|
September 22, 2003From Rwanda, Truthby Joe Katzman at September 22, 2003 12:43 AM
Rwanda isn't part of our War on Terror briefings today [Iraq | The Wider War], but it's worth your attention for other reasons. How could Andrew Apostolu possibly find this Guardian article 'uninteresting'? Good grief, it's just choc-a-bloc with interesting stuff. Things like:
I, too, would trust a gathering of illiterate African villagers over anything the U.N. might attempt. Nor is this the only good news out of Rwanda:
That last bit about non-ethnic voting is incredibly important, because it's such a huge departure for Africa. Of course, "caring" international NGOs are upset over the Gacaca process, and over the executions of 20 perpetrators of genocide. Which bring us to the 2 most telling paragraphs in the whole piece, as the NGO set and the French get theirs in quick succession: "With a few exceptions, the donor community in Kigali and western NGOs criticise the government in notably similar terms... Kagame is cool about the criticisms: "It is because we want to do things our own way - they want to give lessons ... We just have to go on with our own business of changing lives here." Well. Doesn't that just sum up the 'Toyota Taliban' NGOs and the French in 2 neat paragraphs? Tracked: September 23, 2003 2:00 AM
UN-accepting from Low Earth Orbit
Excerpt: From Winds of Change comes yet another story of UN and French hostility to nations that are recovering from war...
Comments
Fascinating. Thank you for linking to this. It would be nice to get another view—not just because the article appeared in the Guardian, but also because the article’s longer version is in The Nation. I do hope that the news from Rwanda is in fact good. And the role of France! It would be interesting to see a compilation of criticisms of France from across the political spectrum. Or a compilation of URLs leading to such. "It would be interesting to see a compilation of criticisms of France from across the political spectrum." I was just thinking the same thing, especially when reading stuff like this and various blog comments praising France for standing up to the Colonialist Imperialist American Hegemon ™. Winds of Change: Re: From Rwanda, Truth Joe Katzman September 22, 2003 Thanks for pointing us to the Guardian article. And we liked your readers' suggestion that "It would be interesting to see a compilation of criticisms of France from across the political spectrum." Here's our contribution: Rwanda, France and NGO's: Trócaire: A Chronicle of a Pious Fraud (Discusses an Irish Catholic "charity"'s counter-factual exploitation of the Rwanda myth (among other things) to con citizens and the Government out of millions.) France: The Irresponsible, Badly Brought Up, Infantile Dutch The French Leave Us At A Loss for Words False Comfort More on Ireland's Favourite NGO: Fischler: NGO's Responsible for Cancun Failure Earth to Trócaire Eric Hobsbawm and Trócaire Justin Kilcullen (Trocaire) Trócaire Continues its Cognative Dissonance Cancún: What Went Wrong? Trócaire at Cancún Bran at Blog-Irish.com How could we have fogotten our first "French" piece, "Lara Marlowe: Fine Wine and Fine Distinctions" www.blog-irish.com/marlowe2.htm in which we pointed out that the world wide wine glut, not Francophobia, was hurting French wine sales, and concluded "Shrill screams of European victimhood in the face of the market facts, laughable media misrepresentation of significant trans-Atlantic issues such as claiming that "making France suffer" is "official US Government policy", and gross, xenophobic, poor sportsmanship at international matches are not what we need now. "The Americans might come back to the UN if we stop screaming untruths at them. BRAN (Posted on June 26, 2003)" For the straight dope on what happened in Rwanda, get the book "The Rwanda Crisis" by Gerard Prunier. He is French, and has lots of information about what the French did -- up to, and including, training the militias which later committed the genocide. One of the footnotes (to a passage describing the French mentality) reads "The author of this book, being French, is also obviously a traitor because he writes in English. He was told so in no uncertain terms by an interestingly wide cross-section of academics, army officers, and politicians. Only journalists seemed immune, probably because they had fallen under the spell of the modern world-wide Anglo-Saxon culture." Prunier was brought in (as an outside specialist) to be involved in the planning of Operation Turquoise -- which he would not have joined if it had really been an operation to protect France's old clients even after they had committed genocide. (But he wasn't sure that wasn't the aim until he posed a change of plans to them -- to send the French troops to an area where they could do more good -- which was accepted.)
