Thousands of Ethiopian prisoner of War, including three of their
Russian advisors.
(From left to Right, Lieutenant Covaldin Alexander Victrovich, Colonel
Kalistrov Yuri Petrovich and Colonel Churayef Yevigniew Nicolayevich)
The African continent became a factor in Russian foreign
policy for the first time at the end of the nineteenth century during two wars,
the Italo-Ethiopian War (1895–1896) and the second Anglo-Boer War (1899–1902).
In both cases, a strong anti-British sentiment among the public and a cautious
but obvious anti-British stand of the government made the Russians consider
first Ethiopia, and then the Boer republics, as potential allies against their
common powerful enemy, Britain.
After the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, the young Soviet state
perceived Africa, as well as other parts of the colonized world, as its natural
ally in its struggle for survival and social progress because of the
revolutionary potential of the colonized peoples, and their presumed ability to
undermine and disrupt the capitalist world. The Communist (Third) International
(Comintern), a union of communist parties of the world founded in 1919 in
Moscow and to a large extent expressing its interests, was deeply involved in
the ideological debate on the “national and colonial problem,” in spreading
socialist— and with it Soviet—propaganda, and in preparation of cadres for both
national and social revolutions. In 1928, the Red International of Labor
Unions, which acted under the auspices of the Comintern, created the
International Trade Union Committee of Working Negroes, which played an
important role in Moscow’s African connection. Several future leaders of
anticolonialism in Africa were educated in the Comintern’s schools, Jomo
Kenyatta and George Padmore among them.
South Africa occupied the central place in Comintern’s
African policy for it was the only country in Africa south of the Sahara that
had a well-developed working class, a well organized labor movement, and a
vibrant and vociferous communist party. The Communist Party of South Africa
gave the Comintern its only direct link to politics in the region but it was
mainly the Comintern’s rigid control over the party that led to the latter’s
demise in the 1930s.
In 1943 the Comintern was disbanded, because during World
War II the Soviet Union was more interested in maintaining relations with its
Western allies than with the communist movement. In Africa this new line found
a reflection in the opening of Soviet consulates in South Africa which existed
from 1943 until 1956.
The Comintern’s greatest contribution to the cause of
African liberation may have been its slogan of the “independent native
republic,” its official goal for South Africa from the late 1920s until 1935.
However, until the 1950s the Soviet stand against colonialism was inconsistent.
The USSR rejected the mandate system of the League of Nations, but it did join
this organization despite the fact that it condoned colonialism. The Soviet
Union was the only big European power to denounce Italian aggression against Ethiopia
in 1935–1936, but even after the war it explored possibilities of territorial
acquisitions in Africa for itself.
After the war, from the mid-1950s on, the center of
attention of the Soviet government in Africa moved from South Africa to other
African countries. Soviet strategists and policy makers saw them as allies in
the struggle against its opponents in the Cold War and as potential members of
the socialist camp because, one after another, they declared their desire to be
socialist or “to build socialism” after proclaiming their independence. This
new approach led to an upsurge of direct Soviet involvement in Africa during
the 1960s, 1970s, and early 1980s.
The most important aspect of Soviet policy at that time was
its assistance to liberation movements. The Soviet Union initiated the
Declaration of Independence of Colonial Countries and Nations, which was passed
by the United Nations in 1960, and championed every case of anticolonial
struggle on the international arena. It provided liberation movements with
funds, consumables, vehicles, air tickets and stationery, and granted
scholarships for the study in Soviet tertiary institutions. From the 1960s on
it became instrumental in providing military assistance: arms, advisers, and
relocation of guerrilla forces. This was particularly significant in the case
of the MPLA, Frelimo, SWAPO, and the African National Congress. In the context
of the Cold War, assistance and support were always offered to a particular
allied party as a measure against the influence of other power—first and
foremost the United States and China, which often led to fragmentation of
nationalist movements.
The spirit of the Cold War dominated Soviet relations with
independent African countries as well, first of all in the sense that the USSR
attempted to create a chain of allies in Africa, as it did elsewhere in the
world. Countries that embarked on the program of reforms that Soviet
authorities considered to be directed at building socialism, or just expressed
their wish to do so, as well as those that did none of these but had tried to
cut their ties with the West were pronounced “countries of noncapitalist
development” (or, later, “countries of socialist orientation”) and put into the
category of “revolutionary democracies” (as distinct from the “people’s
democracies” of Eastern Europe). At different periods different countries fell
into this category including Ghana, Mali, French Guinea, People’s Republic of
Congo, Tanzania, and Somalia. Ethiopia, Angola, and Mozambique enjoyed special
attention and received the most in economic and military aid from the USSR.
There is little doubt that, both before and after World War
II, Soviet policy in Africa was to a large extent dictated and motivated by the
interests of the Soviet state itself. It is equally obvious, however, that
Soviet assistance and its confrontation with the West where Africa’s colonial
powers belonged did make a difference for the outcome of Africa’s struggle for
independence. Soviet aid, on the other hand, did not help to alleviate economic
problems of independent African countries and in some cases exacerbated them,
and its ideologized approach and virtually unlimited supply of arms contributed
to internal conflicts.
After the end of the Cold War, the center of Soviet
interests in Africa moved to southern Africa once again. Due to its leverage in
the wake of the Cold War and its involvement in Angola and Mozambique, the
Soviet Union and then the Russian Federation were able to play an active role
in the Namibian settlement and in South Africa’s peaceful transition to the
majority rule. However, from the beginning of the 1990s on, Russia’s interest
in Africa and its role on the continent began to decrease.
Further Reading
Cassen, R. (ed.). Soviet Interests in the Third World. London: Sage/RIIA, 1985.
Golan, G. The Soviet Union and the National Liberation Movements in the Third
World. London: Unwin Hyman, 1988. Kempton, D. Soviet Strategy toward Southern
Africa. New York: Praeger, 1989. Nation, R. C. and M. V. Kauppi. The Soviet
Impact on Africa. Lexington Books, 1984. Somerville, K. Southern Africa and the
Soviet Union: From Communist International to Commonwealth of Independent
States. London: Macmillan, 1993.
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