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= ''Dark Days in Ghana (1968)'' =
= ''Dark Days in Ghana (1968)'' =
'''''Dark Days in Ghana''''' is a 1968 work by [[Kwame Nkrumah]]. The work describes the events of the February 24, 1966 [[Coup d'état|coup d'etat]] in [[Republic of Ghana|Ghana]], along with Nkrumah's analysis of what made the coup possible. His analysis includes historical background and context, providing a detailed examination of the conditions within Ghana as a nation emerging from [[colonialism]], as well as external interference by [[Imperialism|imperialist]] powers seeking to extend their control over Africa's economic life. An author's note at the beginning of the work states Nkrumah's purpose in writing it: "Ghana's experience since 24th February 1966, costly but priceless, must be viewed in the context of the [[African Revolution]] as a whole. It is with this in mind that I have written, in [[Conakry]], about Ghana's 'dark days' in the hope that publication of the facts may help to expose similar setbacks in other progressive independent African states."<ref name=":1">Nkrumah, Kwame. ''[https://archive.org/details/san_0975/ Dark Days in Ghana].'' 1968. Lawrence & Wishart, London. Archive.org.</ref>
'''''Dark Days in Ghana''''' is a 1968 work by [[Kwame Nkrumah]]. The work describes the events of the February 24, 1966 [[Coup d'état|coup d'etat]] in [[Republic of Ghana|Ghana]], along with Nkrumah's analysis of what made the coup possible. His analysis includes both a detailed examination of the conditions within Ghana at the time, as well as external interference by [[Imperialism|imperialist]] powers, as well as describing some of the aftermath of the coup. An author's note at the beginning of the work states Nkrumah's purpose in writing it: "Ghana's experience since 24th February 1966, costly but priceless, must be viewed in the context of the [[African Revolution]] as a whole. It is with this in mind that I have written, in [[Conakry]], about Ghana's 'dark days' in the hope that publication of the facts may help to expose similar setbacks in other progressive independent African states."<ref name=":1">Nkrumah, Kwame. ''[https://archive.org/details/san_0975/ Dark Days in Ghana].'' 1968. Lawrence & Wishart, London. Archive.org.</ref>


''Dark Days in Ghana'' was published only two years after the coup. Therefore, certain details, such as U.S. government documents released years later and [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] [[whistleblower]] analysis of the events do not appear in the text, although they are now available and support the assertions made by Nkrumah as to the CIA involvement behind the coup.<ref name=":2">Charles Quist-Adade (2021-02-24). [https://covertactionmagazine.com/2021/02/24/how-did-a-fateful-cia-coup-executed-55-years-ago-this-february-24-doom-much-of-sub-saharan-africa/ "How Did a Fateful CIA Coup—Executed 55 Years Ago this February 24—Doom Much of Sub-Saharan Africa?"] CovertAction Magazine. [https://web.archive.org/web/20220126041140/https://covertactionmagazine.com/2021/02/24/how-did-a-fateful-cia-coup-executed-55-years-ago-this-february-24-doom-much-of-sub-saharan-africa/ Archived] from the original on 2022-01-26.</ref><ref name=":3">Komer, Robert W. [https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v24/d260 "Memorandum From the President’s Acting Special Assistant for National Security Affairs (Komer) to President Johnson."] Johnson Library, National Security File, Memos to the President. Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume XXIV, Africa. Document #260. Office of the Historian. United States Department of State. [https://web.archive.org/web/20220518133259/https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v24/d260 Archived] 2022-05-18.</ref><ref name=":4">Komer, Robert W. [https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v24/d253 "Memorandum From Robert W. Komer of the National Security Council Staff to the President’s Special Assistant for National Security Affairs (Bundy)."] Washington, May 27, 1965. Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964-1968. Volume XXIV, Africa. Document 253. Office of the Historian, United States Department of State. [https://web.archive.org/web/20230311105443/https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v24/d253 Archived] 2023-03-11.</ref>
''Dark Days in Ghana'' was published only two years after the coup. Therefore, certain details, such as U.S. government documents released years later and [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] [[whistleblower]] accounts of the events do not appear in the text, although they are now available and support the assertions made by Nkrumah as to the CIA responsibility behind the coup.<ref name=":2">Charles Quist-Adade (2021-02-24). [https://covertactionmagazine.com/2021/02/24/how-did-a-fateful-cia-coup-executed-55-years-ago-this-february-24-doom-much-of-sub-saharan-africa/ "How Did a Fateful CIA Coup—Executed 55 Years Ago this February 24—Doom Much of Sub-Saharan Africa?"] CovertAction Magazine. [https://web.archive.org/web/20220126041140/https://covertactionmagazine.com/2021/02/24/how-did-a-fateful-cia-coup-executed-55-years-ago-this-february-24-doom-much-of-sub-saharan-africa/ Archived] from the original on 2022-01-26.</ref><ref name=":3">Komer, Robert W. [https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v24/d260 "Memorandum From the President’s Acting Special Assistant for National Security Affairs (Komer) to President Johnson."] Johnson Library, National Security File, Memos to the President. Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume XXIV, Africa. Document #260. Office of the Historian. United States Department of State. [https://web.archive.org/web/20220518133259/https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v24/d260 Archived] 2022-05-18.</ref><ref name=":4">Komer, Robert W. [https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v24/d253 "Memorandum From Robert W. Komer of the National Security Council Staff to the President’s Special Assistant for National Security Affairs (Bundy)."] Washington, May 27, 1965. Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964-1968. Volume XXIV, Africa. Document 253. Office of the Historian, United States Department of State. [https://web.archive.org/web/20230311105443/https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v24/d253 Archived] 2023-03-11.</ref>