#6 from John Van Laer at 4:58 am on Sep 23, 2003
I'm sorry to have to disagree with Norman Yarvin, but Prunier's account of the benign role of the French army in Operation Turquoise is a whitewash. I lived in France all through the 90's, when the French press was a lot more free and diverse than it seems to be today. Mags such as Le Point & L'Express had real journalists on the scene who reported the action of the French army, which supported the Interahamwe, the machete-wielding militia created by the late President Juvenal Habyarimana. After he was assassinated by the political opposition, his widow's newspaper and radio station whipped the militia into a berserker frenzy. She and her close associates instigated and prolonged the massacre. Most of the masses of refugees who seemed to be fleeing the Rwandan Patriotic Front were simply hostages, permitted to live by the Interahamwe thugs who drove them into exile in Zaire, where the French set up internment camps near Bukavu with the complicity of Mobutu. Operation Turquoise created a huge salient in southwestern Rwanda, where Mme. President's radio station continued to broadcast under the French aegis. The radio spread panic among the people, urging them to flee, and continued to whip up the killing frenzy of the Interahamwe. When Kigali fell the thugs and their leaders, Mme. Habyarimana included, sought refuge in the French army salient. The army exfiltrated them into Zaire, rearmed the thugs and put them in charge of the internment camps, then flew the VIPs to France. Mme. H and her coterie of war criminals remained as guests of France, housed in luxury in the flossy 16th Arrondissement of Paris until their presence scandalized even the French. Ultimately, they were scattered widely throughout France's former colonies in West Africa. The moral of this dreary tale is blindingly obvious. At all costs, do not accept French assistance in Iraq. Hmm, perhaps I worded that a bit wrong. What Prunier was worried about, with Operation Turquoise, was whether it was intended as an operation to defeat the Rwandan Patriotic Front -- which would inevitably have served to prop up France's genocidal former-allies. This is a much worse possibility than anything that happened. Yet Prunier had good reasons to consider that possibility; he writes, for instance, that "After talking with General Mercier who was in charge of the overall planning for the operation [Turquoise], I felt that he, at least, had no hidden agenda. But I could not be sure about some other officers who were grumbling in the aisles about 'breaking the back of the RPF'." In any case, the official position was that this was a purely humanitarian operation -- they wouldn't fight unless attacked (and they didn't, though Prunier had to do a lot of talking merely to get them to have any communications with the RPF), and they wouldn't get involved in politics (which explains ignoring the radio station). Just go in, rescue some of the few surviving Tutsi (the genocide had been going on for two months already, and was basically over) to look good for the TV cameras, and leave. Even saving the lives of mass murderers fits in fine to this humanitarianism-uber-alles attitude. Arming genocidal thugs doesn't fit (it would have to be done on the sly); but giving genocidal thugs control of food, which they then sell for arms, does fit. As for leaving the thugs in charge of the camps, those thugs had been the government; it was natural to leave them in charge. The bulk of the people were so enervated by decades of totalitarian government that they were mentally unfit to take charge. (This is not an excuse for the French; they had been the chief foreign supporter of that totalitarian government.) What I just called the humanitarianism-uber-alles attitude -- the mindset that tries to fix effects of evil deeds without going after the evildoers -- is a mindset that deserves strong condemnation, but a mindset that is much larger than France. It wasn't just the French who shipped food to the genocidal Rwandan exiles in Zaire -- food some of which was sold to buy weapons. And it wasn't just in the Rwanda episode that "humanitarian" food aid was sold to buy weapons; the same thing happened for many years in Somalia, and something very similar happened in Iraq with the "food for oil" program. When it was the contras in Nicaragua who were being shipped "humanitarian aid", the media saw through the pretense instantly; but in other cases their vision has not been nearly so penetrating.
