-Caveat Lector-

http://www.covertaction.org/full_text_69_01.htm

U.S. Military and Corporate Recolonization of the Congo
by Ellen Ray

The United States’ involvement in Congo since before
independence from Belgium in June 1960 has been steady,
sinister, and penetrating. Most notable was the CIA’s role
in the overthrow (September 1960) and later assassination
(January 1961) of Congo’s first Prime Minister, the
charismatic (and socialist) Patrice Lumumba. The full
extent of U.S. machinations was not known for years,1 but
the failure at the time of the United Nations to protect
Lumumba was patent. And questions continue to linger over
the mysterious plane crash in September 1961 that killed
U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold as he was flying to
the border town of Ndola to meet with Moise Tshombe,
president of the breakaway Katanga Province. The plane fell
from the sky, killing all aboard.2 Is it any wonder that in
Congo today there is little trust of Washington or respect
for the United Nations?

Introduction

In October 1996, the Alliance of Democratic Forces for the
Liberation of Congo-Zaire (ADFL), commanded by and composed
mainly of Tutsi military forces from Paul Kagame’s Rwanda
Patriotic Army (RPA), along with Tutsi refugees from Zaire
and some Congolese patriots,3 all under the titular
leadership of Congolese exile Laurent Kabila, crossed into
Zaire from Rwanda and Burundi. In May 1997, after only
seven months of fighting, they had overthrown the 30-year
dictatorship of Mobutu Sese Seko.4 While marching west
across the vast expanse of the country, divisions of this
army had wreaked terrible vengeance on the Rwandan Hutu
exiles encamped since 1994 in eastern Zaire, where they had
been driven from Rwanda by the RPA on the heels of the
horrendous massacre of hundreds of thousands of Rwandan
Tutsis, encouraged and supervised by extremists in the
Hutu-dominated government.

In Kinshasa, with Kabila named President, key cabinet posts
and the new Congo army and security forces were immediately
staffed at the highest levels by Rwandan Tutsis.

By July 1998, Kabila realized that the Congolese people
would not support the excesses of the Rwandan "foreigners"
throughout their government. He also recognized the extent
to which he had become a puppet of his Tutsi "allies," and
after confirmed reports of atrocities by Tutsi military
against Hutu exiles in the east, and later in the west of
the country, had become too prevalent to ignore, and after
he had uncovered an apparent Rwandan plot to assassinate
him and stage a coup in Congo, Kabila ordered the Rwandans
to leave.

Less than a week later, on August 2, 1998, Ugandan and
Rwandan regular troops invaded Congo with regrouped,
well-trained rebel forces, and began the war to overthrow
Kabila that goes on to this day, despite a shaky,
much-violated, U.S.-supported cease-fire. Rwandans and
Ugandans control most of the east of the country, and there
has been a de facto partition, a gross violation of
Congolese sovereignty.

Yet Rwanda is a tiny, impoverished nation, and Uganda is
not much larger or richer, while Congo is one of the
largest, richest, and most populous nations in Africa,
which at one time had its most powerful army. How did this
happen? Could impoverished Rwanda and Uganda have
orchestrated, armed, and financed such operations on their
own?

Is it a coincidence that Rwandan strongman Paul Kagame was
trained in the United States?5 That the Rwandan army
received, and continues to receive, training in the U.S.?
That the Pentagon has had Special Forces military training
missions in Rwanda and Uganda for more than five years?
That vast segments of the Congolese infrastructure,
particularly the mining companies,6 have been taken over by
U.S.- and western-linked multinationals, working with the
Rwandan and Ugandan rebels and governments?

The U.S. Role

The Mobutu era began with ardent U.S. support, financial
and military. From 1965 to 1991, Zaire received more than
$1.5 billion in U.S. economic and military aid.7 In return,
U.S. multinationals increased their share of the ownership
of Zaire’s fabulous mineral wealth.8 On the foreign policy
front, Zaire was a bastion of anti-communism during the
Cold War, in the center of a continent Washington saw as
perilously close to Moscow’s influence. As the State
Department put it, "Zaire has been a stabilizing force and
a staunch supporter of U.S. and western policies...."9
Mobutu’s corruption and brutality were ignored for thirty
years. It was only when the plunder of western-owned assets
and the ruination of the country were nearly complete, when
Mobutu’s stolen billions had become a world-wide
embarrassment, that the U.S. began to seek an acceptable
change.

By this time, the U.S. was deeply involved in both Uganda
and Rwanda, and very close to Paul Kagame. In 1990, Kagame,
a Rwandan exile serving as a colonel in the Ugandan army,10
was training at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff
College at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas, when he dropped out of
the program and rushed back to Uganda to take command of
the rebel army that invaded Rwanda.11

After three years of civil war in Rwanda, a power-sharing
peace accord was negotiated, only to collapse in 1994, when
an airplane carrying Rwanda’s Hutu president, Juvenal
Habyarimana, was shot down, with all aboard, including
President Cyprien Ntaryamira of Burundi, killed. A still
secret 1997 U.N. investigation implicates Kagame in the
assassinations. Warnings of a coming bloodbath, set off by
the attack, were ignored, and a horrendous 89-day massacre
of 500,000 Tutsis—and 50,000 Hutus—followed.12 Kagame’s
movement then turned on the Hutu-dominated government, and
took power. The massacres began again, this time of Hutus.
More than a million Rwandan Hutus, both militia and
civilians, who escaped the killing, fled to eastern Zaire.

U.S. officials, according to the Washington Post, were
pleased with Kagame and "deeply relieved that the rebels
had halted the massacres, thus ending pressure for a
U.S.-led intervention."13 As one writer observed,
"America’s unease about its own attitude to the massacres
in the spring of 1994 was one reason why it later sided
with the triumphant victims."14 The U.S. "became
increasingly close to the Rwandan government and the army
that backed it.... Washington pumped military aid into
Kagame’s army and U.S. Army Special Forces and other
military personnel trained hundreds of Rwandan forces."15

At the same time, the U.S. kept tabs on the refugees in
eastern Zaire, while mounting what was called a
"humanitarian operation" in Rwanda, but which also included
training of the Rwandan military in combat,
counterinsurgency, psychological operations, etc. (see
sidebar). One U.S. official interviewed by the Washington
Post contended that "the United States is focusing
disproportionate military assistance on Rwanda as part of
the creation of a ‘zone of influence’ in East Africa...."16
An African writer has referred to this zone of influence as
a confederation of "military princedoms [which] have
appeared in Rwanda, Uganda, Burundi, and, to a lesser
extent, in Ethiopia and Eritrea."17 These U.S.-supported
military regimes are characterized by "the repeated use of
force in putting their internal and external policy
strategies into effect." They are "obsessed with security"
and they "clone themselves" by joining forces "with their
own diasporas...whose citizenship is disputed .... [They]
attract the services of ‘rebels,’ dissidents, and others,
who serve as a screen for their intervention" in fragile
and unstable neighboring countries.18 The role of the
Rwandan and Ugandan princelings, Kagame and Museveni, in
neighboring Congo is a classic example of U.S. meddling.19

The Fall of Mobutu, The Rise of Kabila

Still unclear is the full extent of U.S. military support
for Kagame’s move, via Kabila, against Mobutu and Zaire
(and their bloody retribution against both Hutu militia and
Hutu civilian refugees in the camps). "Many Africans," the
Wall Street Journal noted, concluded that "the Zairean
rebellion was the brainchild of Washington from the very
start."20 In August 1996, six weeks before the RPA and
Kabila’s forces moved into Zaire, Kagame had visited
Washington to discuss with Clinton administration officials
the dangerous threat to his regime in Rwanda from the Hutu
refugee camps in eastern Zaire, harboring militia among the
civilians.21 Both Kagame and U.S. officials later claimed
unconvincingly that he left "disappointed" in not having
instigated direct U.S. action. It was clear to the U.S., in
any case, that Kagame was prepared to act,22 and that this
was certainly in the U.S. government’s interest.

