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Africa: From Rwanda to Darfur
AfricaFocus Bulletin
Jan 16, 2006 (060116)
(Reposted from sources cited below)
Editor's Note
In Rwanda, says Gerald Caplan in an analysis of "lessons learned"
from Rwanda to Darfur, the international community excused its
failure to respond by hesitation to apply the term genocide. When
the U.S. Congress and the Bush administration in 2004 declared the
slaughter in Darfur to be "genocide," therefore, many expected that
this would be a signal that the international community would take
effective action. Unfortunately, Caplan concludes, that expectation
was false.
This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains excerpts from Caplan's analysis,
which appears in the January 12 issue of Pambazuka News
(http://www.pambazuka.org). Another issue of AfricaFocus Bulletin
sent out today contains (1) a call from the Darfur Consortium of
African non-governmental organizations for the African Union not to
allow the government of Sudan to assume the next presidency of the
organization, (2) excerpts from update reports on Sudan from the
UN's Integrated Regional Information Networks, and (3) links to
other recent reports on Sudan..
++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++++++++
From Rwanda to Darfur: Lessons Learned?
Gerald Caplan
Pambazuka News 237, January 12, 2006
http://www.pambazuka.org
[Gerald Caplan is author of Rwanda: The Preventable Genocide, the
report of the International Panel of Eminent Personalities
appointed by the Organization of African Unity to investigate the
Rwandan genocide; founder of "Remembering Rwanda."]
[Excerpts only. For full text see
http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?issue=237]
Even before the 1994 Rwandan genocide ended, some began wondering
when "the next Rwanda" would be. Not "if", but when. Despite
Indonesia in 1965, Burundi in 1972 and Cambodia from 1975 to 1978,
genocide had receded in the public consciousness. From the late
1960s, it's true, memory of the Holocaust was in full bloom. But
the Holocaust was treated as almost a self-contained phenomenon
separate from "ordinary" genocide. The earlier Armenian genocide
was mainly the crusade of Armenians, the Hereros' extermination was
unknown beyond a few experts. As for the post-Holocaust massacres
of half-a-million Chinese and Communists in Indonesia, the
slaughter by the Tutsi army of perhaps 200,000 Hutu in Burundi,
including all those with secondary education, and the deaths by
beating, starving or torture by the Khmer Rouge of a million and a
half Cambodians, none quite seemed to meet the standards set down
in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide
(UNCG).
Rwanda was different. Rwanda was a classic UNCG genocide,
fulfilling all the conditions, and it reminded the world that a
half century after the world first vowed "Never again," genocide
had not disappeared. ,,,
Rwanda left no room for ambiguity. Ironically, the seeming absence
of genocide since 1945 had made most observers refuse to take
seriously in advance that an actual genocidalconspiracy was being
hatched in Rwanda before 1994. Once it was over, it seemed all but
inevitable that others could, would, follow. For many, early in the
new millennium, Darfur seemed well on its way to becoming "the next
Rwanda". The urgent question then emerged: Had Rwanda taught the
world any lessons that might help prevent Darfur from following in
its place?
Three lessons from Rwanda
Assuming of course that there really are any lessons at all that
the past can teach the future, it is possible to isolate three from
the unmitigated catastrophe of Rwanda in 1994. Of these, the first
and most obvious is profoundly disheartening to all those who favor
intervention in crises where no interests beyond the humanitarian
are at stake. The second and third are apparently, or potentially,
encouraging. To seek a ray of hope out of a genocide borders on the
desperate, but in the curious universe of those who study genocides
in order to prevent them, what else is there to hold on to?
The horror of the Rwandan genocide extends beyond its intrinsic
bestiality. What's also notable is, first, how swiftly it became
evident that this was a perfect storm of a genocide, and, second,
how easily it could have been prevented. (Before addressing the
betrayal of Rwanda by the "international community", genocide
prevention activists must not forget that it could have been
prevented most successfully if the Hutu conspirators who plotted to
"cleanse" Rwanda of its Tutsi citizens had simply called off their
plot.) Yet the genocide was not formally named as such by the vast
majority of governments and institutions, including the United
Nations and Organization of African Unity, until the 100 days of
slaughter had virtually come to an end. Moreover, not only was the
genocide not prevented, it was not even marginally mitigated. From
the first day to the last, not a single reinforcement arrived in
Rwanda to bolster the puny UN force of 400 that was trying
desperately to save the relatively few Tutsi that it could.
