(PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by QuotaSystem: 7:19pm On May 03, 2021 |
In commemoration of May 30th anniversary and as a rejoinder to an earlier controversial thread started by usj, here presented are pictures of foreign military allies on the Biafran side of the Civil War. https://www.nairaland.com/6534569/countries-supported-either-side-last#101325487SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE
MERCENARY WARS | Biafra 1966"On 26th May 1967 the Eastern region voted to secede from Nigeria. Then on the 30th May, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, the Eastern Region's military governor, announced the Republic of Biafra, citing the Easterners killed in the post-coup violence. To make matters worse the large amount of oil in the region created conflict throughout the whole country, as oil was a major component of the Nigerian economy. Biafra was poorly equipped for war, being out manned, and out gunned by the F.M.G. However, they had the advantage of fighting in their homeland, and the support of most Easterners. The following is the statement declaring the secession. I, Lieutenant-Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, Military Governor of Eastern Nigeria, by virtue of the authority, and pursuant to the principles, recited above, do hereby solemnly proclaim that the territory and region known as and called Eastern Nigeria together with her continental shelf and territorial waters shall henceforth be an independent sovereign state of the name and title of "The Republic of Biafra". In response to the declaration, on 6th July, 1967 the F.M.G. launched what they called "police measures" to annex the Eastern Region now calling its self Biafra. Their initial efforts were unsuccessful, as Biafra successfully launched their own counter offensive, and by August 1967 they had taken land in the Mid-Western Region of Nigeria. However, by October 1967 the Nigerians had regained the land after intense fighting" 2 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by QuotaSystem: 7:19pm On May 03, 2021 |
Biafra was quick to realise that air power was to play a major part in the confrontation that lay ahead, and were secretly publicise to the world that they were looking for aircraft and mercenary pilots to fly them. Being isolated they had realised that they would need transportation to supply their new country with food as well as weapons. Word also went out that they were looking for high profile mercenary leaders to help the fighting on the ground and soldiers like Frenchman Bob Denard were approached, but with no luck. Mike Hoare is reported to have visited both sides, but was unable to offer assistance to either, As the famous 5th Commando that he had led successfully in the Congo a couple of years earlier had just been disbanded. Other names thrown around was Alister Wicks who was in Rhodesia at the time, Peters who was in London and Schroeder who was in South Africa, all three had been serving officers during the Congo Conflict.
Later Frenchman Captain Robert Faulques who had also served in the Congo arrived in Biafra as an advance party for a further 100 strong contingent of French mercenaries. It started to look like the old military rivalry between Britain and France was once again starting to rear its ugly head. Britain, although not openly acknowledging the fact, were supporting Nigeria, with both military hardware and political advice. While France was throwing its weight behind Biafra, by secretly supplying arms and trying to recruit a large mercenary army to fight against them, but the army never materialised. After many false starts and then with a samll group of mercenaries already signed up, for reasons unknown it was later cancelled.
Below: Biafran French & Belgian Mercenaries 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by QuotaSystem: 7:19pm On May 03, 2021 |
From 1968 onward, the war fell into a lengthy stalemate, with Nigerian forces unable to make significant advances into the remaining areas of Biafran control. The blockade of surrounded Biafra led to a humanitarian and propaganda disaster when it emerged that there was widespread civilian hunger and starvation in the besieged Igbo areas. An over used tactic of the Nigerian forces had been the sabotage of farmland, and this was now beginning to affect Biafra’s population. Images of starving Biafran children went around the world. The Biafran government claimed that Nigeria was using hunger and genocide to win the war, and sought aid from the outside world.
Many world organised volunteer bodies organised blockade-breaking relief flights into Biafra, carrying food, medicines, and sometimes (it was claimed) weapons. Nigeria also claimed that the Biafran government was hiring foreign mercenaries to extend and lengthen the war.
In September 1968, the F.M.G. planned what General Gowon described as the "final offensive." However, initially the final offensive was held back by the Biafran troops. Although in the latter stages, a Southern F.M.G. offensive managed to break through the fierce resistance.