Kagame acted quickly after his visit to Washington. Kabila,
a former Marxist exile, who had been recruited by the
Tutsis, had been brought to Goma some time earlier, to be
the national Congolese figurehead of an "insurgency"
against Mobutu’s army. And in October 1996, when the
full-scale incursion began, much of eastern Zaire was
immediately taken. The camps were attacked, and many of the
refugees were driven back to Rwanda or killed. It is
unlikely that Kabila himself took part in the actions
against the refugees, but there is no question that he had
made a deal with the Devil: "Kabila’s army is closely
controlled by Rwandan officers who dominate its upper
echelons. Kabila relied heavily on the well-trained Rwandan
officers, along with Rwandan, Angolan, and Ugandan troops,
to push Mobutu’s army aside. But in so doing, he made a
deal with people intent on bringing the 1994 ethnic war in
Rwanda onto Congolese soil."23

Kabila maintained his headquarters in Goma, in eastern
Zaire, near the site of many of the camps. In the first
months of the fighting, the U.S. denied any ties to Kabila
and also denied that any foreign forces were fighting with
him.24 Diplomatic signals, however, got crossed: At the
start of the rebellion, in October, "U.S. ambassador to
Rwanda, Robert Gribbin, denied in the face of mounting
evidence that the Rwandan army had any role in the action
in eastern Zaire. But at the same time, in Mobutu’s
capital, Kinshasa, American envoy to Zaire, Dan Simpson,
was denouncing the uprising as a Rwandan and Ugandan
‘invasion.’ "25 The London Guardian noted, "U.S. policy
initially was divided between offering active support for
Rwandan intervention and looking the other way.... In
practice, it did both: the Pentagon helped out while the
State Department pretended it wasn’t happening."26 That the
U.S. "helped out" is unquestionable; the motive for doing
so is what we must address.

• A South African pilot in September 1996, "flew a
planeload of assault rifles from Pretoria to...Burundi,
where he was met by... an official from the U.S. Embassy
there. The weapons...were destined for Uvira...in Zaire,
the birthplace of Mr. Kabila’s revolt."27

• In November, "senior officers from the U.S. Embassy in
Rwanda were seen leaving Mr. Kabila’s residence in Goma."28

• By spring, a State Department official, Dennis Hankins,
was ensconced in a local hotel in Goma "as the first
full-time American diplomat posted to the capital of the
rebel alliance...."29

• In April, the House passed a resolution calling on Mobutu
to step down.30

Kabila Arrives

Despite U.S. approval of and involvement in the overthrow
of Mobutu, U.S. support for Kabila from the beginning was
mixed at best, and hostility later intensified, as he
became increasingly estranged from his Rwandan and Ugandan
Tutsi mentors. After arriving in Kinshasa on May 19, 1997,
Kabila’s new government and teams of ecstatic Congolese
began to clean up the capital and restore the country’s
infrastructure, bringing a semblance of normalcy to their
lives, despite armed confrontations between newly appointed
local police and rapid deployment squads. According to
UNICEF, 15,000 young soldiers patrolling Kinshasa did not
speak the language and were strangers to the city. Locals
refused to have anything to do with them.31

These "faceless" army and security forces, being
reorganized under instructions from Rwanda and including
many unidentified soldiers working for state security
services, were regarded as "foreigners" by the people and
viewed with distrust. Lt. Col. James Kabarebe, who became
Army Chief of Staff, had been head of the Rwandan
Republican Guard before he led the forces that overthrew
Mobutu.32 Many other key figures had similar backgrounds.
Jackson Nzinza, a Ugandan Tutsi who became Congo’s Chief of
National Security, had been the head of Rwanda’s Internal
Security Organization, allegedly responsible for numerous
political murders, an activity he continued to practice in
Congo. Bizima Karaha, Kabila’s Foreign Minister, was
another Rwandan Tutsi, whose uncle is a member of the
Rwandan Parliament.33 Col. Ibingira, who later became
Commander of North Kivu, was deeply involved in massacres
of Hutu refugees.34

During the 15 months between the May 1997 entry into
Kinshasa and the August 1998 start of the current war, the
U.S. became openly critical of the Kabila government. Most
complaints voiced were related to ongoing murderous
assaults on the Hutu refugees, who were not being protected
properly in the U.N.-run camps or by Doctors Without
Borders, who were also present. But there were other
undercurrents, related to Realpolitik.

In April and May of 1997, as the downfall of Mobutu was
imminent, reports of massacres which had occurred during
the march to Kinshasa began to appear with regularity,
although it was often unclear just who the perpetrators had
been. The AP reported on May 22 that "one of Kabila’s
soldiers" had shown a reporter a mass grave. The June 1
Boston Globe reported massacres of refugees who had "tried
to flee troops led by then-rebel leader Laurent Kabila." On
May 28, 1997, State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns
said "Kabila lacks democratic credentials." The AP report
noted that "skepticism is strong among U.S. officials about
the willingness of Kabila, once associated with leftist
causes, to lead Zaire to democracy."35 At the same time,
other Clintonites appeared optimistic. "U.S. officials are
generally pleased with Kabila’s actions since his forces
deposed Mobutu two weeks ago. He has included opposition
elements in his government and has promised free elections
within two years."36 There were reports of mass graves in
Kisangani, and U.N. efforts to investigate "have been
blocked by forces affiliated with Kabila’s Rebel Alliance."
Still, some U.S. officials continued to believe that
"alliance forces involved in wrongdoing were acting
independently of Kabila." On June 3, a USAID team arrived
in Congo to assess its assistance needs, particularly
"funds to help Congo meet the challenge of holding national
elections in April 1999, the target date set by President
Kabila."37

The next month Kabila’s Foreign Minister, Bizima Karaha,
visited Washington and, as evidenced by a lengthy interview
he gave to UPI,38 did little to enhance U.S.-Congolese
relations.39 He was in Washington to ask the Clinton
administration for help in reconstructing the country. But,
as UPI noted, he was "not bringing a message the Clinton
administration wants to hear."

For one thing, the U.S., with its typical monomania for
"free and fair elections," even in the wake of the
overthrow of thirty years of relentless dictatorship, was
insisting that elections take place within two years,
which, admittedly, Kabila had announced when he took over.
Karaha referred to the pledge as merely "a goal," one which
he doubted could be reached, given the continuing
instability in the country.

