Before settlement On February 17, 1978, before the agreement was concluded, Nkomo warned that the settlement would lead to increased fighting. On February 28, British foreign secretary
David Owen would tell
Kingman Brewster Jr., the
U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom, that he did not believe the settlement was "viable". Seven days earlier, U.S. Deputy National Security Advisor
David L. Aaron warned, in a meeting of the
National Security Council Special Coordination Committee, that the Soviet Union would enter southern Africa "as a result of the internal settlement in Rhodesia".
After settlement After the internal settlement was announced, the United Kingdom and the United Statesin separate statementssaid that they viewed the settlement as a step in the right direction, but nevertheless inadequate because ZANU and ZAPU were not included. It vowed to continue fighting until attaining a military victory in the war. At the meeting of the
European Council from April 7–8, 1978, they concluded that the settlement was "inadequate" and endorsed the Anglo-American Initiative on Rhodesia as the "best basis" of an acceptable settlement, and stated that all sides involved need to be brought together in order to avoid "a dangerous escalation of the conflict. It was also reported by the
Central Intelligence Agency's National Foreign Assessment Center that television in
Havana, Cuba was critical of the settlement, while Nkomo and Mugabe visited Cuba later in the year. In addition, Max T. Chigwida of the South African Institute of International Affairs stated that the agreement's terms had been subjected to a "lot of criticisms and propaganda based on...motives by all sorts of critics" Prompted by the request of the
African Group within the
United Nations, the
UN Security Council of discussed the issue of Rhodesia's internal settlement at its 2061st to 2067th meetings from 6–14 March 1978. The same day, the U.N. Security Council passed
Resolution 424 calling for the end of the "illegal racist minority régime" in Rhodesia. At the
World Conference against Racism, organized by
UNESCO, in August 1978, participants condemned the settlement as a "blatant attempt to split the national liberation movement" in an attempt to cause civil war and perpetuate "racist minority rule" in the country, stated it cannot be an "acceptable solution" to ensure majority rule in the country. ==Legacy==