Through late 1987, the battlefields of southern Angola moved ever
further away from the border to South-West Africa (Namibia), until the
show-down between the Soviet-supported government in Luanda and South
African-supported insurgency of UNITA culminated in the Battle of Cuito
Cuanavale. Initially reluctant to become involved, the Cubans reinforced
their contingent in Angola, and then decided to force Pretoria into
negotiations about mutual withdrawal. Ironically, while Cuba and South
Africa eventually agreed to withdraw their troops from the Angolan War,
and then did so, in 1988-1989, the government in Lunda - still supported
by the Soviet Union - then reinforced its effort to crush the UNITA. The
result were additional large-scale operations, the mass of which evaded
attention outside Angola, because dramatic developments in Europe not
only distracted attention, but also ended the decades-long stand-off
between the East and the West. Ultimately, the II Angolan War ended with
a cease-fire - hurriedly agreed amid a near-collapse of the government
forces, and rapid advances of the UNITA.