Karaha was also vehement in ruling out any participation in
the new government by opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi,
Mobutu’s last prime minister.40 "The United States," UPI
noted, "one of the few nations to recognize Tshisekedi’s
brief appointment to head Mobutu’s government during some
of the fiercest fighting, has pointed to the opposition
leader as exactly the type of figure that should be
included in Kabila’s administration." Karaha, with perhaps
less diplomacy than might be expected from a foreign
minister, called Tshisekedi a "provocateur" who "wants to
create anarchy and chaos...an enemy of the people and of
the government."41

The handwriting was on the wall. A senior official told the
UPI reporter "that Kabila can ‘kiss goodbye’ any hopes of
American help if the positions taken by Karaha on elections
and on Tshisekedi prove accurate reflections of the
policies Kabila plans to pursue."

War Crime Allegations

The demand that the massacres committed during the
overthrow of Mobutu be fully investigated and that the
perpetrators be identified and punished was raised, but the
U.N. and the Clinton administration never revealed what
they knew—that these were Tutsi revenge killings. A few
reports conceded that the atrocities were committed by
troops beyond Kabila’s control.42 The media attacks against
Kabila were relentless, always ignoring the astonishing
degree to which foreign nations, Rwanda and Uganda,
exercised absolute control over the Congolese military and
security services.43

Kabila responded cryptically to calls from human rights
organizations demanding investigation into the massacres,
claiming that countries and international groups must
assume some of the responsibility. "All the
forces...including in the name of sending humanitarian
assistance, are [also] responsible...for these great
violations." He stopped short of conceding that Rwandan
troops, in fact, committed mass killings in their sweep
across the country. But he hinted at complicity by both the
U.S. government and certain human rights groups.44

An October 1997 Human Rights Watch report with the
International Federation of Human Rights Leagues stated,
"Kabila’s troops, particularly Rwandan allies, segregated
and executed young men, former Hutu government officials
and Hutu intellectuals." They accused the U.S. of ignoring
the massacres to "hasten a conclusion to the region’s
three-year refugee crisis."45

An exception to most media coverage was a revealing
Washington Post investigation by Scott Campbell, placing
much of the blame on Paul Kagame’s Rwandans, and noting
that, while the Defense Department admitted training RPA
troops inside Rwanda, "knowledgeable witnesses told me they
had seen U.S. soldiers in the company of RPA troops on
Congolese territory on various dates including July 23rd
and 24th of this year... Massacre sites continue to be
cleaned up and potential witnesses intimidated... Rwandan
officers and troops remain in the Congo in the same areas
where they participated in massacres, representing a lethal
threat to any who would dare collaborate with the U.N.
team."46

Campbell concluded by urging that "Kabila and the
international community... insist that Kagame withdraw his
troops from Congolese territory and investigate anyone
suspected of killing civilians. Armed Hutu soldiers and
militia must also finally be disarmed and brought to
justice."47

It became apparent that the Clinton administration would
welcome Kabila’s overthrow, and perhaps had always
envisioned such an outcome. The desired scenario was
floated in World Policy Review, where, in the summer of
1998, just before the second Congo invasion, Frank Smythe
savaged Kabila, calling him a "thug," and stating that
"Voices from all quarters say that the Kabila regime is
corrupt. Even his former allies in Rwanda, Uganda, and
Eritrea have begun asking whether they should have
recruited another Zairean to lead operations in eastern
Zaire."48 The notion that Paul Kagame was sensitive to
charges of official corruption is laughable, but Smythe’s
article confirmed that the die was cast.

At the same time, much "shiny new military hardware was
appearing at Kigali airport in Rwanda."49 It was not long
before what the western press would dub "Africa’s First
World War" began.50

Ouster, Attempted Coup, and Invasion

Only four months after President Clinton’s March 1998 trip
to Africa,51 Kabila ordered all Rwandan and Ugandan Tutsi
troops and military instructors out of the country. On July
28, 1998, they began to leave, taking much of what was left
of the DRC treasury with them.

Kabila later described a foiled assassination attempt
against him as the factor that precipitated the ouster, as
well as the Tutsi killings of Hutu refugees, which had
spread to the central Equatorial region.52

On August 2, only four days later, Rwanda and Uganda
invaded Congo from the east with ground troops from their
regular armies. And just two days after that, in what must
have involved months of forward planning, there were two
airborne invasions by Rwanda in the west, and Ugandan
troops simultaneously landed in the south and occupied the
ports.

An attempted coup was under way.

While some "rebels" were involved in the invasion (mostly
former Mobutu officers), "Rwandan and Ugandan
soldiers...constitute the major portion of those troops
which are combating Kabila’s government," according to a
statement at the time by Zimbabwean President Robert
Mugabe.53 Nevertheless, it was months before Uganda and
Rwanda admitted that their soldiers were involved in the
invasion. (The U.S. has yet to confirm its
participation.)54

The early fighting in western Congo almost reached
Kinshasa. For nearly a month, Rwandan troops controlled
Kitona airport, and Ugandans in the southwest held the Inga
dam, cutting electricity and water into the capital.55 In
mid-August, when the invaders totally defied a demand from
the Organization of African Unity to lay down their arms,
Zimbabwe and Angola, and later Namibia, decided to send
troops to Congo to assist the government in beating back
the assault. It was only after fierce fighting, with vital
military support from the Angolans and Zimbabweans, along
with spirited defense from the local populace in Kinshasa,
that the rebels were repulsed at the gates of the capital.
Ultimately, by the end of August, they were driven back to
the eastern regions.56

Life in the Occupied Zone

The battle in eastern Congo is another story, one that
still rages, despite more than a year of cease-fire
efforts. In North Kivu, South Kivu, and Haut-Congo
provinces the invaders have been able to occupy vast
reaches of territory, at present more than half of the
entire country. (Congo is more than one-fourth the size of
the U.S.) The isolated infrastructure of this area,
encompassing most of the mineral wealth of Congo, has
remained under the effective control of rebel groups, as
proxies for the Ugandans, the Rwandans, and the various
mining firms and their private security forces.

Since the invasion, for almost two years, the fortunes of
the "rebel" groups, themselves riven with splits and
recriminations, have been inextricably tied to the
mercurial and deteriorating relations between Uganda and
Rwanda, all competing for Congo’s fabulous mineral wealth.
Personal relations between the Ugandan and Rwandan leaders
were close for many years, ever since Kagame, as an exile
in Uganda, was a rising star in its army. He helped
Museveni come to power. By the summer of 1999, however,
relations were so strained between the two countries that
their troops fought a bloody three-day battle in Kisangani.
Rwanda had attempted, unsuccessfully, to take control of
the Haut-Congo capital, where the Ugandan army and rebels
have their headquarters.57

The Rebel Surrogates

One branch of the Congolese Union for Democracy (RCD),
based on the border with Uganda, is headed by Ernest Wamba
dia Wamba, a former university professor who was brought
from exile in Tanzania and appeared in public three weeks
after the attempted coup. By all reports, he is a Congolese
nationalist who is in favor of a non-military solution, but
whose ambition to be the leader of Congo has him, in some
analysts’ opinion, in "over his head." Wamba dia Wamba
first operated out of Goma with the protection of Rwandan
Tutsi and former Mobutu troops. When political-military
differences became severe, in April 1999, ousted by the
military faction and in fear for his life, he moved the
headquarters of his group to Kisangani and renamed his
operation RCD-ML. He is now under the protection of the
Ugandan army.