Thus, the first lesson from Rwanda: the harsh unwelcome reminder -
as if the world needed another - that the global powers-that-be are
capable of almost infinite callousness and indifference to human
suffering if geopolitical or political interests were not at stake.
Calls for forceful intervention bases strictly on humanitarian
grounds, as we have learned the hard way once again in Darfur, are
simply irrelevant to those with the means to intervene.
Here I refer essentially to the Security Council, and within that
body to the remarkably powerful five Permanent Members (P5) who
alone hold a veto over all its resolutions. Since UN missions can
only be authorized by the Security Council, and since any one of
the P5 can veto any resolution, the leverage of the US, Britain,
France, Russia and China can hardly be exaggerated. Those who have
begged for a more assertive response in both Rwanda and Darfur
understand the immutability of this phenomenon.
Often, middle powers are looked to as a means to exert pressure on
the inner sanctum of the P5. Canada, northern Europe and the
Scandinavian countries are all seen, sometimes naively, as being
less in the thrall of self-interest and more open to humanitarian
projects. In trying to leverage action for Darfur, activists placed
considerable hope on these countries. The role of Belgium in 1994
shows both the leverage that a middle power can play and the
perverse use it can make of that leverage.
For 110 years prior to the Rwandan genocide, no external power
played a more deplorable role in Africa than Belgium - a tiny
country responsible for giant crimes against humanity. Its impact
on the Congo, Rwanda and Burundi was catastrophic. The turbulent
history of the entire Great Lakes region in the 20th century would
have been profoundly different if it had not been for Belgian
colonial rule. Now, just as the genocide was exploding across
Rwanda, the Belgian government sought to bring pressure on the
Security Council to withdraw in its entirety its 6-month old UN
Assistance Mission for Rwanda (UNAMIR). Ten of Belgium's UN troops
had been murdered by Rwandan government soldiers less than a day
after the genocide was triggered by the shooting down of the
Rwandan president's plane. The Belgian government decided it was
politically impossible for its troops to remain in Rwanda. Their
withdrawal very substantially undermined UNAMIR's capacity, and its
lethal consequences are not merely theoretical. It immediately and
directly led to the death of some 2500 Rwandans being protected by
Belgian troops at the Ecole Technique Officielle (ETO) school
compound in the capital, Kigali. At least the Belgian government
had the good sense to feel humiliated by the decision to abandon
Rwanda at its moment of greatest need, and sought to cover its
guilt by convincing the entire world to share its culpability.
To the everlasting sorrow of Rwanda, the Belgians found the
Administration of US President Bill Clinton ready and willing.
Largely for their own entirely short-term partisan reasons, with
pathological UN-hating Republicans breathing down their necks, the
Clintonites were unprepared to have anything whatever to do with
sending a new UN mission to a tiny African country which, as is
invariably said, almost no American could even find on a map. Among
the P5, France was the only country genuinely concerned about
Rwanda for its own perverse reasons of francophone solidarity, and
it was stealthily seeking a way to intervene on behalf of the Hutu
extremist genocidaire government. It was left to the US Ambassador
to the UN, Madeleine Albright, to lead a vigorous movement in the
Security Council to literally decimate UNAMIR's 2500-odd force.
Britain, for reasons British journalist-historian Linda Melvern is
still trying to unravel, fell in solidly behind the Americans.
Russia and China were largely uninterested, a situation that would
change significantly in the case of Darfur. At the end of the
genocide's second week, with an estimated 100,000 or more Tutsi and
almost all prominent moderate Hutu already dead, and the genocide
gaining daily momentum, the Security Council voted to reduce the
UNAMIR mission to 250 men. Force Commander Romeo Dallaire, furious
and sick at heart, disobeyed this explicit instruction and managed
to retain 400 men for the duration of the genocide.
Even now, it is impossible to recapitulate these events without
feeling they cannot possibly be true. But as virtually all
authorities on the subject agree, and as the Security Council's
reaction to Darfur a decade later make entirely plausible, they
were only too true, and their lesson was clear. ...
