1. Hunke, H. 1980.Namibia: The Strength of the Powerless17Rome According to Andrew Young, American ambassador to the United Nations during the Carter administration, '[t]here was always a desire on the part of Britain to avoid any confrontation with South Africa because of economic connections': quoted in For further expressions of theview that economic, or economic and strategic, considerations were decisive, see G.R. Benidge,Economic Power in Anglo-South Africa Diplomacy: Simonstown, Sharpville and After(London, 1981);J. Mayall, 'The South Africa Crisis: The Major External Actors', in S. Johnson, ed.South Africa: No Turning Back(London, 1988), 304;H. Bull, ‘Implications for the West’, in R. Rotberg and J. Barratt, eds, Conflict and Compromise in South Africa (Cape Town, 1980), 175–7
2. Barber, J. 1973.South Africa's Foreign Policy, 1945–197024–32. Oxford W.K. Hancock,Smuts, vol. II,The Fields of Force, 1919–1950(Cambridge, 1968), 467–71
3. Pienaar, S. 1987.South Africa and International Relations between the Two World Wars: The League of Nations Dimension111–56. Johannesburg