Operation Snoopy

Operation Snoopy
Part of Rhodesian Bush War
Operation Snoopy is located in Mozambique
Chimoio
Chimoio
Operation Snoopy (Mozambique)
Date20 September 1978
Location
Result

Rhodesian victory

  • Twenty-five guerrilla camps attacked and destroyed.
Belligerents
 Rhodesia ZANLA
FRELIMO
Commanders and leaders
Rhodesia Ian Smith Robert Mugabe
Mozambique Unknown
Units involved

Rhodesian Army

RhAF
unknown
Strength
unknown ZANLA:
unknown
 Mozambique:
9 T-54/55 tanks
4 BTR-152 APCs
Casualties and losses
2 killed :
hundreds killed
Mozambique:
unknown
3 APCs destroyed

Operation Snoopy was an operation launched by Rhodesia in response to Air Rhodesia Flight 825 being shot down by a communist backed insurgent group, the ZIPRA. The operation took place in Mozambique, where many of the ZANLA's camps were located, particularly in the area in and around Chimoio.[1]

Background

After the Vickers Viscount passenger plane was shot down by the communist-backed insurgents, many Rhodesians clamoured for a massive retaliatory strike against terrorist targets in Zambia, where a large number of the insurgents were based. However, the first external target hit by the Rhodesian Security Forces after the Viscount shootdown was the prominent cluster of ZANLA bases around Chimoio, in Mozambique.[1]

Operation

The Rhodesians destroyed the ZANLA's camps in and around the town of Chimoio through a combination of ground operations and air strikes by the Rhodesian Air Force. In total, the security forces attacked and destroyed twenty-five insurgent camps. The camps were spread over a 33 km2 area, which was approximately 70 km from the Rhodesian border.

During the operation, Mozambique sent armoured vehicles to the ZANLA's aid in the form of nine Soviet-made T-54 tanks and four Soviet BTR-152 armoured personnel carriers. However, the Mozambicans were easily sent into a rout by the elite units of the Rhodesian Security Forces, which managed to destroy one of the Mozambicans' armoured vehicles and kill an unknown number of Mozambicans.

Hawker Hunter fighter-bombers from the RhAF destroyed another two Mozambican armoured personnel carriers. According to official Rhodesian figures, "several hundred" guerrillas killed during Operation Snoopy, and the security forces lost only two troopers. One of them was the SAS trooper Steve Donnelly, who was accidentally killed by a friendly air strike involving a Golf Bomb.

References

  1. ^ a b Moorcraft & McLaughlin 2008, pp. 140–143

Sources

  • Moorcraft, Paul L; McLaughlin, Peter (April 2008) [1982]. The Rhodesian War: A Military History. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Books. ISBN 978-1-84415-694-8.

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