mbumba and fought the Movimento Popular de Libertacao de Angola MPLA and Uniao Nacional para a Independencia Total de Angola UNITA during the Angolan War of Independence The Portuguese had high respect for the gendarme s abilities they were called Fieis or the faithful However historian Pedro Aires Oliveira notes that the gendarmes cared more about fighting the Democratic Republic of the Congo than participating in the Angolan war and as a result were closely watched by the Portuguese authorities 126 127 1 130 ex gendarmes were deployed at Gafaria and a further 1 555 at Camissombo 128 Some of the gendarmes were also given bounties by the De Beers diamond company to disrupt smuggling operations in Angola 129 Efforts began to formalize the presence of exiled gendarmes in Angola In March 1968 the Federation Nationale Congolaise was created to represent Katangese in exile 130 In June 1969 the Congolese National Liberation Front FLNC was founded 131 They were given further military training and in May 1971 many gendarmes began formally receiving compensation for fighting Mbumba negotiated better conditions training and salaries for the soldiers in the early 1970s In February 1971 they were formally made part of the Portuguese irregular forces 132 By 1974 there were an estimated 2 400 gendarmes in 16 companies 126 127 During the Angolan Civil War from 1975 to 2002 the FLNC composed of ex gendarmes called the Tigres fought on the side of the MPLA against the National Liberation Front of Angola FNLA 133 The FLNC was then involved in the Shaba Wars The Katanga Province had been renamed Shaba Province during the rule of Mobutu when the Congo was known as Zaire 134 Shaba I began on March 8 1977 when ex gendarmes invaded the province Western nations came to the aid of Mobutu 135 and the invasion was crushed by May 26 1977 136 On May 11 1978 a second invasion known as Shaba II began About 3 000 to 4 000 FLNC members were involved Western nations again supported Mobutu and the FLNC was largely defeated by May 27 137 After the invasion failed the FLNC lost support from Angola and promptly collapsed Some former gendarmes were incorporated into the Angolan army were they were occasionally deployed militarily Various groups were formed to succeed the FLNC including the FAPAK the MCS and the FLNC II The factions were divided by their goals 138 The Tigres were involved in the First Congo War supporting a rebellion against Mobutu In February 1997 2 000 to 3 000 were airlifted to Kigali and driven to Goma and Bukavu Their fighting contributed heavily towards the capture of Kisangani and sped up the rebellion 139 Historian Gerard Prunier concludes that the Tigres played a decisive role in the war 140 In May 1997 Mobutu was overthrown and replaced by Laurent Desire Kabila 141 After the war the Tigres were largely incorporated into the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo The concept of the Tigres has emerged in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as a symbolic force representing secessionist thinking 142 Order of Battle Edit21er 24e 33e amp 34e Battalions de Gendarmerie 1er Battalion d Inf Portee 1er Para Commando Battalion aka 1er Commando 1er Police Militaire 3 companies 1er Garde Mobile Battalion Four mobile groups lettered A D Peloton de Garde Presidentielle Unite Europeen 50 men sundry service units Tanganyika Flotilla Source 143 Equipment inventory 1960 1963 Edit A captured Katangese M8 Greyhound Small arms Mauser rifles FN Mle 24 30 FN FAL Vigneron submachine gun Sten submachine gunMachine guns FN MAG M1919 Browning machine gun M2 BrowningMortars 60 mm mortar 81 mm mortarArtillery 75 mm caliber recoilless rifle Canon de 75 modele 1897Anti Aircraft Bofors 40 mm gun referred to as Beaufort Vehicles M8 Greyhound Minerva built Land RoverSource 143 See also EditMai Mai Kata Katanga 2011 present References EditNotes This statistic is derived from the discovery of 50 bodies of Africans in the area after the fighting was over 82 Sources Belgian Congo World Digital Library 1920 Retrieved 2020 03 29 Milestones 1961 1968 The Congo Decolonization and the