Rwanda backs the military branch of Wamba’s former group,
still in Goma and now led by Dr. Emile Ilunga, from
Katanga, Kabila’s home province. Ilunga’s faction is now
called RCD-Goma. The security chief for this branch is
Bizima Karaha, Kabila’s former foreign minister.58

Yet another group, the Movement for Congolese Liberation
(MLC), in the north central region, is also backed by
Uganda, led by Jean-Pierre Bemba, a young businessman
during the Mobutu era. His group is composed of some former
Mobutu officers and soldiers. Curiously, his father,
Saolona Bemba, a very wealthy former close associate of
Mobutu, was put in jail in Kinshasa when Kabila took power.
The elder Bemba somehow transformed himself into Kabila’s
political ally and is now the DRC Minister of Economy and
Industry (even as his son plots the overthrow of the Kabila
government).59

The rebels are definitely not welcome in most of the
northeast half of the country they control. "[T]he men
seeking to overthrow the President of Congo, Laurent
Kabila, have been decidedly unpopular even as they
conquered nearly half this huge country. They are linked
too closely with Rwanda, which provides the rebels with
troops and arms but is despised by many ordinary
Congolese."60 The London Economist had earlier acknowledged
that "The second rebellion in two years is unpopular with
most Congolese. In 1996, the rebels [here meaning Kabila’s
forces] held crowded rallies at which they recruited young
fighters. In the eastern Kivu province which the rebels
[here meaning Kabila’s opponents] still hold, and in the
towns outside Kivu which they have captured...rallies have
been...sparsely attended...rebel leaders have been booed,
and there have been no lines of young men eager to join."61

Abuses, indeed atrocities, by the RCD and other rebel
groups in North and South Kivu have been well-documented.
"Reports from South Kivu strongly suggest the danger of
large-scale violence among different ethnic groups there.
Among several alleged massacres and atrocities is the
burial alive of 15 women in Kivu province by rebels,
apparently in suspicion of contacts with Mayi-Mayi
forces."62 Mayi-Mayi are a local tribe that supports Kabila
because of their antipathy for the Tutsi aggressors.

Another conflict—this one in the rebel-controlled area
bordering on Uganda—is a Ugandan-instigated war between the
Hema and the Lendu tribes. Long at peace, albeit tensely,
they began battling fiercely when Ugandan forces took
control of the region and paid the Hema to step up the
level of warfare.63 The fighting has been described as
"massacres on a chilling scale."64 The Ugandans have used
the fighting as an excuse to send more regular army troops
into the area.65 Many other examples of infighting among
rebel groups and their sponsors are surfacing.

Although it is "generally agreed that the rebels are
thoroughly detested in the areas they have now occupied for
more than a year,"66 the Congolese army has been unable to
dislodge them.

So, "de facto partition" has come to Congo.67 Money is a
major factor. As Le Monde Diplomatique noted, "the
well-equipped Rwandan and Ugandan troops [with the rebels]
are paid in dollars."68

And the dollars are flowing. Eastern Congo, virtually
annexed by Uganda and Rwanda, is one of the most
mineral-rich areas in the world. (See sidebar, pp. 8-9.)
Gold and diamonds and rare strategic minerals are flowing
into the two countries, earning vast sums for their
treasuries.

The border between Congo and Rwanda is "a mere
formality."69 The international mining companies that
operate in Kivu protect the Rwandans, who "have a monopoly
on the mining and marketing of those minerals."70

The West has ignored the blatant theft of Congo’s sovereign
natural resources. Some believe this is because its bona
fides were so shattered by its apparent indifference to the
1994 atrocities. Paul Kagame was politically sophisticated
enough, some analysts noted, that, since 1994, he has
"played on Washington’s sense of guilt about the
genocide."71 Le Monde Diplomatique agreed: "The genocide of
the Tutsis is now invoked to play on the international
community’s sense of guilt and persuade the United States
to look with a kindly eye on what is nothing less than a
plan to conquer and control the resources of the Congo."72
Others believe, instead, there is an overwhelming
coincidence of interests for all of the parties
involved—greed.

The Lusaka Accord

Less than two months after rebels had taken control of
eastern Congo and were moving toward the diamond mines in
the southwest near Angola, Susan Rice began to press for a
cease-fire. After two days of discussion with Kabila in
Kinshasa,73 on November 1, Rice went to Zambia for talks
with President Frederick Chiluba, the anointed mediator. In
Lusaka, Rice pressed her point. "There is absolutely no
military solution which is viable."74 Given the unending
U.S. military support for Rwanda and Uganda, Rice knew well
why a military solution was impossible for the Congolese,
half of whose country was under foreign occupation.

But more than eight months were to elapse before any
agreement was reached. With the crucial support of Angola,
Zimbabwe, and Namibia, Congo was able to halt any further
rebel advances and to protect the vital southeast, Katanga,
with its diamond mines. (Rebel groups and their Ugandan and
Rwandan sponsors were constantly squabbling, having splits,
and moving headquarters, and the Rwandans and Ugandans were
fighting each other.)

Moreover, the Americans’ hand-picked peace broker, Chiluba,
was hardly neutral. Frederick Chiluba, president of Zambia,
was known to allow UNITA to transit through Zambian
territory in their constant forays against Angola. Chiluba
was also discovered to have extensive interests in the
internationally outlawed UNITA diamond trade, the main
source of financing for the rebel group. UNITA was not only
wreaking havoc, as it has for 25 years, in Angola, Congo’s
close and critical ally, its troops were now fighting the
DRC in Congo as well, alongside the Rwandan rebels.

By the end of the year, pressures on Kabila to enter talks
were overpowering, even though it had become clear to the
world that Congo had been invaded and occupied by foreign
powers and was not in the throes of a civil war.75

In January 1999, Congo, Rwanda, Uganda, Namibia, Zimbabwe,
and Angola agreed to an African-sponsored cease-fire
framework, but since the rebel groups had not been invited
to the meetings, nothing would be meaningful until they
agreed.

The wheeling and dealing intensified through the spring of
1999. Numerous meetings were held under the auspices of the
Organization for African Unity and the Southern African
Development Community.76 Nevertheless, it took U.S.
pressure on the participants—including Nelson Mandela’s
good offices (splitting still further what were once the
united frontline states)—to forge an agreement that would
satisfy the rebels. This was not difficult, given the
impressive level of U.S. military and economic support for
Rwanda and Uganda, as well as for the South African
government.

In June, foreign and defense ministers gathered in Lusaka,
later joined by their nations’ leaders, and by July 7 new
terms of the cease-fire accord had been announced.
Clinton’s special envoy for Africa, Howard Wolpe, who was
in Lusaka for the duration, noted, somewhat ominously, "Our
sense is that the key players have come to comprehend how
enormously costly this is not only to the people of the
Congo but to the entire region."77

Of all Congo’s allies, Angola has the most serious stake in
the outcome of the war. UNITA forces have been using
southern Congo to attack Luanda’s troops since Mobutu’s
time and had long before joined with Rwandan Tutsi
fighters. In late August 1998, only weeks after the war
began, UNITA representatives met with Kagame. Some UNITA
fighters were also captured in "rebel" skirmishes.78
Further complicating the situation, "UNITA has reportedly
received South African arms, shipped to Mozambique and
flown on South African aircraft to Angola by way of
Zambia."79 After decades of support for UNITA, the U.S.,
according to U.N. Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, now
proposed to "throw its weight behind" efforts to "tighten
and enforce sanctions" against them.80

The effect on Namibia has also been significant. In August,
a separatist group in Namibia’s Caprivi Strip, previously
inactive, launched a series of military attacks made
possible by supplies and other assistance from UNITA. Their
"suspected motive," the New York Times noted, "is to punish
Namibia for its role in the Congo war."81 As recently as
February 2000, UNITA troops were attacking Namibian border
villages.82 Namibia has "a growing problem with UNITA along
its border with Angola and in the breakaway Caprivi
Strip.... Caprivi separatists reportedly receive aid not
only from UNITA, but also from Botswana and Zambia."83 In
addition, Zimbabwe’s contributions to the Congo war effort
played a major role in the devastation of its economy and
the likely ouster of President Robert Mugabe.

