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  • Author’s Response
  • Stephen Ellis

‘The historian is engaged on a continuous process of moulding his facts to his interpretation and his interpretation to his facts,’ according to E. H. Carr in his classic What Is History? – written, clearly, in the days when it was casually assumed that historians were men.

This being so, it is misleading for Hugh Macmillan to suggest that the interpretation of the ANC’s period in exile contained in my book External Mission is backed up by evidence that has been ‘carefully selected’. Of course it is: every historian selects evidence to support his or her interpretation. By the same token, good historians should be prepared to review their interpretation in the light of the evidence as it becomes available.

Like many British people three or four decades ago, when I first became conscious of the ANC, I considered it to be an essentially moderate opponent of the apartheid system in South Africa. I thought that allegations of communist influence were propaganda and lies. Only over a period of years, especially as a result of interviews with rank-and-file activists in exile, did I come to the [End Page 156] conclusion that the SACP had acquired strategic control of the ANC’s apparatus in exile, in the Leninist tradition of providing vanguard leadership to a revolutionary struggle. Hugh Macmillan’s great knowledge of ANC history was acquired not least through the personal friendships he had with senior ANC and SACP officials during the years he lived in Lusaka, the ANC headquarters for most of the period of exile. He takes a similar position in relation to the SACP as did, in regard to the Soviet Union during Stalin’s time, the fellow-travellers whom the legendary Comintern agent Willi Münzenberg used to call ‘the Innocents’. No doubt our differing experiences have contributed to the gulf between our perspectives on the historical relationship between the ANC and its Siamese twin, the SACP.

It is mischievous to describe my charting of the SACP’s vanguard role in the ANC as a ‘conspiracy theory’. Like most serious historians, I do not subscribe to the notion that vast historical movements are the work of secretive plotters. This sense of proportion, however, should not deter us from describing and analysing the many unpublicized arrangements and networks that exist for the purpose of allowing small groups of people to impose their will on the course of events. Such conspiracies really exist. The US president Richard Nixon once conspired with his aides to cover up a burglary at the Watergate building. More recently, a clique of international bankers was found to have rigged the key interbank lending rate known as LIBOR in their own favour. In similar vein, the SACP, until the 1990s, stood in a Leninist tradition that prized secrecy and manipulation as necessary instruments to achieve its revolutionary goal. As the senior South African communist Ronnie Kasrils wrote in his memoirs, ‘ideological development in our Party marked time at 1917, and then at 1945 … Even the exposure of Stalin’s crimes by Khrushchev in 1956 failed to shake the basic ideological position of the old guard.’

There is plenty of documentary evidence to demonstrate the extent of the SACP’s influence in the ANC during the struggle years. In November 1961, the SACP’s general secretary informed the Communist Party of the Soviet Union that in three of the organizations constituting the Congress Alliance (which included the ANC), ‘Party members are in the majority in the top leadership’. In regard to the guerrilla army Umkhonto we Sizwe, officially an ANC/SACP collaboration, another leading party official wrote that ‘by virtue of the close fraternal links that exist between these organisations, and also by virtue of the positions of influence and leadership which individual Party members have won for themselves in the ANC’, only one of Umkhonto we Sizwe’s top officers was not a party member, and that single exception was ‘on the verge of Party membership’. Concerning Umkhonto we Sizwe’s regional commands, the same writer continued, ‘in all cases, the effective control is in the hands of members of the Party’. As a 1978 SACP document...

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