Below: More European mercenaries that offered support to Biafra 3 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by donbachi(m): 7:35pm On May 03, 2021 |
The whiteman keep head like macjefferson. 1 Like |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by puremaker7(m): 7:37pm On May 03, 2021 |
War |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by QuotaSystem: 7:39pm On May 03, 2021 |
More foreign mercenaries that fought for Biafra. 4 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Manq(m): 7:49pm On May 03, 2021 |
Lovely one OP.. these are new pictures to my sight. Thanks 6 Likes 1 Share |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by QuotaSystem: 7:56pm On May 03, 2021 |
Biafra Foreign Air Support
The Biafrans were swift to understand the importance of air power and to start organizing a rag-tag air force, as well as using transport aircraft for brining supplies of weapons into the country. Regular flights of Air Trans Africa DC-7s from South Africa were undertaken already since the summer of 1966: other aircraft operated from Portugal, via Portuguese Guinea (today Guinea-Bissau), and Cameroon. In October 1966, for example, a Royal Air Burundi DC-4M Argonaut, flown by a mercenary Henry Wharton alias Heinrich Wartski, crash landed at Garoua, in Cameroun, while carrying a load of army equipment from Rotteerdam. The same pilot supposedly flew also the Transportes Aereos Portugueses (TAP) Super Constellation (5T-TAF), impounded with a load of weapons at Malta, in September 1967. More aircraft were to become involved subsequently, including time-expired Constellations (some wearing bogus Nigerian registrations like 5N83H, 5N84H, and 5N86H), DC-4s, DC-6s, and a AirTrans-Africa DC-7 (VP-WBO/ZP-WBO), flown by Ernest Koenig, Rhodesian Jack Malloch, and British mercenaries Alistair Wicks.
On 23 April 1967 a Nigerian Airways Fokker F.27 (5N-AAV) was hijacked while underway from Benin to Lagos, and forced to land in Enugu. The aircraft was later equipped as makeshift bomber. A second transport, a DC-3 (9G-AAD) of Ghana Airways, was added on 15th June, after being hijacked from Port Harcourt. From early July also an ex-French Douglas B-26R Invader (41-39531) was operational from Enugu, after being delivered to Biafra by Jean Zumbach (also known as Johnny Brown or Kamikaze Braun). A second B-26 (41-34531) was to follow in August. In July also a US-registered Riley Dove (N477PM) was delivered to Port Harcourt from Switzerland, by Andre Juillard/Girard/Gerard, carrying a load of 2.000 Hungarian-manufactured rifles.
By this time the Biafrans had managed to set up a small yet effective air force. The B.A.F. commanders were Chude Sokey and later Godwin Ezeilo, who had trained with the Royal Canadian Air Force.
Early inventory included two B-25 Mitchells, one B-26 Invader (piloted by Polish pilot Jan Zumbach, known also as John Brown), a converted DC-3 and one Dove. In 1968 the Swedish pilot Carl Gustaf von Rosen suggested the MiniCOIN project to General Ojukwu. By the spring of 1969, Biafra had built five MFI-9Bs in Gabon, calling them "Biafra Babies". They were coloured green, were able to carry six 68 mm anti-armour rockets and had simple sights. The six airplanes were flown by three Swedish pilots and three Biafran pilots. In September 1969, Biafra acquired four ex-Armee de l'Air North American T-6Gs, which were flown successfully to Biafra the following month, with another aircraft lost on the ferry flight. These aircraft flew missions until January 1970, flown by Portuguese ex-military pilots. 2 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by flokii: 7:57pm On May 03, 2021 |
But biafura miscreants on NL claimed they fought Nigeria all alone, with ogbunigwe or whatever.. why do they love lies like this?
I know South Africa, Ivory coast took sides with biafura. Ojukwu fled to Abidjan when the heat almost consumed him. France and co. would have re-colonized them and still take the Oil they fought and died for. 13 Likes 4 Shares |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by longetivity(m): 7:57pm On May 03, 2021 |
RIP to the innocent souls wasted during the war 1 Like |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Bluntguy: 7:58pm On May 03, 2021 |
This affliction called Nigeria shall not win a second time. 8 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Bluntguy: 8:03pm On May 03, 2021 |
flokii: But biafura miscreants on NL claimed they fought Nigeria all alone, with ogbunigwe or whatever.. why do they love lies like this?
I know South Africa, Ivory coast took sides with biafura. Ojukwu fled to Abidjan when the heat almost consumed him. France and co. would have re-colonized them and still take the Oil they fought and died for. I thought you would think with your brain this time. All the world powers were on Nigeria's side then. You still don't think there is a reason why your lifeless presido is asking the US to move AFRICOM headquarters to Nigeria? Stop thinking and talking from your yansh, ewu. 13 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Bluntguy: 8:05pm On May 03, 2021 |
longetivity: RIP to the innocent souls wasted during the war You be RIP expert o. |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by seanfer(m): 8:26pm On May 03, 2021 |
Bluntguy:
I thought you would think with your brain this time. All the world powers were on Nigeria's side then. You still don't think there is a reason why your lifeless presido is asking the US to move AFRICOM headquarters to Nigeria? Stop thinking and talking from your yansh, ewu.
