Abstract

The narratives of Zimbabwean soldiers who fought in the Democratic Republic of Congo war (1998–2002) have received scant attention, particularly at a time when the professionalisation of the Zimbabwean National Army (ZNA) is questioned by scholars and, largely, by the private media, in and outside Zimbabwe. This article explores accounts of soldiers who joined the ZNA in post-independence Zimbabwe: those without a liberation history. The article reveals these ex-soldiers’ accounts of their profound disappointment about the way in which the Zimbabwean army was ‘de-professionalised’ in its deployment in the DRC war. They felt that the army, particularly the commanders, became unprofessional in their practice. The men’s disappointment ranged from the poor conduct in war, lack of food and clothing, and the inability of the army to repatriate soldiers’ dead bodies from the war terrain. I argue that the accounts of de-professionalisation provide a vantage point from which to analyse the current politicisation of the Zimbabwe defence forces. The article is based on 44 life histories.

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