TYING MANDELA'S SHOELACES: NIËL BARNARD'S ACCOUNT OF THE SECRET REVOLUTION
Niël Barnard's autobiography, Secret Revolution, provides an interesting insight into the secret negotiations between Nelson Mandela and the National Intelligence Service (NIS) in 1988/89 that helped prepare the way to the constitutional transformation of South Africa.
Barnard tells us how he established the NIS despite the opposition of the state's other intelligence agencies.
He also reveals the substantial role that NIS played in establishing secret ties with a number of African governments - often without the knowledge of the Department of Foreign Affairs.
He gives his assessment of the SADF's ‘forward strategy’ in terms of which it sought to defend the South African and Namibian borders by supporting UNITA in Southern Angola and Renamo in Mozambique. He implies that the SADF missed the crux of the South African problem - which was the need to reach a just political accommodation with black South Africans.
In fact, the SADF had accepted at an early stage that there would have to be a political settlement but that in the meantime its primary duty was to protect the borders with Angola and Mozambique. Failure to do so might have resulted in a military take-over of Namibia by SWAPO - supported by the Cubans - and would have opened South Africa's industrial heartland to attacks from Mozambique - only 350 kms away.