Author: Ian Pringle
Publisher: Helion, 2012
ISBN: 978-1-909384-12-5
Pages: 266
Photographs: 25 b/w, 33 colour
Maps: 5 b/w
Ian
Pringle has written a fast-paced, engaging book about one of the most successful
Rhodesian “fireforce” operations in history. Conceived out of a requirement to
deal a major blow to the rebel ZANLA forces of Robert Mugabe (operating out of
Mozambique), Op Dingo has come to represent the standard from which to measure
special force joint operations. An unmitigated success, in Nov, 1977, 184
Rhodesian soldiers and 61 Rhodesian fixed and rotary wing aircraft struck two
ZANLA camps deep within Mozambique. Two distinct operations undertaken
concurrently within a period of 72 hrs resulted in a total of approximately
3000 ZANLA deaths, many thousands wounded and tons of equipment lost for a
price of two Rhodesian dead, a handful wounded and one aircraft lost; a success
that sent reverberations throughout the world.
Pringle
sets the stage for the reader by providing throughout the first half of the
book a synopsis of the conditions that led up to Op Dingo. Relaying in a manner
easily followed by the casual historian (but with more than sufficient detail
for the armchair general), he succinctly traces the international situation
that led to the Rhodesian isolation, its reluctant reliance upon South Africa
and its (mainly successful) efforts to develop and maintain capabilities
ensuring freedom of action. Additionally, Pringle sheds light upon the
activities of the regional powers surrounding Rhodesia, their support for the
rebel faction ZANLA and the impact that this had on the ultimate fate of the
Rhodesians. All of this sets an outstanding base from which to segue into the unfolding
of Operation Dingo.
The
second half of the book is a detailed rendition of the planning and execution
at the tactical level of Op Dingo itself. Drawing upon first person as well as
official documentation Pringle provides depth and breadth to his narrative;
including not just recollections from the Rhodesian side, but also the ZANLA.
His style is such that the reader feels intimately the tension, pressure and
speed of the execution.
Two
observations that I would make is that while Pringle explains in detail a
number of the Rhodesian technical innovations such as the flechette and golf
bombs, he does not describe the alpha bomb. This is a significant oversight as
this ordnance was a completely unique Rhodesian design and key to the success
of the operation. Additionally, the maps provided could have been improved had
the tracks of the different ingress and egress routes of the various airframes been
provided. Pringle discusses these routes in detail in the narrative and I feel
that the complexity (and, by extension) the professionalism of the operation
would have been further enhanced by coloured maps tracing the routing. These
are; however, minor comments that are not detrimental to Pringle’s success with
this rendition.
Overall, this is an excellent read and a thoroughly engaging book. I highly recommend it for those interested in a regional conflict that has largely been lost in the shadows of history.