Cold War 1960 1965 Office of the Historian United States Department of State Retrieved 2020 03 29 a b Larmer amp Kennes 2014 Miller 2015 p 70 a b Larmer Miles 2013 Local conflicts in a transnational war the Katangese gendarmes and the Shaba wars of 1977 78 Cold War History 13 1 89 108 doi 10 1080 14682745 2012 727801 ISSN 1468 2745 S2CID 153058994 Miller 2015 p 72 Genser amp Ugarte 2014 p 358 a b Larmer amp Kennes 2014 pp 14 15 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 46 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 45 46 a b Hoskyns 1965 p 289 Gerard Libois 1967 p 114 Larmer amp Kennes 2014 p 15 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 47 Congolese Republic Interavia Vol 22 1967 pp 1305 1306 Hoskyns 1965 p 385 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 47 48 Hoskyns 1965 p 384 Hoskyns 1965 pp 385 387 Hoskyns 1965 p 386 Passemiers 2016 p 81 Nzongola Ntalaja 2007 p 105 Othen 2015 Chapter 7 We Are The United Nations Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 48 a b c d Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 47 49 a b Hoskyns 1965 pp 302 303 Larmer amp Kennes 2014 pp 15 16 Young 2015 p 335 Hoskyns 1965 p 302 Hoskyns 1965 p 303 Hoskyns 1965 pp 329 334 335 a b c d Lefever amp Joshua 1966 p P 16 Higgins 1980 p 417 a b Puren amp Pottinger 1986 p 30 a b Othen 2015 Chapter 12 Sold Up The River Hoskyns 1965 p 392 Mockaitis 1999 p 26 a b c Hoskyns 1965 p 393 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 49 O Brien 1962 p 150 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 49 50 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 50 Othen 2015 p 113 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 50 52 Dixon amp Sarkees 2015 p 612 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 52 54 Miller 2015 pp 94 95 Hoskyns 1965 p 402 Lipsey 2013 p 538 Mockaitis 1999 p 28 Harvey 2011 Chapter 7 Smash The First Battle of Katanga September 1961 Hoskyns 1965 pp 406 408 a b c Marsh Steve Culley Tia 2018 07 03 Anglo American Relations and Crisis in The Congo PDF Contemporary British History 32 3 359 384 doi 10 1080 13619462 2018 1477598 ISSN 1361 9462 S2CID 149469962 a b Williams 2014 p 169 Hoskyns 1965 p 408 a b Hoskyns 1965 p 424 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 55 56 Hoskyns 1965 p 413 Hoskyns 1965 pp 414 417 Hoskyns 1965 p 418 Hoskyns 1965 pp 419 420 Hoskyns 1965 pp 421 424 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 55 Martin Guy 2013 05 01 Who Killed Hammarskjold The UN the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa by Susan Williams review Africa Today 59 3 163 166 doi 10 2979 africatoday 59 3 163 ISSN 1527 1978 S2CID 142914852 a b Hoskyns 1965 p 432 Hoskyns 1965 pp 437 438 Hoskyns 1965 pp 438 439 Hoskyns 1965 p 443 Hoskyns 1965 pp 444 445 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 55 57 Hoskyns 1965 p 447 Hoskyns 1965 p 448 Hoskyns 1965 pp 450 451 Hoskyns 1965 pp 451 452 Hoskyns 1965 p 457 a b Boulden 2001 p 31 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 55 58 Boulden 2001 p 39 Burns amp Heathcote 1963 pp 208 209 a b Burns amp Heathcote 1963 p 210 a b Dorn 2016 p 30 Epstein 1965 pp 141 142 Meisler 2011 p 132 Mockaitis 1999 p 36 a b Othen 2015 Chapter 25 Christmas in Elisabethville a b Colvin 1968 p 135 Urquhart 1998 p 357 Burns amp Heathcote 1963 p 211 Anfallet mot kaminaville UTLANDSVETERAN SE Folke Bernadotte Academy Retrieved 9 June 2017 Burns amp Heathcote 1963 p 213 a b c d e Othen 2015 Chapter 26 Katanga 63 a b c Mockaitis 1999 p 37 Colvin 1968 p 136 United Press International 2 1963 p 2 Urquhart 1998 p 359 a b c d O Ballance 1999 p 63 Urquhart 1998 p 360 United Press International 1963 p 2 a b c Meisler 2011 p 133 Boulden 2001 p 40 Chiborn Larry 24 February 2009 Bengt Fredman Dagens Nyheter in Swedish Retrieved 12 April 2019 Dorn 2016 p 32 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 64 65 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 63 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 65 66 a b c Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 67 a b c Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 