Did you read the list of countries that supported the East during the war? There are more world powers behind Biafra than the Nigeria government. 4 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by IamFINESSE: 8:31pm On May 03, 2021 |
BIAFRA shall rise 3 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by AniOmaa: 8:52pm On May 03, 2021 |
Until you can tell there's a difference between proferring DIPLOMATIC support and MILITARY support for those countries listed on the Biafran side, then there's no point even having this argument with a daft cow-dung sniffing Aboki. Majority of those countries that supported Biafra with the exception of France (as documented and collaborated by various foreign war journals and correspondents that covered the events of the Nigerian civil war) only gave their support diplomatically to Biafra... the so called mercenaries you posted only fought in Biafra for a few months at the early stage of the war, but majority of them left Biafra due to insufficient payments or were killed in action... it's on record that the only mercenaries that actually stayed on and fought with Biafrans inspite of all the crippling odds were Major Taffy Williams from former Rhodesia (a man who had nothing but great respect and admiration for the bravery and tenacity of the Biafran troops under his command) , Rolf Steiner, and the popular Swedish pilot Count Carl Gustaf Ericsson von Rosen who was famous for flying the "Biafran babies" till the end of the war.
Biafra largely depended on its home made weapons ingeniously manufactured by Biafrans themselves to sustain the struggle, it was only late in 1968 that France actually began to give some military aid to Biafra by sending tons of arms and ammunition via the Uli airstrip.. but the effort from France however noble in its intentions, was simply too insufficient and belated to salvage the already precarious and demoralizing Biafran war situation already made worse by starvation.
Please actually educate yourselves more about the facts of the Nigerian civil war even though your palpable ignorance can be pardoned since they extricated these things from our school curriculums, go read books, journals interviews and various other credible databases about the war instead of accentuating your stupidity by picking your "facts" from Wikipedia! 10 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by gwafaeziokwu: 8:57pm On May 03, 2021 |
@op, Immediately I saw Vatican in that your list I laughed hard.
This picture below summarises Fulani uselessness as an army in a conventional warfare.
The full strength of British might (in the height of their reign as world power) was made available to useless Gowonand Murtala Mohammed. Russia another world power opened their armoury to Nigeria to quell Biafra. Pushing in personnel and sophisticated fighter jets to assist nigeria. Yet lily livered Gowon stuttered and failed for 3 years, at last opting for the cowardly route of blockade and starvation.
Murtala Mohammed disappeared and became anonymous after leading 3,000 Nigerian troops to their death at Abagana.
These guys no get shame at all. 5 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by AdaugoChisom(f): 9:01pm On May 03, 2021 |
We Igbos have shook this nation, Fulanis should mind themselves before we come on them. 3 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by gwafaeziokwu: 9:05pm On May 03, 2021 |
AniOmaa: Until you can tell there's a difference between proferring DIPLOMATIC support and MILITARY support for those countries listed on the Biafran side, then there's no point even having this argument with a daft cow-dung sniffing Aboki. Majority of those countries that supported Biafra with the exception of France (as documented and collaborated by various foreign war journals and correspondents that covered the events of the Nigerian civil war) only gave their support diplomatically to Biafra... the so called mercenaries you posted only fought in Biafra for a few months at the early stage of the war, but majority of them left Biafra due to insufficient payments or were killed in action... it's on record that the only mercenaries that actually stayed on and fought with Biafrans inspite of all the crippling odds were Major Taffy Williams from former Rhodesia (a man who had nothing but great respect and admiration for the bravery and tenacity of the Biafran troops under his command) , Rolf Steiner, and the popular Swedish pilot Count Carl Gustaf Ericsson von Rosen who was famous for flying the "Biafran babies" till the end of the war.
Biafra largely depended on its home made weapons ingeniously manufactured by Biafrans themselves to sustain the struggle, it was only late in 1968 that France actually began to give some military aid to Biafra by sending tons of arms and ammunition via the Uli airstrip.. but the effort from France however noble in its intentions, was simply too insufficient and belated to salvage the already precarious and demoralizing Biafran war situation already made worse by starvation.
Please actually educate yourselves more about the facts of the Nigerian civil war even though your palpable ignorance can be pardoned since they extricated these things from our school curriculums, go read books, journals interviews and various other credible databases about the war instead of accentuating your stupidity by picking your "facts" from Wikipedia! You are talking to an Almajiri who used the slot of southern children to obtain a paper certificate. Ezeife's warning really hit a nerve. They've been gloating about defeating Biafra yet Biafrans has no respect for them because we knew whom we lost the war to. Ojukwu counted on Britain's neutrality , because the brits had witnessed the pogrom against Igbos in the north and western Nigeria. How wrong he was. 4 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Asgard73: 9:49pm On May 03, 2021 |
Fulani changing narratives
Used to think op different from those plate carrying humans
So you wan use stenin and he’s military adventurers as foreign support..