== Summary ==
== Summary ==
The book not only describes the events of the coup d'etat but also provides a detailed analysis of the internal conditions of Ghana at the time, as well as historical background and international context. The account of the coup itself begins from Nkrumah's perspective of finding out about it while in Beijing, followed by a description of the events surrounding the coup as related to him by eyewitness accounts provided to him by others, followed by an examination of what made the coup possible and who was backing and orchestrating it. His analysis includes a detailed examination of conditions within Ghana and the specific obstacles the newly independent Ghana was facing after being a colony, descriptions of the economic policies enacted under Nkrumah and his administration's intended future plans, as well as describing external interference by imperialist powers in Ghana and their motivations, as well as some commentary on the post-coup situation in Ghana. The book also includes an appendix of letters to Nkrumah from various heads of state regarding the coup.
The book not only describes the events of the coup d'etat but also provides a detailed analysis of the internal conditions of Ghana at the time and in the years before as well as providing external and international context. Nkrumah himself was outside of the country at the time of the coup, and so the account begins from his perspective of finding out about it while in Beijing, followed by a description of the events surrounding the coup as related to him by eyewitness accounts provided to him by others, followed by an examination of what made the coup possible, and who was backing and orchestrating it. His subsequent analysis includes a detailed examination of conditions within Ghana and the specific obstacles the newly independent Ghana was facing after being a colony, descriptions of the economic policies enacted under Nkrumah and his administration's intended future plans, as well as describing external interference by imperialist powers in Ghana and their motivations. The book also includes an appendix of letters to Nkrumah from various heads of state regarding the coup.


== Background ==
== Background ==
Nkrumah had been Prime Minister of Ghana since 1952, and after independence was elected president in 1960. By the time of the coup, his administration had lasted about 15 years. Nkrumah was on a round of state visits in Asia when the coup occurred. Upon returning to Africa from Asia, Nkrumah initially made his way to [[Republic of Guinea|Guinea]], originally with the intention to promptly return to nearby Ghana, although he was not able to do so and ended up living in exile in Guinea, where he was named honorary co-president, and wrote ''Dark Days in Ghana''.<ref name=":1" />
Nkrumah had been Prime Minister of Ghana since 1952, and after independence was elected president in 1960. By the time of the coup, his administration had lasted about 15 years. Nkrumah was on a round of state visits in Asia when the coup occurred. Upon returning to Africa from Asia, Nkrumah initially made his way to [[Republic of Guinea|Guinea]], originally with the intention to promptly return to nearby Ghana, although he was not able to do so and ended up living in exile in Guinea, where he was named honorary co-president, and wrote ''Dark Days in Ghana''.<ref name=":1" />
Regarding Ghana's situation just after independence in 1957, Nkrumah comments that the issues Ghana faced at independence "were so gigantic that within every sphere we had to take calculated risks" and that areas of society with reactionary leadership could not be changed overnight despite their obvious problems, because Ghana had no revolutionary war which would have produced and trained those who would have been able to take their place. Problems such as basic literacy due to the neglect of education during colonial times created a scarcity of qualified military, police, civil servants, and other experts and professionals, forcing a situation where many [[reactionary]] individuals with qualifications were retained in positions of leadership due to there often being no other viable, immediate replacement. Nkrumah observes that a once-dependent territory emerging from [[colonialism]] must try to accomplish in a single generation what it has taken developed nations 300 years or more to achieve if it is to survive in the modern world.
Nkrumah explains that for some years, "imperialism has had its back to the wall in Africa" and had been faced with a growing liberation movement which, if allowed to continue, would end the [[exploitation]] upon which "imperialism's very existence depends." Nkrumah observes that imperialism has thus resorted to a coordinated strategy to preserve and extend its grip on the economic life of Africa, waging an "all-out offensive against the progressive, independent states" via both subtle methods such as economic pressure and political subversion, as well as overt methods of violence and regime change to establish puppet governments. Nkrumah observes that arranging of coup d'etats has been "relatively easy" in Africa due to the continent being "fragmented into so many separate states, many of them weak and economically non-viable" and that it has only required "a small force of disciplined men to seize the key points of the capital city and to arrest the existing political leadership." He states that it has been the task of the CIA and other similar organizations to discover and encourage the dissident and ambitious elements willing to co-operate with such operations and that in Ghana, "the embassies of the United States, Britain, and West Germany were all implicated in the plot to overthrow my government."