When everyone sat down in Lusaka, the rebels dampened U.S.
enthusiasm by refusing to sign the accord (unable to agree
on who would sign it on their behalf).84 It would take
another month and a half before the RCD rivals agreed that
both factions would sign.85

It was just at this moment that Richard Holbrooke began to
take center stage. In August, Clinton administration
horse-trading with Senate Republicans had abandoned funding
for U.N. projects overseas that supported abortion programs
in exchange for confirmation of Holbrooke as U.N.
ambassador. In the meantime, his Africa staff had been
shepherding the accords to their signing, maintaining a
constant pressure on Kabila to accede.86

The agreement called for a step-by-step withdrawal of
foreign troops, including the rebels, within 180 days,
rather than immediately, as the African-sponsored version
had required. This meant that the rebels would stay in
Congo. In any case, that deadline was never met. The
foreign troops never left.87

Cease-fire violations since then have become rampant. By
mid-November each side accused the other of violations.
Susan Rice continued to insist, "Lusaka is the only viable
way. It can and must be implemented."88 She then announced
that Richard Holbrooke would travel to the region in
December. When he did, he "acknowledged that unlike the
Balkans, where military might and billions of dollars have
been devoted to peacemaking, NATO was not available to
impose a settlement."89 Nevertheless, he was both
threatening and patronizing. The OAU, he insisted, must
"get its act together," or the U.S. would not support a
peacekeeping operation at all.90

This was a reference to another critical provision of the
accords, calling for the deployment of a United Nations
peacekeeping force within 120 days, another unmet deadline.
The U.N. force has only just been authorized, after a
special session of the Security Council in January.91
Albright, Holbrooke, and company, had learned to be less
publicly ham-handed since their manipulations of the
Rambouillet meetings on Yugoslavia had been widely exposed,
and the Security Council sessions were relatively open and
smooth, paving the way for U.N. approval.92

Nevertheless, the U.S. role continues to grow, even as the
U.N. prepares to deploy a woefully inadequate 5,000-man
peacekeeping force.93 The Pentagon is already giving
military advice to the U.N. on that force. It is, in the
words of Holbrooke, giving "the United Nations the benefit
of U.S. experience in such matters."94 Direct participation
of U.S. personnel remains a touchy subject, after the
debacle in Somalia, also under Clinton’s watch.
Unfortunately, former South African President Nelson
Mandela has not only offered to send South African troops
to Congo, but has also publicly urged the participation of
U.S. forces there, a certain recipe for disaster.95

What It Really Means: Balkanization

The U.S. shaping of, and insistent support for, the Lusaka
accords only highlights what has been clear for some time.
The agreement was not a good deal for the Congo government,
and Kabila was forced to accede only because of the
implicit threat that refusal would be met by even greater
assistance to the rebels and the potential dismantling of
the entire country.96 In stark contrast to the resolutions
of the OAU and the SADC, and to the earlier draft agreement
before the last gathering in Lusaka, the final accord did
not even recognize the legitimacy of the DRC government or
President Kabila.97

When the agreement was signed, U.S. envoy Howard Wolpe
noted, "it’s a very important beginning to have all the
parties together, collectively laying out a road map."98
But the map is of a partitioned, divided Congo, contrary to
the OAU Charter and a throw-back to the Berlin Conference
of 1885, when the western powers drew the boundaries of
African nations with impunity.

More than a year ago, the New York Times launched what can
now be identified as a major propaganda campaign to
legitimize the Balkanization of Africa, much as the
re-Balkanization of Yugoslavia was promoted in the West
during the 1990s.99 On January 12, 1999, when the Lusaka
accord lay well in the future, a front-page article by Ian
Fisher with Norimitsu Onishi entitled "Congo’s Struggle May
Unleash Broad Strife to Redraw Africa," appeared. Its
rhetorical trick was to lay the responsibility for the
current borders on meddling European colonialists,
implying, despite OAU recognition of those borders as
inviolate, that the redrawing of those boundaries by
African combatants might be more legitimate: "The borders
of African nations, set up arbitrarily by the Europeans who
colonized the continent a century ago, are supposed to be
inviolate. Yet Congo is now split in two, perhaps for
good."

While the article paid lip service to the "stability" lent
to the continent by respect for those boundaries, it
planted the seeds of doubt: "The borders established [at
the Berlin Conference] had little to do with geography or
the lines that separated ethnic groups."

A few days later, the Times campaign continued, more
directly. A long article on January 16 by Howard W. French
was entitled "The African Question: Who Is to Blame? The
Finger Points to the West, and Congo Is a Harsh Example."
While some recognition was given to the generally
exploitative legacy of "European subjugation and rule," the
imposition of boundaries was stressed: "colonial
subjugation brutally ended Africa’s sovereign evolution
toward modern nation-states." An African scholar at the
State University of New York at Buffalo was quoted: "The
example I like to think of is if an African imperial army
had marched into Europe in the Middle Ages and required
Germany, France, and England to live together by force of
arms. It would have unleashed untold mayhem...." "Almost
every time the Europeans created a state," French wrote,
"ethnic groups or previously existing African polities were
split by the new borders, undermining the new states’
claims to legitimacy in the eyes of their inhabitants."

Permanent Division?

Most recently, the Times, while never openly endorsing
partition, has lauded the "relative stability" of the
current division of Congo100 and has opined that the main
mission of the U.N. peacekeeping force will be to "provide
security in relatively stable zones."101

It is not unlikely that the boundaries of a two-Congo
Africa have already been set—imposed yet again by the
western powers.