And yet forgot to add Soyinka and Musa as countries that fought for Biafra
Atimes sense is truly lacking
And trust Yoruba people... they’ve invaded the thread to pour their frustrations and hopefully believe their yorubaic propaganda go sell
Nonsense and rubbish
People still reason from their anus no be lie.. 7 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Nobody: 11:21pm On May 03, 2021 |
now things has changed!! I'm looking forward to More diplomatic resolution |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Obamaofusa: 11:47pm On May 03, 2021 |
Asgard73: Fulani changing narratives
Used to think op different from those plate carrying humans
So you wan use stenin and he’s military adventurers as foreign support..
And yet forgot to add Soyinka and Musa as countries that fought for Biafra
Atimes sense is truly lacking
And trust Yoruba people... they’ve invaded the thread to pour their frustrations and hopefully believe their yorubaic propaganda go sell
Nonsense and rubbish
People still reason from their anus no be lie.. Where did you see a Yoruba person here? Face your aboki Quotasystem and come with facts because facts are sacrosanct.. 2 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Iegendhero: 12:01am On May 04, 2021 |
This is a Time Magazine report dated Friday, Oct. 25, 1968, talking about Biafra Mercenaries. From the outset, the war between Nigeria and secessionist Biafra loomed as an unequal contest. It was not surprising that, as in the earlier Congo conflicts, foreign mercenaries were drawn to Biafra to practice their trade: fighting. Nor was it surprising that the beleaguered Biafrans accepted their services—despite the fact that mercenaries can be narrow, violent men who often harbor a deep contempt for Africans. In the midst of the idealism with which Biafra pleaded its cause for independence, the mercenaries have operated—sometimes ugly, certainly anomalous, but perhaps necessary to Biafra's continued survival.
In 16 months of often brutal fighting, Nigerian federal troops have whittled Biafra down to one-tenth of its original area. They are now closing in on Umuahia, the secessionist state's last major town and the current seat of Lieut. Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu's movable government. Umuahia would have long since fallen had it not been for the exploits of the best unit in Ojukwu's small army, Biafra's Fourth Commando Brigade. Commanded by nine white mercenaries, the Fourth spent the first three months of the year operating behind Nigerian lines. Later, it held sectors on the Western front but, outgunned and outmanned by the federals, was forced to retreat. By early September, after a doomed attempt to defend Aba with supplies equal to only a daily average of five rounds of ammunition per man, the Fourth was down to barely 1,000 effectives. Of the 7,000-odd men with whom it had started the campaign, more than 300 had been killed and 2,200 had been wounded. The rest were missing in action.
Record Supplies. Last week the Fourth Commandos were once more rebuilding under the command of a German-born ex-Foreign Legion sergeant who became a sector commander for the S.A.O. (Secret Army Organization) in Algeria and then a colonel for Ojukwu in Biafra. He is Rolf Steiner, and he considers the war to be far from lost, contemptuously dismissing the territorial gains of the heavily armed Nigerians. "If any corporal serving under me in the Legion had taken more than a week to conquer West Africa with their kind of equipment," he snorts, "I'd have him shot for dereliction of duty." Ojukwu, for whom Steiner has immense admiration, has authorized the Fourth to be expanded to two brigades, or 20 strike forces of 360 men each. The new men are being armed with weapons apparently bought with private European credits and flowing into Biafra from neighboring Gabon and the Portuguese island of São Tomé. Up to as much as 40 tons are said to be arriving every night—more than ever before in the war.
Colonel Steiner, 38, has been soldiering for most of his life. In the final days of World War II, he fought as a Hitler Youth in Germany's last-ditch defense against the advancing U.S. Army. After the German surrender, he enlisted in the French Foreign Legion. He spent seven years in Indo-China, an enfant terrible who was at least twice busted from sergeant to private. At Dienbienphu, he was wounded and lost the use of a lung. After five years of service in Algeria, a spell with the S.A.O. and a suspended sentence, he was living in Paris last year when he heard of Biafra. He set out to serve Ojukwu's cause, first as a "technical adviser," then as company commander, finally as boss of the Fourth Commando Brigade.
Red and Green. He has taken the Legion with him to Africa. Legion marches blare from a transistorized pickup that he carries almost everywhere, and the Fourth Commando standard bears the red and green of the Legion. At inspections, Steiner often gets his troops' attention by firing off a few rounds from his Browning, then lectures them, his walking stick under one arm. "You are not Legionnaires," he will rant after a particularly bad showing. "You are not men." He has demoted at least one captain to private, but has also been known to pick a good man from the ranks and make him an officer. When he recently elevated a private to 2nd lieutenant, one of his officers complained: "My dear chap, we can't have someone in the mess eating with his fingers." Steiner, who speaks French and German, replied that he did not care if the man ate with his feet, as long as he was a good soldier.