== Overview ==
== Overview ==
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Nkrumah describes a similar point of view among the Chinese officials who were with him when he learned of the coup. While he was still in Beijing, Nkrumah states that the Chinese officials "made it clear that they regarded the military and police action in Ghana as no more than a temporary obstacle in the long struggle against imperialism, the kind of event to be expected, but which had no effect whatsoever on the final outcome." Nkrumah quotes [[Zhou Enlai]] as telling him, "You are a young man, you have another forty years ahead of you!" and later [[Liu Shaoqi]] stating at an event that day, "however hard the imperialists may whip up revolutionary adverse currents, the anti-imperialist revolutionary struggles of the African peoples can never be suppressed but are bound to win final victory."
Nkrumah describes a similar point of view among the Chinese officials who were with him when he learned of the coup. While he was still in Beijing, Nkrumah states that the Chinese officials "made it clear that they regarded the military and police action in Ghana as no more than a temporary obstacle in the long struggle against imperialism, the kind of event to be expected, but which had no effect whatsoever on the final outcome." Nkrumah quotes [[Zhou Enlai]] as telling him, "You are a young man, you have another forty years ahead of you!" and later [[Liu Shaoqi]] stating at an event that day, "however hard the imperialists may whip up revolutionary adverse currents, the anti-imperialist revolutionary struggles of the African peoples can never be suppressed but are bound to win final victory."
Regarding the motivation and methods behind the coup, Nkrumah observes in Chapter 3 that for some years, "imperialism has had its back to the wall in Africa" and had been faced with a growing liberation movement which, if allowed to continue, would end the [[exploitation]] upon which "imperialism's very existence depends." Nkrumah observes that imperialism has thus resorted to a coordinated strategy to preserve and extend its grip on the economic life of Africa, waging an "all-out offensive against the progressive, independent states" via both subtle methods such as economic pressure and political subversion, as well as overt methods of violence and regime change to establish puppet governments. Nkrumah observes that arranging of coup d'etats has been "relatively easy" in Africa due to the continent being "fragmented into so many separate states, many of them weak and economically non-viable" and that it has only required "a small force of disciplined men to seize the key points of the capital city and to arrest the existing political leadership." He states that it has been the task of the CIA and other similar organizations to discover and encourage the dissident and ambitious elements willing to co-operate with such operations and that in Ghana, "the embassies of the [[United States of America|United States]], [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland|Britain]], and [[Federal Republic of Germany|West Germany]] were all implicated in the plot to overthrow my government."
Regarding Ghana's situation just after independence in 1957, Nkrumah comments in Chapter 4 that the issues Ghana faced at independence "were so gigantic that within every sphere we had to take calculated risks" and that areas of society with reactionary leadership could not be changed overnight despite their obvious problems, because Ghana had no revolutionary war which would have produced and trained those who would have been able to take their place. Problems such as basic literacy due to the neglect of education during colonial times created a scarcity of qualified military, police, civil servants, and other experts and professionals, forcing a situation where many reactionary individuals with qualifications were retained in positions of leadership due to there often being no other viable, immediate replacement. Nkrumah observes that a once-dependent territory emerging from colonialism must try to accomplish in a single generation what it has taken developed nations 300 years or more to achieve if it is to survive in the modern world.


