Operation Thunderbolt (1997)
Operation Thunderbolt (1997) | |||||||||
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Part of the Second Sudanese Civil War and the First Congo War | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Unidentified major general[1] Juma Oris (WIA) (WNBF) Abdulatif Tiyua (POW) (WNBF) Jean-Marie Magabo (POW) (Ex-FAR) Joseph Kony (LRA/LSA) |
Salva Kiir Mayardit James Hoth Mai Yoweri Museveni Salim Saleh Katumba Wamala James Kazini Unidentified Ethiopian commanders | ||||||||
Units involved | |||||||||
FAZ remnants |
Eritrean Army | ||||||||
Strength | |||||||||
Thousands | ~12,000 | ||||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||||
Sudan: thousands killed or wounded; thousands captured WNBF: at least 800 killed, 1,000 captured UNRF (II): Heavy | Unknown | ||||||||
Many civilians displaced |
Operation Thunderbolt (9 March – late April 1997) was the codename for a military offensive by the
The success of Operation Thunderbolt significantly strengthened the SPLA in Western Equatoria, and weakened the Sudanese government's control over its southern territories. The South Sudanese rebels were thus able to expand their operations, and raised global awareness for their cause. Furthermore, the WNBF and UNRF (II) suffered heavy losses during the offensive. Taken together with their defeats in the First Congo War, they were permanently weakened, and in case of the WNBF, effectively defeated as active fighting forces.
Background
Civil war in Sudan
Following its independence in 1956, Sudan had suffered from numerous internal conflicts over political, ethnic, and religious issues. In 1983, revolutionaries and separatists from the country's
By 1991, the civil war had developed into a "network of internal wars"[4] between the government and a multitude of rebel groups with widely diverging backgrounds and aims. Though the SPLA had grown in power and seized control of large parts of southern Sudan, it also suffered from internal disputes and had never enjoyed the support of the entire southern population. Many in the south had sided with the government or rebel groups that were opposed to the SPLA.[4][7][8]
The region of
The Ugandan-Sudanese conflict
The Sudanese government suspected that the survival of the South Sudanese rebels was dependent on support by the neighboring country of
In an effort to topple Museveni's government, Sudan thus supported and even organized several Ugandan insurgent groups from 1986, though the extent to which these rebels actually followed Sudanese orders varied greatly.[25] By 1996, the most important pro-Sudanese Ugandan rebel groups were the WNBF, the UNRF (II) (a WNBF splinter faction), the ADF, and the LRA/LSA. Though these groups were not strong enough to actually threaten the Ugandan government, they could undermine its legitimacy by attacking the Ugandan population and further damage the country's struggling economy.[26][27][28] They were generally based in southern Sudan or eastern Zaire (present-day DR Congo), whose dictator Mobutu Sese Seko tolerated their presence out of enmity toward Museveni.[29] The Ugandan President responded to the Sudanese and Zairean support for these rebel groups by ending his neutrality in 1993. Uganda started to aid, and then coordinate with the SPLA in their common struggle against Sudan, the Ugandan insurgents, and Zaire.[30][31] Furthermore, the conflict along the Sudanese-Ugandan-Zairean border intensified, as not just the various rebel factions but even the Sudanese and Ugandan militaries launched cross-border raids and bombardments.[11][32][33]
Prelude
This volatile situation further escalated upon the outbreak of the
With the pro-Sudanese forces in Zaire routed, the SPLA and its supporters occupied northeastern Zaire. The SPLA was thus in the position to launch offensive operations into Sudan from the Zairian side of the border.[34] Two offensives were planned: "Operation Thunderbolt" which would take place west of the Nile, and "Operation Jungle Storm"[a] east of the Nile.[40] The South Sudanese rebels amassed a force of about 12,000 fighters, including tanks and artillery, for Operation Thunderbolt.[1][41] Salva Kiir Mayardit was appointed overall commander of the SPLA troops involved in the offensive.[42][43] Another important rebel commander during Operation Thunderbolt was James Hoth Mai.[39]
The SPLA enjoyed strong support by foreign states, namely Uganda, Ethiopia, and Eritrea, during the preparation and execution of Operation Thunderbolt.[b] Each of these countries had its own goals which it hoped to achieve by aiding the SPLA in capturing Western and Central Equatoria. For Uganda, Operation Thunderbolt's main aim was to capture the entire border to block the SAF from advancing into Zaire to help its allies there.[36] By helping the SPLA, Ethiopia intended to pressure the Sudanese government into ending its support for anti-Ethiopian militants.[44] Eritrea hoped that its involvement in the conflict would weaken its rival Sudan, and reduce the influence of its other rival, Ethiopia, in southern Sudan.[44] The foreign support for the SPLA during Operation Thunderbolt took several forms. First of all, the rebels were trained, provided with intelligence, and supplied with equipment by the UPDF,[1][45][46] the Eritrean Army and the Ethiopian Army.[47][16][48] Furthermore, many of the tanks and artillery pieces that took part in the operation were operated by crews belonging to the Ugandan, Eritrean, and Ethiopian militaries.[47] Unidentified Ethiopian military officers directly commanded parts of the anti-Sudanese operation.[36] President Museveni even ordered the UPDF to train at Monodo for a potential attack on the Sudanese border town of Kaya.[49]