However, two other lessons of the international reaction,
distressing as they were at the time, seemed to offer a certain
hope for intervention in future crises. First were the lies told by
both US President Bill Clinton and UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
in later apologizing for their inaction during the 100 days. Both
claimed that they were insufficiently aware of the situation at the
time. These claims, on the part of both men, have been repudiated
beyond a shadow of a doubt. They knew everything, or at least
everything they wanted to know. Nevertheless, their very
disingenuousness permitted the inference that the next time
"another Rwanda" loomed, if it could attain a sufficiently high
public profile, the Security Council would have lost the excuse of
ignorance and have little alternative but to intervene. This
apparent truth initially gave heart to the movement to intervene in
Darfur.
Second, as already noted, almost no one in an official position at
the time agreed to characterize Rwanda as a genocide and, led again
by the Clinton administration, actually denied that a genocide was
in fact in progress. This refusal to affirm the obvious was again
tied directly to the Clintonites' electoral fears. Government
lawyers studying the 1948 Genocide Convention appear to have
decided that accepting the genocide label would trigger a major
obligation on the administration to intervene actively. That such
an interpretation was highly debatable is neither here nor there.
... ...
And indeed, Clinton's position that there was no full-blown
genocide in Rwanda unwittingly provided the glimmer of hope out of
an act of unsurpassed political opportunism. If Rwanda was "not
quite" a genocide, and therefore intervention was not obligatory,
it surely followed logically that if a genocide were declared in
future, would it not mean that intervention was mandatory,
inescapable? That logic, combined with the prospect that if a
disaster was well-enough publicized, the world would have little
choice but to move in, offered some real hope that the "next
Rwanda" would not be betrayed and abandoned as the original Rwanda
had been.
The next Rwanda
Then came Darfur. Less than a decade after Hutu Power was defeated,
the world had found its "next Rwanda". It is irrelevant to my
argument that serious genocide authorities disagree about whether
the conflict is a genocide or not. All agree that it had many of
the dimensions of a genocide, that it is an appalling catastrophe,
and that robust intervention is demanded. As we know, no such
intervention has occurred, and as this is written early in 2006,
the situation seems to have deteriorated substantially and become
even more complex - the almost inevitable consequence of the
world's meagre response to date. From the point of view of the
hopes raised by two of the optimistic lessons from Rwanda, the
response of the "international community" to the crisis in Darfur
can only be considered a giant, tragic set-back. It is not too much
to say that Darfur shows that only the first despairing lesson -
the bottomless cynicism and self-interest of the major powers -
-remains valid, while the hopes have been largely destroyed.
After all, by the middle of 2004, at the very latest, everyone who
counts knew that an overwhelming political and humanitarian
man-made disaster had befallen western Sudan. ...Everyone who
counts soon either visited Khartoum to plead with the Government of
Sudan that was orchestrating the crisis, or popped in at a
displaced persons or refugee camp in Darfur or across the border in
Chad. When Annan and Colin Powell make a stop somewhere, you know
that it's already a major story. It may not have competed with the
Michael Jackson trial, but even in the mainstream media, Darfur
stories, features and opinion pieces were remarkably common for a
crisis so remote and complex.
The crisis in Darfur, in other words, was fairly big news. This was
unlike Rwanda. Clinton and Annan knew all about Rwanda, but media
coverage for many weeks was both minimal and distorted ("tribal
savagery") so the public remained largely uninformed. Yet despite
Darfur's profile, the Security Council was effectively paralyzed by
the conflicting interests of the veto-casting P5. This time China,
thirsty for Sudan's oil, and Russia, anxious to sell arms to a
genocidal government, also played spoiler roles. The Council passed
a series of powder-puff resolutions each threatening the killers in
Khartoum that if they did not rein in their Janjaweed forces, they
would be forcefully confronted with - yet another resolution. ...
The role of the United States
Yet there was another reason for hope. Pushed by an unlikely
coalition of domestic pressure groups, the US Congress and
Executive publicly declared that Darfur constituted a genuine
genocide under the 1948 Convention. Such a radical and dramatic
step was unprecedented in American history. Both chambers of
Congress hastily and unanimously passed their own resolutions
declaring Darfur to be a genocide with barely an explanation, let
alone debate, and President Bush and Secretary of State Colin
Powell each eventually followed with their own concurring
declarations. To the genocide prevention community, this seemed the
moment they had so long dreamed of and planned for. What would be
the point of making this declaration unless significant action was
being planned? It was true the Bush government, and others, were
modestly generous in providing humanitarian aid to the displaced
and the refugees as well as funding for the Africa Union Mission to
Darfur. But now, surely, with these declarations, was the
long-awaited moment of qualitative escalation. Now we would see the
kind of forceful intervention denied Rwanda and that was crucial if
the travesty in Sudan was to be ended.