====Events of the coup====
====Events of the coup====
'''''Note:''' Dark Days in Ghana is written from Nkrumah's point of view, and published only two years after the coup, which occurred in his absence. Therefore, certain details, such as U.S. government documents released years later, CIA whistleblower accounts of the events, etc. do not appear in the text, although they are now available.''<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":3" /> ''This section deals primarily with Nkrumah's point of view and analysis of events.''
'''''Note:''' Dark Days in Ghana is written from Nkrumah's point of view, and published only two years after the coup, which occurred in his absence. Therefore, certain details, such as U.S. government documents released years later, CIA whistleblower accounts of the events, etc. do not appear in the text, although they are now available.''<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":3" /> ''This section deals primarily with Nkrumah's point of view and analysis of events.''


In Chapter 2, titled "24th February 1966", Nkrumah outlines the general timeline of events of the coup, the process of taking over the presidential palace, and the identity of the main conspirators. He begins with his departure from Ghana on February 21, then describes how the main action of the coup was set into motion on February 23, when a handful of opportunistic military leaders intercepted a 600-strong group of Ghanaian soldiers who were on the move. The leaders lied to the soldiers, saying that Nkrumah had fled the country, stolen £8 million, and was planning to send them to fight in Vietnam, while Russians had secret tunnels under Ghana's capital and were flying planes in, that there was effectively no more government in Ghana and therefore the soldiers were needed to take control of the capital. The soldiers were convinced by this, and so various individuals in positions of power were rounded up, forced to surrender, arrested, or killed. Flagstaff House, the presidential palace of Ghana (now known as Jubilee House), eventually fell under their control as well. Ministers, officials of the Party, and trade unionists were arrested and detained. Nkrumah states, "The rank and file police who had taken no part in the 'coup' were horrified at what was taking place and did their best to restrain the soldiers and this led in some cases to actual fighting between the two forces."
In Chapter 2, titled "24th February 1966", Nkrumah outlines the general timeline of events of the coup, the process of taking over the presidential palace, and the identity of the main conspirators. He begins with his departure from Ghana on February 21, then describes how the main action of the coup was set into motion on February 23, when a handful of opportunistic military leaders intercepted a 600-strong group of Ghanaian soldiers who were on the move. The leaders lied to the soldiers, saying that Nkrumah had fled the country, stolen £8 million, and was planning to send them to fight in Vietnam, while Russians had secret tunnels under Ghana's capital and were flying planes in, that there was effectively no more government in Ghana and therefore the soldiers were needed to take control of the capital. The soldiers were convinced by this, and so various individuals in positions of power were rounded up, forced to surrender, arrested, or killed. Flagstaff House, the presidential palace of Ghana (now known as Jubilee House), eventually fell under their control as well. Ministers, officials of the Party, and trade unionists were arrested and detained. Nkrumah states in ''Dark Days in Ghana'', "The rank and file police who had taken no part in the 'coup' were horrified at what was taking place and did their best to restrain the soldiers and this led in some cases to actual fighting between the two forces."
 
 


Nkrumah describes what the troops were told when they were first intercepted by the coup conspirators and the aftermath after the conspirators took control, as follows:<blockquote>The troops were then told that I intended sending them to fight in Vietnam and in Rhodesia, and that I had deserted Ghana taking with me £8 million. There was, they were told, no government left in Ghana, and it was their duty to assume control of the country to maintain law and order. Already, was said, Russian planes were landing on a secret airstrip in northern Ghana. Furthermore a secret tunnel had been made from Flagstaff House, the presidential residence, to Accra airport, and for days Russians had been arriving. The only way to save Ghana, and to avoid being sent to fight in Vietnam, the troops were told, was to take Flagstaff House.
Nkrumah describes what the troops were told when they were first intercepted by the coup conspirators and the aftermath after the conspirators took control, as follows:<blockquote>The troops were then told that I intended sending them to fight in Vietnam and in Rhodesia, and that I had deserted Ghana taking with me £8 million. There was, they were told, no government left in Ghana, and it was their duty to assume control of the country to maintain law and order. Already, was said, Russian planes were landing on a secret airstrip in northern Ghana. Furthermore a secret tunnel had been made from Flagstaff House, the presidential residence, to Accra airport, and for days Russians had been arriving. The only way to save Ghana, and to avoid being sent to fight in Vietnam, the troops were told, was to take Flagstaff House.
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