The Scramble for Africa's Fatal Flaw
The Boer War as a microcosm of imperial greed and miscalculation.
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The war was essentially a struggle for the richest gold mines in the world, and for the control of South Africa.
Pakenham argues that the Boer War was not an isolated conflict but the result of the 'Scramble for Africa' – a period of European expansion driven by economic motives, mainly the gold and diamond reserves in the Transvaal and Orange Free State. British figures like Cecil Rhodes and Alfred Milner saw the independent Boer republics as an obstacle to their vision of a connected British Africa, especially after the discovery of the Witwatersrand gold fields. This focus on resources, combined with underestimating Boer determination and mil...
Supporting evidence
Pakenham details the financial machinations of figures like Cecil Rhodes, who explicitly linked his imperial ambitions to the control of mineral wealth, and the strategic importance of the Witwatersrand goldfields, which transformed the Transvaal into a geopolitical prize.
Apply this
Modern geopolitical analysis benefits from recognizing how resource competition, often disguised as ideological or humanitarian intervention, continues to fuel international conflicts. Understanding historical precedents like the Boer War can help identify similar patterns in contemporary resource-rich regions.