70 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 67 68 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 68 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 69 Lukas J Anthony 9 August 1964 Rebels Gain In Congo Success of Rebellions Raises Doubt Over Ability of Tshombe to Mold Politically Cohesive State The New York Times p E4 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 69 70 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 72 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 75 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 71 72 Congo Ringing the Changes Arab Observer 6 December 1965 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 73 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 76 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 75 76 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 77 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 77 78 Tanner Henry July 23 1967 Congo The Revolt That Failed The New York Times Arnold 1999 p 15 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 77 78 84 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 80 81 a b Oliveira Pedro Aires 2017 Saved by the Civil War African Loyalists in the Portuguese Armed Forces and Angola s Transition to Independence PDF The International History Review 39 1 126 142 doi 10 1080 07075332 2016 1167103 hdl 10362 31419 ISSN 0707 5332 S2CID 156383478 a b Meditz amp Merrill 1993 p 292 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 86 Epstein Edward Jay 3 August 2000 U N Is Diamond Cartel s Best Friend The Wall Street Journal p A14 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 85 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 81 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 92 95 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 118 Berkeley Bill August 1993 Zaire An African Horror Story The Atlantic Retrieved April 5 2020 Ogunbadejo Oye 1979 Conflict in Africa A Case Study of the Shaba Crisis 1977 World Affairs 141 3 219 234 ISSN 0043 8200 JSTOR 20671780 Eze Dons 2008 Africa in turmoil a reflection on military coups in Africa Linco Press Odom Thomas P Shaba II The French and Belgian Intervention in Zaire in 1978 PDF The Combat Studies Institute pp 31 86 Archived PDF from the original on January 28 2017 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 145 163 164 Reyntjens Filip 2009 The great African war Congo and regional geopolitics 1996 2006 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 511 59629 2 OCLC 506026042 Prunier Gerard 2008 12 31 Africa s World War Congo the Rwandan Genocide and the Making of a Continental Catastrophe Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 974399 5 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 171 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 pp 188 189 a b Peter Abbott and Raffaele Ruggeri Modern African Wars 4 The Congo 1960 2002 pp 34 36 Bibliography EditArnold Guy 1999 11 26 Mercenaries Scourge of the Developing World Springer ISBN 978 1 349 27708 7 Boulden Jane 2001 Peace Enforcement The United Nations Experience in Congo Somalia and Bosnia illustrated ed Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275969066 Burns Arthur Lee Heathcote Nina 1963 Peace keeping by U N Forces From Suez to the Congo Princeton Studies in World Politics Vol 4 New York amp London Frederick A Praeger OCLC 186378493 Colvin Ian 1968 The Rise and fall of Moise Tshombe a Biography London Frewin ISBN 9780090876501 Cordier Andrew Wellington Harrelson Max eds 2013 Public Papers of the Secretaries General of the United Nations Vol 6 Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231513807 Dixon Jeffrey S Sarkees Meredith Reid 2015 10 22 A Guide to Intra state Wars SAGE ISBN 978 0 87289 775 5 Dorn A Walter 2016 Air Power in UN Operations Wings for Peace Military Strategy and Operational Art Routledge ISBN 9781317183396 Epstein Howard M 1965 Revolt in the Congo 1960 1964 New York Facts on File OCLC 875482690 Genser Jared Ugarte Bruno Stagno 2014 06 05 The United Nations Security Council in the Age of Human