Footnotes

1. See Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental
Operations With Respect to Intelligence Activities, Alleged
Assassination Plots Involving Foreign Leaders (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975). The CIA had
elaborate plans for the assassination of Lumumba. Deputy
Director Richard Bissell sent Joseph Scheider, a CIA
scientist, to Congo, having chosen from an astonishing
array of biological weapons available at Ft. Detrick,
Maryland, which would “either seriously incapacitate or
eliminate Lumumba.” The available toxic substances,
according to Scheider’s testimony before the Senate
committee, included tularemia (“rabbit fever”), brucellosis
(undulent fever), tuberculosis, anthrax, smallpox, and
Venezuelan equine encephalitis (“sleeping sickness”), p.
21, n. 3. Though the toxins were never used to kill
Lumumba, not for lack of trying (Mobutu and his goons beat
him to death), this writer wonders what happened to these
toxins, since Scheider testified that they were left in
Congo with the CIA station chief, Lawrence Devlin. See n.
92. And see generally John Stockwell, In Search of Enemies
(New York: W.W. Norton, 1978).
2. See Lisa Pease, “Midnight in the Congo,” Probe, Vol. 6,
No. 3 (Mar.-Apr. 1999); Jim DiEugenio, “Dodd and Dulles vs.
Kennedy in Africa,” Probe, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Jan.-Feb. 1999);
Probe can be found at www.webcom.com/ctka; and see Arthur
Gavshon, The Mysterious Death of Dag Hammarskjold (New
York: Walker, 1962).
3. And forces from Uganda, Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Angola.
Lynne Duke, “U.S. Military Role in Rwanda Greater Than
Disclosed,” Washington Post, Aug. 16, 1997.
4. And restored the country’s former name, Democratic
Republic of Congo.
5. Maj. Gen. Kagame is now Acting President of Rwanda and
Defense Minister, and unquestionably runs the country as a
military dictatorship.
6. Congo has about 80% of the world’s cobalt reserves and
vast, mostly untouched reserves of diamonds, gold, and
copper.
7. Robert Block, “Lost In Africa: How the U.S. Landed on
Sidelines in Zaire,” Wall Street Journal, Apr. 22, 1997.
8. See discussion below and sidebar on the current role of
the mining companies, including the Bush interests.
9. 1991 Congressional Presentation, quoted in William D.
Hartung and Bridget Moix, “Deadly Legacy: U.S. Arms to
Africa and the Congo War,” WorldPolicy Institute Arms
Control Report, Jan. 2000.
10. The leaders of the Tutsi minority had dominated Rwanda
for centuries, most recently in the service of the Belgian
colonial masters. When Rwanda became independent in 1962,
the leadership of the long-oppressed Hutu majority took
power, and the Tutsi élite fled to eastern Congo and to
Uganda. The Tutsi nursed their grievances and trained for
an invasion that was 30 years in coming. Kagame and many of
his “rebel” troops had served for years in the Ugandan
army; the force that invaded Rwanda was composed, in large
part, of a foreign armed force.
11. Lynne Duke, “Africans Use Training in Unexpected Ways,”
Washington Post, July 14, 1998.
12. The accusation is backed by 1997 testimony of three
Tutsi informants then still with the current regime who
were part of a covert élite strike team. They said they
used surface-to-air missiles that had been confiscated in
Iraq by the U.S. military during the Persian Gulf war. The
information was presented in August 1997 to then chief U.N.
war crimes prosecutor, Louise Arbour, who later suppressed
it and classified the report. See Steven Edwards, “
‘Explosive’ Leak on Rwanda Genocide,” National Post
(Canada), Mar. 1, 2000. The U.N. investigation revealed
“that Paul Kagame, a Tutsi, had ordered the shooting down
of the...plane....” Barbara Crossette, “Rwanda: Kagame
Implicated,” New York Times, World Briefing, Mar. 24, 2000.
A Belgian attorney has filed suit against Kagame related to
the assassinations. Marlise Simons, “Rwanda: Acting
President Sued,” New York Times, World Briefing, Apr. 1,
2000. And a group of Canadian lawyers representing Hutu
defendants in the International Criminal Tribunal for
Rwanda are attempting to force the release of the U.N.
report.
13. Op. cit., n. 11. According to a U.S. military officer
who knew him in the early 1990s, they found Kagame “a
brilliant commander...more than a military
man...politically attuned....” Ibid.
14. Gérard Prunier, “Uganda, Nearly a Miracle,” Le Monde
Diplomatique (Paris), Feb. 1998.
15. Ibid.
16. Op. cit., n. 3. Despite lip service paid to the
importance of humanitarian assistance, most U.S. actions
were military. “U.S. officials...discussed options with
Kagame, including air strikes to hit at extremist bases....
Information about the camps was exchanged....” Ibid. One
U.S. response to the 1994 massacres was the African Crisis
Response Initiative (ACRI) by Susan E. Rice, when she was
director of “peacekeeping” for the National Security
Council. The objective of ACRI “is to help African
countries develop a joint ‘military capability that would
be able to rapidly assemble and deploy in order to prevent
another descent into anarchy and the needless loss of
life.’ ” Frank Smythe, “A New Game: The Clinton
Administration on Africa,” World Policy Journal, Summer
1998, quoting Vincent D. Kern, II, then Deputy Assistant
Secretary of Defense for African Affairs. Considering the
subsequent actions of the Rwandan and Ugandan troops in
Congo, these words were hardly prophetic. Rice is now
Assistant Secretary of State for Africa, technically
reporting to the sinister international gadfly, Thomas
Pickering; but she is also a close family friend and
confidant of Madeleine Albright.
17. Achille Mbembe, “Africa’s Frontiers in Flux,” Le Monde
Diplomatique, Nov. 1999.
18. Ibid.
19. “Rice is optimistic about a new generation of
independent, nationalist-minded leaders like...Uganda’s
Yoweri Museveni and Rwanda’s Paul Kagame, who have recently
come of age.” Smythe, op. cit., n. 16.
20. Op. cit., n. 7. One writer has suggested that the U.S.
was involved in diplomatic arrangements with Uganda and
Rwanda for the operation as early as the beginning of 1995.
“With consummate skill..., Museveni and his ally, Paul
Kagame, were able to exploit the disgust felt by many
Africans at the corrupt dictatorship in Kinshasa and create
a disparate but powerful alliance, openly backed by
America.” Op. cit., n. 14. “U.S. officials deny that there
were any U.S. military personnel with Rwandan troops in
Zaire during the war, although unconfirmed reports of a
U.S. advisory presence have circulated in the region since
the war’s earliest days.” Op. cit., n. 11.
21. “Their U.N.-operated camps were largely controlled by
Hutu militiamen posing as refugees....” Op. cit., n. 3.
22. According to an unnamed Pentagon official, “we
counseled him several times not to do that.” Ibid.
23. John Pomfret, “Massacres Were Weapon in War of
Liberation,” Washington Post, June 11, 1997. Kabila
admitted his own military weakness in a 1999 CovertAction
interview, CovertAction Quarterly, No. 66 (Winter 1999), p.
31: “One of the things that was agreed between me and
Kagame...was that the revolutionary people of the Congo
