roM! 12 IS. 1 5 O( 0 Behind the State Department report on . , . Late last month an United Nations sponsored conference on the South African backed war against Mozambique was held in the country's capital, Maputo. The �nt, which took place on April 26-Zl, was the first international donors con­ fereece to be CODft ed in the African Dation requesting assis­ tance, rather than in Europe and North America. Just prior to the conference the United States Department of State is ued a statement which blamed the apartheid regime backed Mozambique National Resistance (MNR or RENAMO) for the wanton destruction IeYeUed against the country. The statement further accessed the MNR of respon­ sibility for the deaths of 100,000 I Mozambicans iD combat related activities, massacres and result­ ing famine. However, the U.S. State Department report never mentioned the link between the apartheid regime in South Africa and the MNR's military training, communication facilities and logistical support in carrying out a systematic cam­ paign of destruction against the FRELIMO government in Mozambique. C tndidi s i. us, Policy I The contradicatory stance of the United States in regard to its relationship to the FRELIMO government in Mozambique is . the result of several factors in the overall geo-political situa­ tion in southern Africa. A con­ stant refusal to support man­ datory and comprehensive economic sanctions against the apartheid regime in south Africa by the Reagan administration is largely the result of the monumental direct and indirect imvestment by the U.S. cor­ porate community in the South African and Namibian economies. Consequently, �y culpability placed on the apartheid regime in regard to its military and political destabilization efforts in the neighboring "front line states", would require stronger measures against the South African government, a policy which e Reagan administra­ tion has consistently resisted A more deeper probing of U.S. foreign policy history would reveal that when FRELIMO (acronym for Mozambique Liberation Front) was fighting for Mozambican in­ dependence against the Por�' tuguese colonialists, during the 1964-1974 period, the Por­ tuguese were a part of the orth .. Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) altiance which is headed by the United States. As a result, the United States offi- . cial policy was supportive of the colonial powers in oppossition to the national liberation move­ ment. This was the situation in' not only the former Portuguese colonies of Mozambique, An­ gola, and Guinea-Bissau, but also Zimbabwe (formeroly Rhodesia) during the period of armed str'Ugle for the national VOT�S GUIDE TO ntEo ��n.s MID IS\UE.S, SO fAA.. .� urr .., Tf'U:� FOIt lMf BUffALO NEWS I � At the UN conference in Mozambique the participants pledged to grant $270 million in assistance to the war torn nation which would go toward health, education, water supply and agricultural projects. Many pre­ vious development projects in the country were destroyed by the RENAMO forces, who seem to have but one program, and that is the destruction of govern­ ment initiated projects. RENAMO or MNR, which was originally founded by Ian Smith's Rhodesian Army to fight against FRELlMO during the Zimbabwean armed struggle, has never put forward an alter­ native governmental program from the imposition of man­ for Mozambique. Irs actions datory comprehensive sanc­ �m to indicate that they view tions, the U.S. policy ha at­ the destruciton of Mozambican tempted to provide a property and lives as ends in. smokescreen by pledging sup­ themselves. port to Pretoria's victim, the It has been quite obvious and Mozambican people. However, well documented by the these contradictory foreign . FRELIMO government in policy initatives have only ex­ Moz!mbique that despite the aserbated the suffering and tur­ non-agression pact between moil in the region. The respon­ Mozambique and South Africa, sibility for the Mozambican the apartheid regime has con- tragedy cannot escape the tinued to finance RENAMO. au practiooers of coe­ While at the same time the structiYe engage nt independence of the territory. The willingness of the Mozambican government to sign a non-aggression pact with the racist South African govern- - ment in 1984 was the result of the overwh Iming problems of famine, destruction by. MNR forces and economic con­ straints. The U.S. has officially adopted a policy of support for the FRELIMO �overnment since 1984 and has refused to provide direct aid to RENAMO in their anti-government cam­ paign. Despite the prodding by conservative Republican Senators Jesse Helms of South Carolina and minority leader Bob Dole of Kansas, the staUDChest dvocatyes of direct military and political support for RENAMO, the Reagan ad­ ministration bas refused to fol­ low the same path as they have in Angola by aiding the South African backed UNIT A forces who are fighting the MPLA government Policy· Ie di ozambique FRELIMO government has re­ quested the reduction of African National Congress per­ sonnel in Maputo to a bare min­ imum. So why doesn't the U.S. government use these acts of deceit and treachery by the apartheid regime against Mozambique to justify man­ datory .economic sanctions directed toward the Pretoria racists? As it stands now the policy contradictions play them­ selves out in favor of the racist government in Pretoria. The u.s .. is providing aid to a country, Mozambique, which is being literally ravaged by the South African backed counter­ revolutiooaries who are waging a genocidal war gainst the pea of this underdeveloped COUDby. At the same time, trade with racist South Africa COD­ tin and any move designed to impose an effective trade em­ bargo or economic blocade . Pretoria is stifled in Con- gres ad the White House under the guise that it is the African people who will suffer the most from these "drastic measures". However.jn the ab­ sence of effective an meaning­ ful sanctions, tho sands of Africans continue to . month­ ly in Mozambique an Angola at the hands of the apartheid financed and trained forces. The u.s. is still one of the largest trading partners and foreign in­ vestor in the apartheid state. Constructive engagement, the foreign policy approach of the United States in southern Africa, has failed to come to grips with the principle obstacle to peace and development in the_ region, the apartheid regime. In hekering the Pretoria racists