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The ace in the hole that South Africa’s leaders believed they possessed at the height of the Cold War was the role they thought they could play as a bastion of anticommunism on a continent endangered by the red menace. On that basis they could expect Western aid and tacit support—which in fact they received in relative abundance between the late ’40s and the late ’70s.
Racism: A Short History (Princeton Classics, 106 Book 18)
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