would split up and expel from power the Mobutu regime and
also deny any base of activities by which the Interahambe
[the Rwandan Hutu militias] might attack Rwanda. On the
other hand, Rwanda had agreed to give free passage to the
Congolese Liberation Movement for our activities in our own
country to overthrow the Mobutu regime. That is what we
did.”
24. Although Uganda and Rwanda ultimately admitted that
they had invaded Zaire, initially there had been
significant efforts to camouflage the invasion to make it
look like an internal uprising against Mobutu. The “rebels”
called themselves Banyamulenge, claiming they were Tutsis
who had lived in Congo for centuries. In fact, the
Banyamulenge (people living in Mulenge, an area in eastern
Zaire) were known as Banyarwanda (people from Rwanda),
Rwandan Tutsi exiles from the 1959 expulsion, living mostly
in Congo’s Kiva province, which borders on Rwanda. Many did
join the invading forces, but the vast majority of those
forces were from the Rwanda Patriotic Army. See “An
Interview with President Laurent Kabila,” CovertAction, op.
cit., n. 23. As early as 1961, the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees distributed leaflets in eastern
Congo among these people, addressing them as “Refugies
Rwandais de Lemera, Mulenga, et Katobo,” and reminding them
of their obligation to remain neutral and to completely
abstain from politics.” Reproduced in Remigius Kintu,
“Tutsi Invasion of Congo,” Uganda Democratic Coalition,
September 1998. On the Banyarwanda, see also Israel
Ntaganzwa-Rugamba, “Rwanda’s Batutsi,” privately published,
1994.
25. Op. cit., n. 7.
26. Quoted in Joseph Farah, “Did U.S. Help Zaire’s Rebels?”
WorldNet Daily, May 5, 1997.
27. Op. cit., n. 7.
28. Ibid.
29. Ibid.
30. Ibid.
31. See Colette Braeckman, “Pragmatic Rule in
Congo-Kinshasa,” Le Monde Diplomatique, Dec. 1997.
32. Paul Kagame admitted that Kabarebe, “had been given the
task of organizing the future Congolese army.” Ibid. In
July 1998, Kabarebe was implicated in a plot to assassinate
Kabila. After he and other Tutsi officials were expelled,
Kabarebe then led the 1998 invasion against Kabila. See
Kintu, op. cit., n. 24, and CovertAction, op. cit., n. 23.
33. He is now security minister for one branch of the RDC
rebel group fighting Kabila, which has split. See below.
34. After the expulsion, he became head of military
security in Rwanda. Kintu, op. cit., n. 24.
35. AP, June 1, 1997.
36. AP, June 3, 1997.
37. Ibid.
38. Sid Baltman, Jr., “Kabila Backtracking on Democracy
Pledge,” July 8, 1997.
39. Karaha was one of the July 1998 plotters, now working
with the rebels in the east; whether he was out to
destabilize President Kabila as early as July 1997 is
unclear.
40. Ironically, the wing of the rebel group for which
Karaha now serves as security minister, RCD-Goma, is
calling for Kabila’s replacement by Tshisekedi.
41. The American penchant for insisting that other
governments offer positions of power to their bitterest
enemies is even more bizarre than their love for instant
post-revolution elections. No one ever suggested that Bill
Clinton offer George Bush or Bob Dole a cabinet post. Why
should it be more reasonable to do so in Congo after a
thirty-year dictatorship and a bitter war?
42. John Pomfret of the Washington Post interviewed
Congolese soldiers fighting for Kabila. They admitted that
the Congolese commander in the area, Gen. Gaston Muyango,
“had no real power.” Atrocities were “ordered by the
Rwandan army officers who dominated Kabila’s officer
corps,” including two who had ordered the slaughter of
unarmed men, identified only as Col. Wilson and Col.
Richard. Pomfret, op. cit., n. 23.
43. “U.S. Moves to Resume Congo Assistance,” AP, June 3,
1997.
44. AP, Oct. 13, 1997; and see CovertAction, op. cit., n.
23. In July 1997, Rwanda ordered the U.N. human rights
office there closed. Barbara Crossette, “The Congo
Massacres: The U.N. Steps Aside,” New York Times, July 24,
1997. See also, Mwayila Tshiyembe, “Africa’s New Players
Jostle for Power,” Le Monde Diplomatique, Jan. 1999: “In an
escalating dereliction of duty, the United Nations, the
International Red Cross, the humanitarian NGOs, and the
states themselves have abandoned hundreds of thousands of
Hutu refugees to their fate in the forests and savannah of
eastern Congo-Kinshasa.”
45. October 1997 Electronic Telegraph from Johannesburg.
46. Washington Post, Sep. 22, 1997.
47. Ibid.
48. Smythe, op. cit., n. 16. Sourcing as provocative a
proposition as this to “voices from all quarters” is also
shabby journalism.
49. “Hands Off the Democratic Republic of Congo,” Lalkar
(Southall, U.K.), Sep.-Oct. 1998.
50. This prescient military slogan has been alternately
attributed to Madeleine Albright and to Susan Rice.
51. Clinton visited South Africa, Rwanda, and Uganda, among
other countries, but bypassed Congo. Secretary of State
Albright had visited Congo in December 1997. The World
Policy Journal report by Frank Smythe announced her
displeasure: “Albright held a joint press conference with
[Kabila] [who] embarrassed her by railing against a local
journalist who dared to ask about an imprisoned opposition
leader.” Smythe, op. cit., n. 16.
52. CovertAction, op. cit., n. 23.
53. Solidaire (Brussels), Sep. 8, 1998. And according to
Colette Braeckman, writing in the Belgian daily, Le Soir,
U.S. naval ships off the coast were directing the invasion
in the west. Quoted and translated from the French in
Vision, Sep. 29, 1998. Among prisoners taken by the Congo
army on the west coast were both Rwandan and Ugandan
troops; the Ugandans belonged to an élite unit that had
been trained by the Americans. Solidaire.
54. Norimitsu Onishi, “Long War Saps Spirit and Money in
Congo,” New York Times, Dec. 30, 1998. When the Rwandans
finally admitted their involvement, they recited a mantra
of the Hutu refugees being an ever-present threat to their
security. But according to Le Monde Diplomatique, “Kigali’s
security is nothing but a pretext for a plan to conquer and
control the resources of the country.” Colette Braeckman,
“Carve-Up in the Congo,” Le Monde Diplomatique, Oct. 1999.
55. Braeckman, op. cit., n. 54.
56. See the Chronologies of the Current Crisis, published
by the Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) of
the United Nations Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs; home page: www.reliefweb.int.
57. “Rwanda and Uganda Battling to Control Key City in
Congo,” New York Times, Aug. 16, 1999; Ian Fisher and
Norimitsu Onishi, “Many Armies Ravage a Rich Land in the
‘First World War’ of Africa,” New York Times, Feb. 6, 2000.
58. Braeckman, op. cit., n. 54; Fisher and Onishi, op.
cit., n. 57; see also op. cit., n. 56.
59. Norimitsu Onishi, “Papa and a Rebel Son Ask: Who’s the
Betrayer?” New York Times, July 29, 1999.
60. Ian Fisher, “Rebels Can’t Conquer the Hearts of the
Congolese,” New York Times, Aug. 13, 1999.
61. Economist (London), Sept. 5, 1998.
62. U.N. Press Release, Jan. 24, 2000.
63. Ian Fisher, “Congo’s War Overshadows Tribal Fight,” New
York Times, Feb. 10, 2000; Simon Denyer, “Aid Body Warns of
‘Looming Rwanda’ in Congo,” Reuters, Jan. 29, 2000. “Wamba
