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By Johan Schoeman on
2020/07/25 03:12 PM
Lomba River source, Southeast-Angola, late February 1988…
That whining automatic turbo diesel engine of the Ratel, such a reassuring and calming sound for its occupants, raises in pitch as it accelerates, bouncing through the thick sand, sweeping bush and small trees aside, breaking its own path through the thick, bushy vegetation of the Angolan landscape, right on the edge of the bush next to a huge anharra, a wide, open, treeless band of sucking mud and grass that surrounds any and almost all rivers in southeast Angola.

We are bundu-bashing a new track along the inside of the tree line, the Ratel leading the way to a hide the battery have to occupy for the night, somewhere to the southwest of Mavinga. It’s a rather large number of vehicles, mostly comprising of Kwêvoël armoured and...
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By Johan Schoeman on
2014/07/22 01:43 AM
Dedicated to the officers and men of 82 SA Mechanised Brigade, who, on this day, lost three of their tanks... call signs 12A, 52 and 53...
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By Johan Schoeman on
2011/01/11 05:51 AM
I was deployed as an anchor observer (call sign 35A) with a 2nd Lt (Lt "Pikkie" Prinsloo) and a Lance-Bombardier acting as Technical Assistant, for the attack of 82nd Brigade on the Tumpo Triangle on 23 March 1988. My position on the Chambinga high ground directly east of Cuito Cuanavale gave me a panoramic view of the entire Tumpo Triangle as well as the Cuito and Cuanavale Rivers and the town of Cuito Cuanavale beyond. I also commanded a good view of the east slope of the Cuito high ground to the west of the Cuito River and my primary task was counter-bombardment of Fapla artillery batteries and rocket launchers deployed there. I was unable to see any of the actual defences of the Tumpo Triangle itself and therefore engaged very few targets of opportunity there. Only when I saw the occasional vehicles dart out between the dense bush did I attempt engagements of targets in the triangle.
I could clearly see the high ground in the "Delta" north of the Cuito-Cuanavale confluence, where another anchor observer...
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