The price of ambition: How 200 South African soldiers paid for their leaders' sins in the Battle of Bangui

Loading player...
A small contingent of around 200 South African soldiers faced a force of up to 7,000 Seleka rebels during the Battle of Bangui in March 2013, a conflict that lasted for three days. The South African troops fought with extraordinary bravery and tactical skill, suffering 13 fatalities and 27 injuries while inflicting up to 800 casualties on the rebels. Their allies from the Central African Republic's army (FACA) and the regional force (FOMAC) abandoned them, leaving them exposed and outnumbered. The mission, rooted in a 2007 defence agreement, highlighted significant strategic missteps and severe military capability gaps, including a lack of air support and strategic airlift. This harrowing story underscores the human cost of geopolitical decisions and the critical need for a nation's military ambitions to align with its actual capabilities.

Disclaimer: This podcast was created by Google's NotebookLM, with content checked and edited by BizNews.
19 Aug 2025 10AM English South Africa Investing · Business News

Other recent episodes

Members Only: FT Unhedged – Energy crisis deepens as supply shocks ripple globally

In this fully licensed episode of the Financial Times’ Unhedged podcast, Katie Martin and energy editor Malcolm Moore unpack the escalating global energy crisis triggered by disruption in the Strait of Hormuz. With millions of barrels of oil effectively trapped and supply chains under strain, the impact is already being…
7 Apr 12PM 19 min

Ivor Chipkin: GNU outlaws cadré deployment

President Cyril Ramaphosa's assent to the Public Service Amendment Bill has been hailed as the most significant reform since 1996. In this interview with Chris Steyn, Ivor Chipkin, the Director of New South Institute (NSI), says “we've got now in law a distinction between political office and administrative office…Our politicians,…
7 Apr 9AM 21 min