Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05HARARE1007
2005-07-22 16:43:00
SECRET//NOFORN
Embassy Harare
Cable title:  

ARMED RESISTANCE GROUP SEEKS US ASSISTANCE

Tags:  PGOV PREL PHUM ASEC ZI 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 HARARE 001007 

SIPDIS

NOFORN

AF FOR DAS T. WOODS
AF/S FOR B. NEULING
NSC FOR SENIOR AFRICA DIRECTOR C. COURVILLE
DS FOR IP/AF AND IP/ITA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/31/2010
TAGS: PGOV PREL PHUM ASEC ZI
SUBJECT: ARMED RESISTANCE GROUP SEEKS US ASSISTANCE

Classified By: Charge d,Affaires, a.i., Eric T. Schultz under Section 1
.4 b/d

-------
Summary
-------

S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 HARARE 001007

SIPDIS

NOFORN

AF FOR DAS T. WOODS
AF/S FOR B. NEULING
NSC FOR SENIOR AFRICA DIRECTOR C. COURVILLE
DS FOR IP/AF AND IP/ITA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/31/2010
TAGS: PGOV PREL PHUM ASEC ZI
SUBJECT: ARMED RESISTANCE GROUP SEEKS US ASSISTANCE

Classified By: Charge d,Affaires, a.i., Eric T. Schultz under Section 1
.4 b/d

--------------
Summary
--------------


1. (S/NF) The Embassy has received several requests from
various groups for meetings with the Ambassador/CDA in the
past few weeks to discuss overthrowing the Mugabe regime. We
have rejected all of these meetings, out of concern that they
could have been attempts by the GOZ to implicate the USG in
such an agenda. However, the Australian Embassy did meet
with one of these groups and provided us with a readout. The
same group then obtained a meeting with an Embassy political
officer under false pretenses. The readouts of these
meetings indicate that there may be growing interest in armed
resistance on the part of some regime opponents. The MDC was
not implicated in the group,s plans. End summary.

--------------
Australian Readout
--------------


2. (S/NF) On July 13, the Australian DCM, Mark Lynch, called
on CDA to provide a readout of a meeting he had had the
previous day with Learnmore Muzvidzwa. Lynch said Muzvidzwa
had introduced himself as the Managing Director of Dreiford
Trading, a firm that specialized in hunting safaris. (N.B.
At CDA,s request, RMAS ran a background check on this
individual, which came up negative.) Lynch said Muzvidza had
said Zimbabweans were at the end of their patience with the
Mugabe regime. He had said he was part of a group with
contacts in the CIO, the military, and the police that
planned to overthrow the government. The group did not
include the MDC. He had claimed to have 500 men under arms
in the Chihota region southeast of Harare. The group,s
operations plan, which he had requested the Australians vet,
called for the coup to occur when Mugabe was out of the
country.


3. (S/NF) Lynch said he had declined to have the plan vetted
and had also rejected requests for financial and material
assistance, noting that the Australian Government did not
support the violent overthrow of the Mugabe regime. That
said, Lynch said Muzvidzwa had struck him as a credible
figure. He added that Muzvidzwa had said he was requesting
meetings with the American and British Embassies as well.
The CDA responded that he had already declined the meeting,
out of concern that it could be part of a CIO effort to
distract attention from international outrage over Operation
Restore Order by implicating the West in an effort to
overthrow the GOZ.

--------------
Embassy Meeting
--------------


4. (S/NF) On July 20, poloff met with Muzvidzwa, ostensibly
to discuss the plight of Zimbabweans as a result of Operation
Restore Order. Muzvidza repeated his claim to represent a
group that had 500 men under arms in the Chihota district.
He wanted advice and support from the Embassy. He said he
had approached the Australian and UK embassies with the same
&plan.8 Poloff told him the U.S. did not and would not
provide support for violent overthrow of Zimbabwe,s
government and closed the meeting.

--------------
COMMENT
--------------


5. (S/NF) It is probably inevitable that given the GOZ,s
turn to more repressive tactics to maintain its hold on
power, the idea of armed resistance may begin to appeal to
some Zimbabweans. Certainly there are plenty of weapons in
the country and plenty of experience using them. That said,
our judgment is that the military and the police remain
largely loyal to the regime and would be able to handle a
coup attempt or an armed uprising with little difficulty. We
will continue to monitor this situation but will also
continue to attempt to avoid direct meetings with groups such
as Muzvidzwa,s. The GOZ is quite capable of running such an
operation at us and of using the very fact of a meeting to
distract attention from the GOZ,s current travails.
SCHULTZ