Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 01 February 2026
📘 Source: TimesLIVE

I think it’s a bit naive, if not disingenuous, of us to start expressing shock and horror at the fact that the SANDF hierarchy has been dabbling in politics, and even conducting their own foreign policy on the side. These are not soldiers, but politicians in military garb. They always have been.

The entire top structure of the defence force is made up of veterans of Umkhonto we Sizwe, the military wing of the exiled ANC. At the time of the integration of the armed forces in 1994, some in the PAC and the BC movement complained that their people had been overlooked and that most of the posts had gone to MK combatants. But then, to the victors often go the spoils.

The ANC had won an overwhelming majority in the election and therefore felt entitled to take all the marbles, so to speak. As a result, the new SANDF, or its leadership, is essentially a transmutation of MK. The top echelon, from the overall chief, Gen Rudzani Maphwanya, to the head of the navy, Vice Admiral Monde Lobese, head of the army Lt-Gen Lawrence Mbatha, head of the air force Lt-Gen Wiseman Mbambo, and the head of SANDF’s joint operations division, Lt-Gen Siphiwe Sangweni, cut their teeth in the furnace of ANC politics in exile as MK combatants.

📖 Continue Reading
This is a preview of the full article. To read the complete story, click the button below.

Read Full Article on TimesLIVE

AllZimNews aggregates content from various trusted sources to keep you informed.

[paywall]

They underwent military training in places such as Angola, East Germany, the Soviet Union and many other socialist-aligned countries. The government’s inability to rein in the generals has obviously given them wings MK was not a conventional army but a guerrilla movement. It was a part of, and not apart from, all other projects and activities of the ANC.

Unlike a conventional army, there was no distinction between the political and military, and it follows, therefore, that their training and socialisation would have been different from that of a regular army. Their loyalty has always been to the organisation — its aims and objectives — and not to a state. They’re therefore all dyed-in-the wool comrades, not in a military, but in a political, sense.

They’re all veterans of the struggle. The difference between them and any other ANC member is that they’re wearing a military uniform. They are, in that arcane ANC lexicon, deployed cadres in the army.

To expect them to stay in their military lane, as it were, is to require them to shed a part of who they are and what got them where they are. It may be too late in the day to start drawing boundaries. That horse has bolted.

Such a possibility should have been foreseen in 1994 when, for political convenience, liberation armies and their adversaries, the old apartheid SADF, were thrown together to form the hotchpotch that is the SANDF and told to get on with it. It doesn’t seem to have panned out that way. One can’t think of one thing the military has got right.

They’ve been in the news for the wrong reasons, be it presiding over the debacle in the DRC which needlessly sacrificed the lives of young soldiers, the Lady R controversy at the height of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, or military generals deliberately and almost defiantly speaking out of turn. These are all clear signs of indiscipline at the very top of the army, which is completely at odds with the conduct of any well-run professional military establishment — and such behaviour should have been dealt with firmly by the commander-in-chief. The military is, or should be, under civilian control in a democracy.

But President Cyril Ramaphosa, as is often the case, has been asleep at the switch. He should have been shown the door, especially given the acute problems relations with Iran are creating for the country internationally. And his minister, Angie Motshekga, should have followed him out.

The government’s inability to rein in the generals has obviously given them wings. Lobese, another MK luminary, is a serial offender. As head of the navy, he would have been implicated in the Lady R controversy, and he’s obviously at the centre of the storm surrounding the participation of the Iranians in the drills.

Last November he was at it again, questioning the patriotism of the government for underfunding the navy, which he said jeopardised national security. Alluding to comments made by KwaZulu-Natal provincial police commissioner Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, he alleged that those responsible for cutting the budget may be influenced by “drug cartels, illegal traders, maritime criminals or human traffickers” who benefit from a weakened navy. Motshekga issued a statement describing Lobese’s remarks as “inappropriate, disingenuous and unfortunate”. Nothing seems to have come of it.

[/paywall]

📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by TimesLIVE • February 01, 2026

Powered by
AllZimNews

By Hope