SOUTH AFRICAN DEFENCE FORCE


The 'South African Defence Force' (SADF) were the South African armed forces from 1957 until 1994. The former Union Defence Force was renamed to the South African Defence Force in the Defence Act (No. 44) of 1957. The SADF was superseded by the South African National Defence Force in 1994.
The SADF was involved in the South African Border War and in the Angolan Civil War on the side of UNITA and Angola rebel leader Jonas Savimbi.
Within South Africa, the SADF was also widely used in the suppression of opposition to apartheid.
The SADF implemented conscription of white men, opposed by organisations such as the End Conscription Campaign.

Contents
Organization
Personnel
Four armed services
Nuclear weapons
Integration
See also
Reference

Organization


The State President was the Commander-in-Chief of the SADF with:

★ Chief of the Defence Staff - overall senior command officer

★ Chief of the Army

★ Chief of the Air Force

★ Chief of the Navy

★ Surgeon General

★ Joint Forces Commander
Staff Divisions under the Chief of Defence Staff included:

★ Personnel

★ Intelligence

★ Operations

★ Logistics

★ Finance
Other Support Services commands included:

★ Inspector General of the SADF

★ Chaplain General of the SADF
A list of Chiefs of Defence Staff of the SADF:

★ General A.J. Liebenberg, SSA, SD, SOE, SM, MMM

★ General Constand Viljoen, SSA, SD, SOE, SM

★ General J.J. Geldenhuys, SSA, SD, SOE, SM

★ General Magnus Malan, SSA, OMSG, SD, SM
Other senior officers:

★ Lieutenant General D.P. Knobel, SSAS, SD, SOE, SM, MMM, K St J

★ Vice Admiral G. Syndercombe, SAA, SD, SOE, SM, Chief of SAN

★ Colonel N.C. Parkins

★ Brigader Philip Schalkwyk

★ Major General D.R. Marais

Personnel



Permanent Forces - Active members

National Servicemen - called up for 2 years national service and were generally fully trained for operational duty within the space of 12 months

Citizen Forces - fully trained part-time members

Commando Forces - fully trained members

Special forces - including 32 Battalion and the Civil Co-operation Bureau

★ Voluntary Term Service - created in 1992 to replace the National Service

★ Service Volunteers - non-permanent full time members

★ Auxiliary Service
Prior to the dissolution, the SADF had 2.9 million personnel:

★ Full-time - 40 000 Volunteer Service, 5 000 National Service


★ auxiliaries - 16 000


★ civilians - 24 000

★ Part-time - 500 000


★ Citizen Force (approximately 120 000)


★ Commando Force (approximately 130 000)


★ Reserves (approximately 180 0000)

Four armed services


Four armed services made up the forces of the SADF:

South African Army

South African Air Force

South African Navy

South African Medical Service

Nuclear weapons


Main articles: South Africa and weapons of mass destruction

South Africa at one time possessed weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear weapons, but its stockpile was dismantled during the political transition of the early 1990s. There have been no reported attempts to build more nuclear weapons.

Integration


At the end of apartheid in 1994, the SADF was amalgamated with the defence forces of a number of formerly independent homelands as well as personnel from the former anti-apartheid guerrilla forces such as the African National Congress's Umkhonto we Sizwe, the Pan Africanist Congress's APLA and the Self-Protection Units of the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP). The new integrated force became known as the South African National Defence Force.

See also



Military history of South Africa

South African Police Service

SWATF

South African Orders, Decorations and Medals

South African National Defence Force

Reference



Overview of the changing of the SADF

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