In fact, all that was needed was to pay heed to the second part of
Colin Powell's statement before the US Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. Yes, the US had decided, upon looking at evidence it had
specifically commissioned - the exact opposite of Rwanda - that a
genocide was taking place before the eyes of the world. Powell had
no doubt what the world expected next, and said so explicitly: "Mr.
Chairman, some seem to have been waiting for this determination of
genocide to take action. In fact, however, no new action is
dictated by this determination. We have been doing everything we
can to get the Sudanese government to act responsibly. So let us
not be preoccupied with this designation of genocide. These people
are in desperate need and we must help them. Call it a civil war.
Call it ethnic cleansing. Call it genocide. Call it 'none of the
above'. The reality is the same: there are people in Darfur who
desperately need our help." (US Department of State, "The Crisis In
Darfur," Written remarks before the Senate FRC, Washington, DC,
September 9, 2004).
How was this possible? Had the historic declaration of genocide
been nothing more than an opportunistic political ploy by the Bush
administration to assuage some domestic pressure groups? Could even
the Bush neocons be so cynical as to play politics with genocide?
If not, how could this wholly unanticipated development be
explained? How could the esteemed Colin Powell participate in this
destructive exercise which has done so much to debase the currency
of the Genocide Convention?
Within mere months of the American government's determination of
genocide in Darfur, a new Bush administration betrayal of Darfur
was exposed. First came the revelation that the CIA had sent a
plane to Khartoum to ferry the head of Sudanese intelligence,
General Salah Abdallah Gosh, to Washington for discussions with his
American peers on the "war against terror". Sudan, it appears, had
become "a crucial intelligence asset to the CIA." (Suzanne
Goldenberg, "Ostracized Sudan emerges as key American ally in 'war
on terror'," Guardian Weekly, May 6-12, 2005.) Never mind that
General Gosh's name is widely assumed to be among the 51 leading
Sudanese officials named by the UN-appointed International
Commission of Inquiry on Darfur. The "war on terrorism" obviously
trumps genocide. Later we learned just how close this tie really
was. In October 2005, Guardian reporter Jonathan Steele reported
the following:
"Question: When do Bush administration officials cuddle up to
leaders of states that the US describes as sponsors of
international terrorism? Answer: When they are in Khartoum. I know
because I saw it the other day . We were attending the closing
dinner of a 2-day conference of African counter-terrorism
officials, to which the US and UK were invited as observers. The
western spooks were less than happy to have the western press on
hand, especially as their names were called out. But loss of
anonymity was a small price for the excellent cooperation both
agencies believe Sudan is giving to keep tabs on Somali, Saudi and
other Arab fundamentalists who pass through its territory . [The
dinner] was in the garden of the headquarters of Sudan's
intelligence service, not far from the Nile. Up stepped a senior
CIA agent. In full view of the assembled company, he gave General
Salah Abdallah Gosh, Sudan's intelligence chief, a bear hug. The
general responded by handing over a goody-bag, wrapped in shiny
green paper. Next up was the [British] M16 official, with the same
effusive routine." (Jonathan Steele, "Darfur wasn't genocide and
Sudan is not a terrorist," Guardian, October 7, 2005.)
There are still Darfur activists who believe that despite close
working relationships between the Bush administration and precisely
those Sudanese leaders against whom the International Criminal
Court intends to issue warrants, the US can still be relied on as
an ally in pressuring Khartoum to end its war against the Fur and
other Africans. I wish I could agree. The Khartoum government is as
canny as it is treacherous, and blithely uses its leverage to
continue getting away with murder in Darfur. It now has trump cards
with the Americans, the Chinese and the Russians. Those of us who
urge intervention on strictly humanitarian grounds have no
comparable influence whatever. The result is virtually
pre-ordained: the death and rape and suffering in western Sudan
will continue.
...
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providing reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with
a particular focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus
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