Rhodesian Defence Regiment


The Rhodesian Defence Regiment was a unit of the Rhodesian Army during the last years of the Rhodesian Bush War. It was a guard unit composed of mainly coloured and Asian conscripts.

History

It was formed on 1 January 1978 from existing units known as Reserve Holding Units and Protection Units. The Reserve Holding Units and Protection Units contained Rhodesia's coloured and Asian personnel, including both conscripts and volunteers.
The regiment consisted of seven companies, organized into the 1 Mashonaland Battalion at Cranborne Barracks in Salisbury and 2 Matebeleland Battalion at Brady Barracks in Bulawayo. The regimental training depot was located at Inkomo, near Salisbury.
One RDR battalion was attached to each brigade headquarters to guard military installations and lines of communication. It was also tasked with railway patrolling, convoy protection, and regular infantry duties. From its formation, the regiment was also used to mobilise white reservists over the age of 38, although it was mostly coloured and Asian. The drafts of white reservists and conscripts were usually low quality and were barely trained, and suffered from poor morale due to being attached to notoriously inefficient units. Due to its poor discipline, the RDR was disparagingly nicknamed the "Rhodesian Dagga Regiment", after the slang term for marijuana. Paul Moorcraft and Pete McLaughlin have written that the RDF units "would have had little chance" if they were ever attacked by a determined enemy force.
The RDR was disbanded shortly after the 1980 Southern Rhodesian general election.

Engagements

An example of the Regiment's role in defence of Rhodesia's strategic installations during the Second Chimurenga was witnessed in the events of 15 November 1978, at Otto Beit Bridge where the RDR was the most forward army unit during a major mortar, rocket and machine-gun attack on Rhodesian army positions at the Chirundu border. In this engagement the RDR contributed, as first line of defence, to the 'neutralisation' of the enemy positions.