admits there has been some Ugandan involvement in the
fighting between Lendu and Hema...blames a lack of state
authority...in the region. NCN 2000, South African Center
for American Studies, (Johannesburg) Feb. 10, 2000. But the
New York Times, on the same day, observed: “ ‘Rogue’
soldiers from Uganda...have not only sided with the
Hema...but have killed Lendu for hire...another way that
Ugandan soldiers have profited from the war in Congo.... So
far, they have been accused of smuggling out diamonds,
gold, coffee, and ivory.” Fisher, supra.
64. Simon Denyer, “Greed Fans Ethnic Flames in Congo War,”
Reuters, Feb. 7, 2000.
65. “Uganda Sending More Troops to Congo,” Reuters, Feb.
18, 2000.
66. Braeckman, op. cit., n. 54.
67. Op. cit., n. 17.
68. Braeckman, op. cit., n. 54.
69. Ibid. Neither Uganda nor Rwanda have any mineral
resources of their own to speak of. Mwayila Tshiyembe,
“Africa’s New Players Jostle for Power,” Le Monde
Diplomatique, Jan. 1999.
70. Braeckman, op. cit., n. 54. Kagame, Kabarebe, and even
former President George Bush, have interests in mining
companies. Ibid.
71. Op. cit., n. 11.
72. Braeckman, op. cit., n. 54.
73. Ian Fisher, “Disunited Rebels Share One Goal: Ousting
Kabila,” New York Times, Nov. 2, 1998.
74. Agence France-Presse, “U.S. Discusses War in Congo With
Zambia,” New York Times, Nov. 3, 1998. Two weeks later, she
used the same rhetoric: “You cannot walk away from it.
There is no other viable vehicle for peace.” Hrvoje
Hranjski, “Congo Deal Said Only Path to Peace,” AP, Nov.
19, 1999.
75. Onishi, op. cit., n. 54. On November 6, in the wake of
the Rice visits, Kagame “acceded to a request by South
African President Nelson Mandela to admit involvement in a
bid to advance peace talks.” IRIN Chronology. See also, Ian
Fisher, “U.S. Diplomat Pleads for Political Solution to
Civil War [sic] in Congo,” New York Times, Nov. 6, 1998.
76. The two African organizations had early on recognized
the legitimacy both of the Kabila government and of the
interventions on its behalf by Angola, Zimbabwe, and
Namibia.
77. Norimitsu Onishi, “Pacts Reached on Congo and Sierra
Leone,” New York Times, July 8, 1999.
78. “Africa: More of the Same, and Worse,” Global
Intelligence Update, Stratfor, Dec. 31, 1999; Solidaire,
Sep. 8, 1998.
79. Stratfor, op. cit., n. 78.
80. Barbara Crossette, “Holbrooke to Draw Outline of New
U.S. Plans in Africa,” New York Times, Dec. 6, 1999.
According to Angolan newspaper reports in July, the U.S.
had “agreed to resume military cooperation with Angola....”
“U.S. Attempts to Contain and Segment African Conflicts,”
Global Intelligence Update, Stratfor, July 27, 1999. The
Clinton administration was also “considering” efforts to
curb UNITA’s illegal traffic in diamonds. Raymond Bonner,
“U.S. May Try to Curb Diamond Trade That Fuels Africa
Wars,” New York Times, Aug. 8, 1999. Critics note tersely
that “UNITA has outlived its usefulness for U.S.
imperialism.” Johnnie Stevens, “U.S. Role in Angola:
Washington Tries to Pose as an ‘Honest Broker,’ ” Workers
World News, Dec. 23, 1999.
81. Donald G. McNeil, Jr., “Tangled War in Congo Now Snares
Namibians,” Aug. 6, 1999.
82. “Suspected UNITA Rebels Attack Namibian Village,”
Reuters, Feb. 17, 2000.
83. Stratfor, op. cit., n. 80.
84. There was only one seat for the RCD, and when Ernest
Wamba dia Wamba of RCD-ML sat down in it, neither Emile
Inlunga nor Bizima Karaha of RCD-Goma would enter the room.
Donald G. McNeil, Jr., “Not Quite a Triumph in Congo,” New
York Times, July 12, 1999.
85. Jean-Baptiste Kayigamba, “Congo Rebels Agree to Sign
Peace Accord,” Reuters, Aug. 24, 1999.
86. In Congo, just as a year before with the criminal KLA
in Kosovo, Holbrooke was the first U.S. official to meet
publicly with the rebel groups. Rosalind Russell, “U.S.
Envoy Holds Talks With Congo Rebels,” Reuters, Dec. 10,
1999.
87. As late as December 1999, Zimbabwe stated that American
mercenaries had been seen fighting with the rebels. Cris
Chinaka, “Zimbabwe Says U.S. Mercenaries in Congo Rebel
Ranks,” Reuters, Dec. 1, 1999.
88. Hranjski, op. cit., n. 74.
89. Daniel J. Wakin, “Holbrooke Demands Congo Compliance,”
AP, Dec. 6, 1999.
90. Crossette, op. cit., n. 80.
91. Holbrooke had announced in December that January would
be “the month of Africa,” the month in which the U.S. was
to assume the Security Council presidency. Ibid.
92. Tensions were softened by wining and dining in New York
City, some of it hosted by billionaire mining entrepreneur
Maurice Templesman, chairman of the Corporate Council on
Africa, who took everyone to a white-glove dinner at the
Metropolitan Club. Nicole Winfield, “Talks Continue on
Congo Peace,” AP, Jan. 25, 2000. In 1974, Templesman had
hired Lawrence Devlin, the former CIA Chief of Station in
Kinshasa, upon his retirement from the Agency, to exploit
his connections with Mobutu. Devlin had tried hard to
assassinate Patrice Lumumba. He testified before the Senate
under the pseudonym Victor Hedgeman. Ellen Ray, et al.,
Dirty Work: The CIA in Africa (Secaucus: Lyle Stuart,
1979), p. 350. It was Devlin with whom the CIA’s scientist
left the biological toxins he had brought to Congo. Senate
Select Committee, op. cit., n. 1.
93. The violence has become almost endemic. “We are seeing
the growth of social groupings where war, and organizing
for war, are tending to become everyday activities.” Op.
cit., n. 17.
94. Ben Barber, “Pentagon Advises U.N. on Congo,”
Washington Times, Feb. 9, 2000. Of course, the U.S. feels
entitled to “advise”; it is paying “at least a fourth of
the $160 million start-up costs.” “U.N. Council Close to
Approving Small Force for Congo,” Reuters, Feb. 24, 2000.
95. “South Africa Aims High, Budget Lags Behind,” Global
Intelligence Update, Stratfor, Jan. 12, 2000; Kominform,
Feb. 16, 2000. Mandela, who had condemned the foreign
invasion of Congo, has become a critic of the Kabila
government and has met with leaders of the rebels,
including Etienne Tshisekedi. Buchizya Mseteka, “Mandela
Says U.N. Must Go to Congo, Hits Kabila,” Reuters, Jan. 28,
2000.
96. “When Kabila signed the Lusaka agreement, the rebellion
achieved its most important objective in forcing the Kabila
government to agree to an inclusive political process.”
Horace G. Campbell, “From War to Peace in the Congo or
Devastation and Militarism,” private paper, Syracuse, New
York, Aug. 19, 1999.
97. President José Eduardo Dos Santos of Angola said in his
presentation to the Security Council, “The omission of the
principle that the legitimacy and authority of the present
government and the president of the Democratic Republic of
Congo should be recognized, leaves room for some confusion
and uncertainty. A government that has not been militarily
defeated cannot accept capitulating at the negotiation
table.” Permanent Mission of the Republic of Angola to the
United Nations, Press Release, Jan. 24, 2000.
98. Op. cit., n. 77.
99. See Ellen Ray and Bill Schaap, “NATO and Beyond: The
Wars of the Future,” CovertAction Quarterly, No. 66 (Winter
1999).
100. “Risks and Realities in Congo,” editorial, Feb. 29,
2000.
101. “A Peace Strategy for Congo,” editorial, Jan. 31,
2000.





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