The situation in Zimbabwe is really difficult to read right now. I have journalists and analyst friends who are watchers with a lifetime of experience and knowledge and they simply cannot make out what is going on. One of my early ancestors fought with Robert the Bruce in Scotland against the English and I can just imagine what that must have been like - thousands of men with simple arms running at each other and doing battle. From the sidelines the men in command would be watching and I am sure that it would not have been clear for some time who was winning.
When the Allies landed at Normandy, even though they had prepared meticulously and used deceit and guile to confuse those defending the beaches of Normandy, they could not have guaranteed what the early outcome would be. The smoke, confusion, noise and inevitable muddles that accompany such an operation would guarantee that progress could not be reported on for many hours - maybe days.
So it is in Zimbabwe. MDC has established a beachhead in hostile territory that has been under Zanu PF control for 29 years. Anyone who thought that those opposed to this would give up and lie down are naïve. Many argued that we should never have gone in, that we should have waited until the collapse in the country had softened up the opposition. Our problem was that our invasion fleet was already at sea and turning back was not an option, we had to take our chances on the beaches.
The opposition had been trying for a couple of years to get us to abandon the landings. They tried every ruse in the book, even holding some of our troops for ransom and exerting every provocation. When we eventually went in, they were taken by surprise and were then forced to fight back. By then it was too late for them - we were on their territory and were well prepared and equipped.
What we found when we landed was a seriously disillusioned population and a force whose rank and file no longer had the stomach for the fight. Although their elite forces and many senior officers were still loyal and had some resources and weapons, they are greatly outnumbered by those who quickly changed sides.
The opposition elite have a great deal of cunning and experience and have reformed what is left of their forces and are fighting back. Like all such conflicts it eventually rests on logistics - who can fight on longest and who has the better reinforcement capability. In 1944/5 that rested with the USA even though the majority of the troops on the ground were European. It was the factories of the US that ensured Allied ascendancy after Normandy, although it was the courage of the men on the beaches that caught our attention and won our admiration.