Rights Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 04007 6 Gerard Libois Jules 1967 Katanga Secession University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 04200 4 OCLC 209775045 Harvey Dan 2011 A Company Action The battle for the tunnel Dunboyne Maverick House ISBN 978 1 907221 40 8 Harvey Dan 2015 01 07 A Company Action The battle for the tunnel Maverick House ISBN 978 1 907221 40 8 Higgins Rosalyn 1980 United Nations Peacekeeping 1946 1967 Africa Vol 3 Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192183217 Hoskyns Catherine 1965 The Congo Since Independence January 1960 December 1961 London Oxford University Press OCLC 414961 Larmer Miles Kennes Erik 2014 08 08 Rethinking the Katangese Secession PDF The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 42 4 741 761 doi 10 1080 03086534 2014 894716 hdl 2263 49135 ISSN 0308 6534 S2CID 145205024 Kennes Erik Larmer Miles 2016 The Katangese Gendarmes and War in Central Africa Fighting Their Way Home Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 02130 4 Lefever Ernest W Joshua Wynfred 1966 United Nations Peacekeeping in the Congo 1960 1964 Vol 3 Washington D C Brookings Institution OCLC 631685344 Lipsey Roger 2013 Hammarskjold A Life illustrated ed University of Michigan Press ISBN 9780472118908 Meisler Stanley 2011 United Nations A History revised ed Grove Press ISBN 9780802194992 Miller Linda B 2015 World Order and Local Disorder The United Nations and Internal Conflicts Princeton University Press via Project MUSE Meditz Sandra W Merrill Tim 1993 Library of Congress Country Study Zaire 1993 Library of Congress Mockaitis Thomas R 1999 Peace Operations and Intrastate Conflict The Sword Or the Olive Branch illustrated ed Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275961732 Namikas Lise 2013 Battleground Africa Cold War in the Congo 1960 1965 Washington D C Woodrow Wilson Center Press ISBN 978 0 8047 8486 3 Nzongola Ntalaja Georges 2007 The Congo From Leopold to Kabila A People s History 3rd ed New York Palgrave ISBN 978 1 84277 053 5 O Ballance Edgar 1999 The Congo Zaire Experience 1960 98 illustrated ed Springer ISBN 9780230286481 O Brien Conor Cruise 1962 To Katanga And Back A UN Case History London Hutchinson OCLC 460615937 Othen Christopher 2015 Katanga 1960 63 Mercenaries Spies and the African Nation that Waged War on the World illustrated ed The History Press ISBN 9780750965804 Passemiers Lazlo 14 Jan 2016 Safeguarding White Minority Power The South African Government and the Secession of Katanga 1960 1963 The State the Citizen and Power 68 70 91 Power Declan 2016 Siege at Jadotville The Irish Army s Forgotten Battle unabridged ed Blackstone Publishing ISBN 9781504758888 Puren Jerry Pottinger Brian 1986 Mercenary Commander Golago ISBN 9780947020217 Sonck Jean Pierre amp Despas Daniel January 1996 L aviation katangaise 1e partie Katangan Aviation Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French 34 2 6 ISSN 1243 8650 Sonck Jean Pierre amp Despas Daniel February 1996 L aviation katangaise 2e partie Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French 35 2 7 ISSN 1243 8650 Sonck Jean Pierre amp Despas Daniel March 1996 L aviation katangaise 3e partie Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French 36 2 6 ISSN 1243 8650 Urquhart Brian 1998 Ralph Bunche An American Life illustrated ed W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393318593 United Press International 9 January 1963 Congo War At an End Tshombe The Desert Sun Elisabethville p 2 OCLC 26432381 United Press International 5 January 1963 U N Troop Fighting All of Plan Bunche Indicates That Drive Will Go On to Kolwezi The Desert Sun Leopoldville p 2 Williams Susan 2014 Who Killed Hammarskjold The UN the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190257637 Young Crawford 2015 12 08 Politics in Congo Decolonization and Independence Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 7857 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Katangese Gendarmerie amp oldid 1130196792, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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