Hazardous Courses in Southern Africa

Summary --

Stretching southward from the two great river systems of the Congo and the Zambesi to the confluence of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, and thus comprising roughly the southern third of the African continent, there lies a vast area, about two-thirds the size of the United States, which constitutes in its entirety one of the principal problem-children of the world community. Consisting largely of an arid central plateau, with lower coastal strips only partially suitable for human habitation, this region harbors a population of some 41,000,000, of whom, in approximate terms, 34,000,000 might be of black African origin, 4,500,000 of European, and the remainder of mixed or other blood. It is made up of a number of highly disparate political entities: the great Portuguese dependencies of Angola and Mozambique, the highly controversial territories of Rhodesia and South West Africa, the Republic of South Africa, and the three former British High Commission territories, now independent: Lesotho, Swaziland and Botswana.

Comments

George Kennon is knows Africa too?

The only thing that really surprised me about the article was the author. George Kennon was supposed to be the expert on the cold war. In this article he objectively analyzed the situation very well in southern Africa. No wonder Truman made him the head of policy planning in the State Department. For a non-expert this article showed much knowledge and inight on the area.

John Navarra
Daytona Beach, Florida