Steiner likes beer, Benson & Hedges cigarettes, violence and very little else. Compulsively clean, he throws even slightly dusty plates at his mess waiters, then kicks them to drive the point home. But he also plucked a 21-year-old Ibo boy from the side of his dead parents, adopted him and named him Felix Chukwuemeka (after Ojukwu) Steiner.
The troops do not seem to mind the harshness of the command; they follow Steiner because they believe he is a winner and because he has juju (good luck). Thus Steiner has had no trouble refilling the depleted ranks of the Fourth at this late stage in the conflict. Guerrilla warfare may be the way out, he thinks. "If the towns are taken, we will go into the bush," he says. "We could do the job. But we must have weapons. We don't need armor. We need trucks. We don't need much air. But spotter planes would be useful."
Bulletproof. Steiner's mercenary officers are a mixed lot, united only by loyalty to their commander, distinguished only by their combat experience and their foibles. Major Taffy, 34, Welsh and a veteran of the Fifth Commando mercenaries of the Congo, thinks he is bulletproof. By now, so do the federals, who have reported him dead at least five times since last December. Taffy came perilously close to being killed a few weeks ago, when a round smashed into his binoculars. Short-tempered, he curses his black troops constantly, threatening to kill them if they don't obey orders. "You rotten bastards!" he roars, when things go wrong. "You bloody, treacherous morons!"
Captain Paddy, an Irishman who has spent 22 of his 54 years in Africa, is the unit's master mechanic. Just before Port Harcourt fell to the federals early last summer, he scrounged up a convoy of trucks and liberated—under fire —the entire workshop of the Shell-B.P. refinery there. When Aba had to be evacuated last month for lack of ammo, Paddy was one of the last men out, a machine gun in one hand, a demijohn of wine in the other. Captain Armand, a former French paratrooper and veteran of Algeria, sports a Yul Brynner pate and fights on despite bazooka fragments in one hand. Another veteran has just left Steiner. Captain Alec, a onetime British paratrooper, used to walk around with a Madsen submachine gun, an FN rifle, and a shotgun, "just in case I have to shoot my way out of this bloody place." He believed in the "little people," who, he would say in all seriousness, "will jam your machine guns and cause your rockets to misfire." He was wounded four times in six days before he left Biafra.
Outcasts. The mercenaries' salaries run from $1,700 a month upward. But payday is at best a sporadic affair in besieged Biafra. In any case, money is probably not the major reason for their presence. It is not the land, either, for they seem to have no eyes for the green rolling infinity of the African bush, the visionary sunsets, the humming, warm, smoky nights. They are lobos, outcasts from society who fight every day in order to taste the excitement that comes in living close to violent death. If they survive Biafra, they will doubtless drift on in search of another war. Until then, their allegiance, temporary though it may be, is to Biafra and to Ojukwu. http://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,900387-1,00.html 4 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Iegendhero: 12:13am On May 04, 2021 |
How France armed Biafra's bid to break from Nigeria De Gaulle saw the conflict as a means to weaken the “anglophone giant” of west Africa, which was surrounded by former French colonies closely aligned with Paris through a policy of defending French interests that would come to be known as Françafrique. While French Foreign Affairs Minister Maurice Couve de Murville declared that his country was observing a “complete embargo”, the presidential palace’s notorious “Africa cell”, headed by the controversial Jacques Foccart, sent large quantities of arms to the Biafran side, taking care to keep the operation secret from the Quai d’Orsay.
The planes carrying the weapons had to pass through the airspace of several countries that opposed the process, prompting a complaint by Morocco, which had not granted them access.
They landed at Uli, “Africa’s busiest airport”, according to Biafra supporters. But it was in such a poor state that pilots flying for Nigeria, including South African mercenaries, sometimes mistook it for a stretch of road. Pilots recruited by Biafra were in the know and managed to bring 75 tonnes of rifles, assault rifles, bazookas, grenades and cannon in just 11 days in 1969, documents show.
Appeal for more weapons
But, with the Biafran side losing ground, Foccart’s men appealed for more. Warning that the breakaway territory could fall “before the end of October [1969]”, one of them Philippe Lettéron, wrote in a note now in the national archives and seen by RFI, “to take back control of the situation and have some hope of regaining the lost territory, a massive effort of at least 600 tonnes of arms and munitions would be needed in a very short space of time.”
