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Arms diplomacy, bicycle diplomacy, and flag money: the selection of an American Ally in Angola

Many civil wars are fuelled by the receipt, by one or more armed groups, of material support from a foreign third-party state. Such rebel patronage injects traces of international conflict and international cooperation into civil conflicts, and it often shapes their outcomes. But understanding rebel...

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Main Author: Jellema-Butler, Julia
Other Authors: Seegers, Annette
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Political Studies 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Jellema-Butler, Julia
author2 Seegers, Annette
author_browse Jellema-Butler, Julia
Seegers, Annette
author_facet Seegers, Annette
Jellema-Butler, Julia
author_sort Jellema-Butler, Julia
collection Thesis
description Many civil wars are fuelled by the receipt, by one or more armed groups, of material support from a foreign third-party state. Such rebel patronage injects traces of international conflict and international cooperation into civil conflicts, and it often shapes their outcomes. But understanding rebel patronage strategies requires developing models to explain how state patrons select their foreign rebel clients, and such models remain at an early stage of theoretical development. Using process-tracing and original historical research, this dissertation tests theoretical hypotheses about rebel selection by examining American support to Angolan nationalist groups during the first phase of the Angolan Civil War in 1975. In particular, it seeks to explain the transformation in the relationship between the United States and the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (União Nacional para a Independência Total de Angola; UNITA), which the White House declined to support in January 1975 but included in a multimillion- dollar support package in July 1975. The most decisive factors in this transformation, it emerges, were political. UNITA's rise in American esteem was closely related to the group's newfound closeness with American allies in Angola's neighbouring countries, who shaped the American patronage strategy. It was also influenced by the White House's increasingly ambitious political objectives in Angola. The Angolan case study thus provides support to an emerging body of literature that suggests that rebel selection decisions may be closely conditioned on the objectives of the intervention and on the expected policy positions of other third-party states.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-07-01T04:02:45.696Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher Department of Political Studies
publisherStr Department of Political Studies
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/43403 Arms diplomacy, bicycle diplomacy, and flag money: the selection of an American Ally in Angola Jellema-Butler, Julia Seegers, Annette Angola American Ally Many civil wars are fuelled by the receipt, by one or more armed groups, of material support from a foreign third-party state. Such rebel patronage injects traces of international conflict and international cooperation into civil conflicts, and it often shapes their outcomes. But understanding rebel patronage strategies requires developing models to explain how state patrons select their foreign rebel clients, and such models remain at an early stage of theoretical development. Using process-tracing and original historical research, this dissertation tests theoretical hypotheses about rebel selection by examining American support to Angolan nationalist groups during the first phase of the Angolan Civil War in 1975. In particular, it seeks to explain the transformation in the relationship between the United States and the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (União Nacional para a Independência Total de Angola; UNITA), which the White House declined to support in January 1975 but included in a multimillion- dollar support package in July 1975. The most decisive factors in this transformation, it emerges, were political. UNITA's rise in American esteem was closely related to the group's newfound closeness with American allies in Angola's neighbouring countries, who shaped the American patronage strategy. It was also influenced by the White House's increasingly ambitious political objectives in Angola. The Angolan case study thus provides support to an emerging body of literature that suggests that rebel selection decisions may be closely conditioned on the objectives of the intervention and on the expected policy positions of other third-party states. 2026-06-26T09:46:07Z 2026-06-26T09:46:07Z 2026 2026-06-26T09:40:24Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43403 en eng application/pdf Department of Political Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Angola
American Ally
Jellema-Butler, Julia
Arms diplomacy, bicycle diplomacy, and flag money: the selection of an American Ally in Angola
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Arms diplomacy, bicycle diplomacy, and flag money: the selection of an American Ally in Angola
title_full Arms diplomacy, bicycle diplomacy, and flag money: the selection of an American Ally in Angola
title_fullStr Arms diplomacy, bicycle diplomacy, and flag money: the selection of an American Ally in Angola
title_full_unstemmed Arms diplomacy, bicycle diplomacy, and flag money: the selection of an American Ally in Angola
title_short Arms diplomacy, bicycle diplomacy, and flag money: the selection of an American Ally in Angola
title_sort arms diplomacy bicycle diplomacy and flag money the selection of an american ally in angola
topic Angola
American Ally
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43403
work_keys_str_mv AT jellemabutlerjulia armsdiplomacybicyclediplomacyandflagmoneytheselectionofanamericanallyinangola