Simple
analogy between
By Commonsense
During
the 1980s the international community, after years of indecision, finally came
to enforce a stringent regime of economic and diplomatic pressure that was
beginning to bite. A sustained campaign of civil disobedience and political
action waged by the United Democratic Front was beginning to be lethally
effective. Attacks by Umkhonto we Sizwe, ANC’s armed
wing, mainly symbolic, were getting unnervingly frequent. In short, international
pressure, popular action and the insurgency fed on each other to make minority
rule untenable and its downfall imminent.
Against
this backdrop, the apartheid regime still retained control of a highly
efficient and well-equipped army and security force. However, it was becoming
obvious that this could not forestall the inevitable--- certain defeat. Time for Afrikaners to make a tough decision:
go on fighting, risking utter destruction, or negotiate a peaceful and win-win
way out---ditto.
A
comedy by Robin Williams, the US Comedian, captured the essence of the dire
situation faced by the Apartheid regime.
He related an anecdote about an encounter between Lester Maddox, the
segregationist former Georgia Governor and an Afrikaner leader.
Maddox: “How many whites are there in
Afrikaner
Leader: “About 3.5 million.”
Maddox:
“How many blacks?”
Afrikaner
Leader: “20 to 30 million.”
Maddox: “Does Custer ring a bell to you?”
Maddox
was allegedly referring to Armstrong Custer, a flamboyant
The
victory by the Indians did not last long. That is not the gist of the story. No
analogy is a perfect fit but the story of Custer’s blunder, a major fiasco in
Despite skepticism
by some quarters, mostly unfounded, the formation of the
But if
TPLF, not known for its far-sightedness, rejects this magnanimous gesture and
continues with repression, “Does Custer ring a bell?” This is only Commonsense.