Defeat did in fact come in January 1970 but not for want of French arms, as telegrams from the French embassy Lagos reported, notably when French expatriates in Port Harcourt, the region’s main port, notified it that the Bounty, hailing from Bordeaux, had broken the blockade and delivered weapons.
The Foreign Affairs Ministry did find out about the arms traffic and drew up an “inventory”, declassified at RFI’s request, in 1968.
It lists 16 Alouette and 12 T6-G helicopters and two planes for training pilots, delivered before the war, and two B26 bombers delivered after the independence declaration. Support for the Biafran cause did not prevent France selling some arms to the Lagos government, mainly parts of orders placed before the war broke out.
And planemaker Sud-Aviation, then headed by Maurice Papon who was later convicted of war crimes during the Nazi occupation, lobbied to be allowed to sell helicopters, while sending a note the Africa cell, now declassified at RFI’s request, advocating “secret backing” through the supply of mercenaries to Biafra, to guarantee France a “privileged position” in an independent Biafra where high-quality, low-sulphur oil had recently been discovered.
Many French mercenaries
In fact, a number of mercenaries, many of them French, had been in the area since at least five months before the declaration of independence, as ambassador Marc Barbey had been informed by French nationals in Port Harcourt and a Soviet diplomat.
But Barbey, either believing or pretending to believe that they were working for the Lagos government, discussed their presence with Nigerian military leader Colonel Yakubu Gowon, urging him to refrain from recruiting French citizens.
Gowon warned the diplomat against any action that might threaten Nigeria’s territorial integrity but Barbey told his superiors that “France is certainly not the target” of the warning, since it was Israel that was sending mercenaries to the territory.
Source: https://www.rfi.fr/en/africa/20170525-how-france-armed-biafras-bid-break-nigeria 3 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Biafranboys: 12:30am On May 04, 2021 |
The biafran nation can not be allowed to be for we do not trust what they will become with their vast wealth around the Russians and the French
Read those above and I thank the guy that posted it here gwafaeziokwu, we as biafrans must start a diplomatic pressure on the British and plead with them to let biafra go, igbo states with oil and gold and other mineral resources must strike a deal with the British and the Niger delta people can strike a deal too
The world is now about give me I help you, we can bargain with Britain 3 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Iegendhero: 12:34am On May 04, 2021 |
How did you come to fly for the Biafran Air Force? Lord Revelstoke was a friend of Ojukwu’s father. James and I met Ojukwu through friends who had attended Sandhurst with him.
My article will reveal some basic elements that have never been discussed. The idea of small aircraft, in small wars, was generated by me during the very early sixties in California and Biafra saw the elements fall together because of my exposure to Von Rosen.
There was a marked lack of combat skills, among the pilots. It is one thing to get up and down. It is an entirely different matter to fly and fire machine guns or rockets with any certainty of hitting anything, without a lot of training and experience. Same goes for dropping bombs. Anyone can salvo a bomb load, but hitting within a useful distance is something else.
Frederick Forsyth was in Biafra, during the conflict. He went on to write Dogs of War, plus The Biafra Story, from his experiences. We both trained in the RCAF, under the NATO Plan, at the same time. And, during the seventies, he lived off the end of my runway, in Ireland, when I was doing feature films.
What inspired the Biafran Baby concept? Arming light aircraft for attack missions. It really doesn’t matter now, but history credits Count Gustav von Rosen as being the overall creator of the Biafra Babies concept. This was not the case. He was the final initiator for the acquisition of the 5 surplus MFI-9s in Sweden, after I had outlined our concept of armed light aircraft, operating off roads, unprepared fields…..etc. To Ojukwu. Von Rosen possessed the Swedish contacts through which to purchase the aircraft.
Von Rosen had no real concept of the dynamics involved with accurate, low-level rocket attacks or, for that matter, low-level navigation. It is one thing to fly with radio compasses and altitude and quite another to operate at 100 feet with nothing more than a map in your lap and a course in your mind. Things happen very fast and one small mistake can spoil everything.
John Fairey, of the Fairey Aircraft family, was also one of my film pilots. He had contacts within the French aviation industry and was instrumental in acquiring French government support for supply of MATRA rocket pods and rockets.
James Baring’s banking contacts helped with some funding, although this upset his father. The UK government/Shell/BP were firmly behind the Nigerian government and Lord Revelstoke almost had a stroke. Lord Revelstoke was in charge of a European commission to stamp out “barter deals.” He was also upset when I proposed Marchetti provide Ireland the SF-260s in exchange for potatoes, Irish whiskey, mutton and Aron knit sweaters, since the Irish government was short of funds.
The entire Biafran effort was a sort of “old boys network” with pilots from all over Europe and America lending a hand.