The offensive
The SPLA began the offensive amid the dry season[42] on 9 March,[45][50] attacking the Kaya and the road between Yei and Juba.[1][45] The assault on Kaya was preceded by an artillery bombardement,[51] and spearheaded by the Uganda People's Defence Force with tanks, howitzers, mortars, and machine guns.[51][33][49][c] The Ugandan forces were under the overall command of Salim Saleh, with Katumba Wamala as operational commander. A task force of UPDF tanks led by Hannington Kyazze crossed a nearby river, and attacked Kaya from the rear.[49] The SAF had previously realized that the SPLA was preparing an offensive, but the rebels managed to capture Kaya on the first day of the attack nonetheless,[45][50] while the UPDF seized the strategically important nearby Koboko Mountain.[33] Much heavy equipment fell to the UPDF at Kaya,[49] while the town's remaining SAF soldiers retreated to Yei.[52] The UPDF consequently destroyed a SAF artillery unit at Poki Hill near Kaya.[53] On 10 March, the SPLA and UPDF captured Bazi and Gumuni,[45][50][49] while the Sudanese and Ugandan militaries reportedly exchanged artillery fire across their common border.[1]
The SPLA was thus able to encircle the SAF in a "massive pincer movement", and cut off the "big" garrison at Yei from Juba on 11 March.
Instead of relieving Yei's garrison, the column was ambushed by the SPLA about halfway between Morobo and Yei, and suffered 3,000 casualties: 2,000 killed and 1,000 captured. The survivors were routed and fled in disarray to Juba. The column's leaders were mostly killed, wounded or captured: WNBF commander Juma Oris was badly wounded though escaped,[54] while Ex-FAR Captain Jean-Marie Magabo was captured.[56] Following this defeat, Yei's garrison surrendered on 12 or 13 March,[50][54] though many of its fighters attempted to flee into the bush. They left behind much materiel, including at least nine 122mm howitzers, one 37mm anti-aircraft gun, and five Chinese-made T-59 tanks.[57] Several WNBF fighters, including the militia's deputy commander Abdulatif Tiyua, were also captured in the town.[58][59] The Sudanese government responded by ordering 2,000 SAF soldiers who were retreating toward Juba to instead march on Yei, officially to aid the besieged garrison, although the government knew that the town had already fallen. This counter-attack failed, and 1,000 SAF soldiers were captured or surrendered, while the rest were killed or scattered by the rebels.[1]
The SPLA further advanced after its success at Yei, capturing the garrison towns of Morobo (12 March),
The remaining SAF units in the region were mostly forced to retreat. A counter-attack by the pro-government
The SPLA claimed to have put 8,000 enemy troops "out of action" during Operation Thunderbolt,[50] including a large number of Sudanese senior officers.[1] "Several thousand" SAF soldiers were captured or surrendered near Yei.[64] Likewise, the pro-Sudanese WNBF and UNRF (II) suffered heavy losses during the fighting in Equatoria.[55] The WNBF lost 1,800 combatants at Yei and Morobo alone, of whom 800 were killed while the rest were captured.[50] The high commands of both WNBF and UNRF (II) were mostly killed or captured in the offensive.[55] In comparison, the SPLA suffered much lighter casualties.[65]
Aftermath
The success of Operation Thunderbolt significantly improved the SPLA's military and political position.[66] It had conquered numerous important towns,[42] and was thereby more able to present itself as legitimate government of South Sudan.[66] Much of the territory captured by the SPLA during Operation Thunderbolt remained in its hands until the civil war's end.[31] The rebel group had also seized a large amount of small arms, ammunition, landmines, and heavier equipment such as artillery pieces, at least 60 tanks,[43] anti-aircraft guns, and anti-tank cannons, greatly increasing its combat capabilities.[1][63][67] Nevertheless, much of the weaponry and ammunition that fell into the hands of the SPLA was "degraded and of no use on the battlefield".[68] The Sudanese government had had problems for years to properly supply its forces with modern arms, and the SAF was consequently forced to rely on obsolete, incompatible, or badly worn equipment.[69] Operation Thunderbolt, along with simultaneous offensives by the SPLA and other insurgents, further worsened the Sudanese government's dire shortages in manpower and equipment. The regime was reportedly forced to resort to forcibly recruiting schoolboys, train them just 15 days, and then send them into battle with no more than a gun, a Quran page to "ward off infidel bullets", and a key to unlock Heaven's Gate if they fell in combat.[48] The NIF leadership also increased its efforts to enlist the aid of various militias to keep the SPLA at bay.[48]
I believe it's the most significant victory in the south to date. Yei is pivotal to the whole war situation.... It was the main battle. I believe the war in the south is over. There is nothing that the regime will do, or can do, to reverse this. We are confident that we will indeed capture Juba and not only that, we will bring down the whole regime. That is the final target.
