In this latest of her contributions to the "unsimplification" of African politics and the U.S. policymaking process, Helen Kitchen brings together in this volume the observations of three of the West's most perceptive analysts of post-colonial Angola and Mozambique. Contributor John Marcum's discussion on Angola appraises the effects of "A Quarter Century of War," the saga of Jonas Savimbi's UNITA, and U.S. policy options in the late 1980s. Gillian Gunn, with extensive recent field experience in both countries, assesses "The Angola Economy," "Cuba and Angola," "Post-Nkomati Mozambique," and "Mozambique After Machel." Finally, Winrich Kuhne, a distinguished West German scholar of Africa and the Soviet policy process, considers "What the Case of Mozambique Tells Us About Soviet Soviet Ambivalence in Africa."