One of my directors, Bud Mahurin, got the USAF leadership interested. They offered the loan of 4 Boeing C-97 freighters to create an air bridge into Biafra. At the time Mahurin was a senior level executive in the Apollo Project with North American-Rockwell. Bud was a War Two/Korea fighter ace.
IRELAND: During the Biafran War a DC-6 operated from Shannon, Ireland to San Tome with food and relief supplies. It was flown by a guy named Lynch, who had a brother, Father Lynch with CONCERN. It would fly into ULI, or other spots, to drop of the load. Return to San Tome, pick up weapons, and fly these into Biafra. It would then return to Ireland for another load, sponsored by the Catholic group CONCERN.
I led the first 4 attacks at very low-level, with some success. The 5th attack was to be against troop concentrations and I declined this mission.We had some vocal debates about committing the aircraft against targets of low-value.
I mapped the tracks out for the team but the formation got lost and didn’t find the target. I wanted to disrupt the Nigerian infrastructure along with that of the Shell installations. To this end, I targeted a number of petroleum facilities that effectively shut down a great deal of the productive capabilities. Having grown up in Calgary, Alberta, Canada’s oil centre, I was very familiar with refineries, pipeline, pumping stations, and their vulnerabilities.
SHELL/BP was largely responsible for Nigerian support and hitting them made SHELL reconsider is position when Nigeria had them cut off payments to Biafra for oil being exported.
The first 5 missions: MAY 22 PORT HARCOURT MAY 24 BENIN MAY 26 ENUGU MAY 28 UGHELLI DELTA 1 POWERPLANT MAY 30 TROOPS – didn’t participate
Later in the year, I believe it was November, we attacked an airfield using some Harvards and the MFI-9s. One of the Harvards was a MK2 Armament trainer that I had flown with the RCAF. I will dig around for more information on this.
It must also be realized that Von Rosen, at that time, was what would be described as an “elderly transport pilot” who told me he was a year from retirement. Ground attack is not something you learn from a brochure. We were faced with an immediate requirement, for immediate action and I was pressed into service, on condition that they left my name out of the game. The other pilots were not really much above “amateur” level, although keen to try. One has written a book in which he says we fired our rockets from 800 M. My goodness! That is very close to half a mile! At that range the target is a “fly speck” on the windscreen. A slight jiggle on the controls and your rockets would miss, miss, miss. He also suggests we fired 2 rockets at a time, making sure we destroyed our targets.
WOW!
Let’s say that saw us take 3 minutes, after firing 2 rockets, to make another decision, and fire another 2. Added up, that gives 18 to 20 minutes a couple of hundred feet above a dangerous place. One mission like this and all 5 aircraft would be downed by ground fire!
Never this approach. It is the explanation of someone who knows nothing about ground attack, or its inherent dangers. The idea was to get as close as possible, pointing directly at your target, then salvoing all 12 missiles in level flight, about 5 feet above the ground.
I never missed and almost blew myself up a couple of times, but you never, never,never linger over a target at low level. And, the Cardinal Rule is – Never make a second pass! They will be waiting for you!
On several attacks, other pilots salvoed their missiles very early. I can remember being focused on my target ahead, waiting to get into range, and being surprised by clusters of rockets passing me on the left and right. To prepare, I parked my aircraft, on the ramp, and paced off 300 yards. I then put 2 markers 40 feet apart. This represented the wingspan of a fighter, length of a fighter. On returning to my aircraft I looked through the windscreen, sitting myself in the position I would be in during the attacks, and placed 2 bandaids on the plexiglass, one covering each of the ground markers.
I learned this concept from Wing Commander Joe McCarthy, my OC in RCAF pilot training who few with the Dambusters. Now, when I was running in on a target, I would know exactly – well almost exactly – when I was 300 yards away.
I never made an attack without destroying something of value. The rockets were expensive and couldn’t be wasted. 4 Likes 1 Share |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by QuotaSystem: 12:57am On May 04, 2021 |
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Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by QuotaSystem: 1:05am On May 04, 2021 |
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Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by QuotaSystem: 1:42am On May 04, 2021 |
AniOmaa: Until you can tell there's a difference between proferring DIPLOMATIC support and MILITARY support for those countries listed on the Biafran side, then there's no point even having this argument with a daft cow-dung sniffing Aboki. Majority of those countries that supported Biafra with the exception of France (as documented and collaborated by various foreign war journals and correspondents that covered the events of the Nigerian civil war) only gave their support diplomatically to Biafra... Unfortunately I am not responsible for your cognitive bias which misled you to assume anyone was lumping military & dipliomatic support together. From my captions it would be clear to a 10 year old that I was referring to French & Belgian military support through mercenaries, weapons, planes etc. but of course that would be rocket science to a typical semi-literate, brainwashed, cownu zombie without mental capacity for critical analysis. Indeed France supported Biafra heavily militarily & otherwise. AniOmaa: the so called mercenaries you posted only fought in Biafra for a few months at the early stage of the war, but majority of them left Biafra due to insufficient payments or were killed in action... it's on record that the only mercenaries that actually stayed on and fought with Biafrans inspite of all the crippling odds were Major Taffy Williams from former Rhodesia (a man who had nothing but great respect and admiration for the bravery and tenacity of the Biafran troops under his command) , Rolf Steiner, and the popular Swedish pilot Count Carl Gustaf Ericsson von Rosen who was famous for flying the "Biafran babies" till the end of the war.