—John Garang, leader of the SPLA[70]
The capture of Yei was one of the most important successes for the SPLA. It provided the rebel group with an international propaganda boost, as it portrayed its own rule in the town as free and fair in contrast to the previous administration which was widely perceived as oppressive.[66] SPLA leader John Garang even declared that with Yei in rebel hands, the SPLA had almost won the civil war in southern Sudan;[70] this assessment proved premature. In fact, the conflict had effectively become a stalemate, as neither the government nor the insurgents were capable of completely defeating each other.[48] The war continued until the Comprehensive Peace Agreement was signed seven years later in 2005.[31]
The SPLA was however not very popular with the local Equatorians, and many of them opted to flee into Zaire and Uganda rather than live under SPLA rule.[10] In turn, the SPLA settled a large number of its fighters and their families, mostly ethnic Dinka, in Yei.[71] As Yei remained relatively stable and its security improved over the following years, the town underwent an economic upturn.[72] Cross-border trade in the region increased,[73][74] and many refugees from around Sudan and the Congo settled in Yei.[75] The SPLA made Yei its new headquarters in summer 1997.[65]
The capture of Yei was also a major success for the SPLA's allies. Uganda did not just prevent a Sudanese incursion into Zaire, and thus fulfilled its main strategic goal during the offensive.[36] Operation Thunderbolt also weakened the WNBF and UNRF (II) to a great extent, diminishing their ability to fight the Ugandan government and its allies.[55][56] Of the two, the WNBF was in a worse situation. As it had also suffered from internal disputes, and mass desertions, the massive defeat in Sudan meant that the WNBF's "insurgency was essentially spent by 1997".[76] Nevertheless, the Sudanese government continued to support the remaining remnants of WNBF and UNRF (II) that had fled into the Garamba National Park.[56] UPDF soldiers thus remained stationed in and around Yei until at least 2008, securing the area against pro-Sudanese rebels.[77] The Ugandan insurgents who were in SPLA custody following Operation Thunderbolt (including 500–1,000 WNBF fighters) were eventually expatriated to Uganda.[50][55] Ethiopia also achieved what it had wanted, namely to pressure the Sudanese government into reducing its support for anti-Ethiopian militants in the Horn of Africa. By the time Ethiopia pulled all of its troops from southern Sudan in May 1998 to respond to the Eritrean–Ethiopian War, the Sudanese leadership had conceded to the principal demands of Ethiopia.[16]
Notes
- ^ The "Operation Jungle Storm" in 1997[37] should not be confused with the better known SPLA offensive of the same name that targeted Juba in 1992.[38] There were several other offensives named "Jungle Storm" between 1993 and 1995 as well.[39]
- ^ According to Researcher Alex de Waal, Ugandan President Museveni and Ethiopian Prime Minister Zenawi instead of the SPLA leadership decided the scope of Operation Thunderbolt during a meeting at Gulu, and agreed that it should capture the border and Yei, but not to target Juba.[36]
- ^ The Ugandan government officially denied involvement in the operation at the time,[32] but later admitted that it had taken part in the offensive.[49]
- Rwandan Armed Forces (FAR) had been forced into exile in eastern Zaire, from where they intended to retake their country. The new Rwandan government drove them from the region in 1996, and some Ex-FAR subsequently found refuge with the Sudanese government. In return, the EX-FAR soldiers fought against the SPLA.[56]
- ^ Morobo had served as WNBF headquarters before its conquest by the SPLA.[43]
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- ^ Payne (1998), p. 52.
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