Lies. Pure lies. Swedish & Portugese Pilots were still flying for Biafra up till January 1970. Mercenaries like the German born Rolf Steiner who was a Lt. Colonel and assigned to the 4th Commando Brigade, and Welshman Taffy Williams who served as a Major until the very end of the conflictAniOmaa: Biafra largely depended on its home made weapons ingeniously manufactured by Biafrans themselves to sustain the struggle, it was only late in 1968 that France actually began to give some military aid to Biafra by sending tons of arms and ammunition via the Uli airstrip.. but the effort from France however noble in its intentions, was simply too insufficient and belated to salvage the already precarious and demoralizing Biafran war situation already made worse by starvation.
Please actually educate yourselves more about the facts of the Nigerian civil war even though your palpable ignorance can be pardoned since they extricated these things from our school curriculums, go read books, journals interviews and various other credible databases about the war instead of accentuating your stupidity by picking your "facts" from Wikipedia! Going to war ill-prepared & depending on your local ogbunigwes was the height of foolishness, so it's no wonder Biafra stood no chance especially against the well orchstrated blockades. If you were half as smart as you fancy yourself to be, you'd have noticed this is a rejoinder thread so the Wiki screenshots were pulled from the other thread. You should't be so dim that you have to be spoonfed logic all the time. 3 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Mixedfruit: 1:49am On May 04, 2021 |
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Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Biafranboys: 1:49am On May 04, 2021 |
QuotaSystem:
Going to war ill-prepared & depending on your local ogbunigwes was the height of foolishness, so it's no wonder Biafra stood no chance especially against the well orchstrated blockades. If you were half as smart as you fancy yourself to be, you'd have noticed this is a rejoinder thread so the Wiki screenshots were pulled from the other thread. You should't be so dim that you have to be spoonfed logic all the time.
Why is it that you fulanis never learn and never try to understand and study the igbos. Igbos do not bow to anybody unless his chi. Igbos fought and died for what they believed in and that is freedom, go and read the igbo landing story. It is No foolishness to die for freedom and they were right to fight back then, look at what is happening today and infact if ojukwu didn't declare the war the igbos would have killed him Remember the igbo pogroms in the North before the civil war? What is wrong with you people is it really by force don't worry you guys can collect 5% from the oil money to feed your people but we want freedom 5 Likes |
Re: (PICS) Countries That Supported Either Side During Civil War by Biafranboys: 1:55am On May 04, 2021 |
AniOmaa: Until you can tell there's a difference between proferring DIPLOMATIC support and MILITARY support for those countries listed on the Biafran side, then there's no point even having this argument with a daft cow-dung sniffing Aboki. Majority of those countries that supported Biafra with the exception of France (as documented and collaborated by various foreign war journals and correspondents that covered the events of the Nigerian civil war) only gave their support diplomatically to Biafra... the so called mercenaries you posted only fought in Biafra for a few months at the early stage of the war, but majority of them left Biafra due to insufficient payments or were killed in action... it's on record that the only mercenaries that actually stayed on and fought with Biafrans inspite of all the crippling odds were Major Taffy Williams from former Rhodesia (a man who had nothing but great respect and admiration for the bravery and tenacity of the Biafran troops under his command) , Rolf Steiner, and the popular Swedish pilot Count Carl Gustaf Ericsson von Rosen who was famous for flying the "Biafran babies" till the end of the war.
Biafra largely depended on its home made weapons ingeniously manufactured by Biafrans themselves to sustain the struggle, it was only late in 1968 that France actually began to give some military aid to Biafra by sending tons of arms and ammunition via the Uli airstrip.. but the effort from France however noble in its intentions, was simply too insufficient and belated to salvage the already precarious and demoralizing Biafran war situation already made worse by starvation.
Please actually educate yourselves more about the facts of the Nigerian civil war even though your palpable ignorance can be pardoned since they extricated these things from our school curriculums, go read books, journals interviews and various other credible databases about the war instead of accentuating your stupidity by picking your "facts" from Wikipedia! |