#8 from JFM at 1:33 pm on Sep 25, 2003
At that time there was struggle of power in France: Mitterrand, the left wing president
wanted the French army kicking FPR ass and sending it back to Uganda. Apparently the extermination of a bunch of niggers (sorry about the word) was less important than the defence of francophony and of France's interest in Rwanda. Balladur, the right wing prime minister, and thus in control of the money, opposed to Mitterand's plans. I don't know if it was for moral reasons (he is a devout Catholic) or for financial/political reasons (elections were scheduled for following year)
The compromise was Operation Turquoise.
I am still prone to fits of rage when I remember
#9 from Trent Telenko at 4:17 pm on Sep 25, 2003
France is the friend of evil, tyranny and genocide everywhere. Never forget it.
Post a comment
Here are some quick tips for adding simple Textile formatting to your comments, though you can also use proper HTML tags: |
You're Reading an Individual Post!
If you want to head to the main blog page, just follow the "Main" link in the navigation up top underneath our blog's name. Or click here:
Winds of Change.NET Home
Project Valour-IT
Winds of Change Library
Recent Entries
· Mumbai Aftermath: 2 Snippets
· "A Bad News Guy In A Bad News World" · What's Next in Iraq · Political Weenie Report: Why Cure a White Male Disease? · What If An Ad Agency Created the Stop Sign? · Stupid Government Tricks: Carpooling in Ontario · The Psychology of the Con · Thanksgiving Morning 2008 · Project Valour-IT · Winning In Afghanistan: A British View · Changing Winds · TAREK VERSUS TARIQ · Turkey · Hoder in Jail in Iran · Obama's Web 2.0 Communication Strategy
Support Winds of Change.NET!
Your support & assistance is greatly appreciated, and makes a difference!
The Winds Crew:
Town Founder: Joe Katzman joe {at} windsofchange. net Joe's Normblog Interview Left-Hand Man: Marc 'Armed Liberal' Danziger armed {at} windsofchange. net A.L.'s Normblog Interview Other Winds Marshals 'AMac', aka. Marshal Festus (AMac@...) Robin "Straight Shooter" Burk 'Cicero', aka. The Quiet Man (cicero@...) David Blue (david.blue@...) 'Lewy14', aka. Marshal Leroy (lewy14@...) 'Nortius Maximus', aka. Big Tuna (nortius.maximus@...) Other Regulars 'Callimachus' (callimachus@...) 'Demosophist' (demosophist@...) Rev./Maj. Donald Sensing 'Molon Labe' (molon.labe@...) 'Neo Neo-Con' Tarek Heggy (tarek@...) Semi-Active: Arthur Chrenkoff 'Gabriel Gonzalez' (in Paris) Tim Oren (tim@...) Trent Telenko (trent@...) Posting Affiliates Athena: Terrorism Unveiled Chester: The Adventures of Chester Dave Schuler: The Glittering Eye Grim: Grim's Lair et. al. Joel Gaines [Russia] Michael Totten MILblogging.com: The MilBlogs directory Murdoc [Military] Situational Awareness team [Military] Nathan Hamm [Central Asia] Randy Paul [Latin America] Robert Koehler [Koreas] Robi Sen [India & S. Asia] Nitin Pai [India & S. Asia] Simon [China & E. Asia] Yehudit: Kesher Talk Emeritus: Adil Farooq (adil@...) Andrew Olmsted [KIA, Iraq] Celeste Bilby (celeste@...) Dan Darling Gary Farber (gary@...) Hossein Derakhshan (hoder@...) T.L. James (tljames@...) Robin Burk (robin@...)
Winds of Change.NET Blogkids & Affiliates
· The Argus: covering Central Asia · Canis Iratus: Glen Wishard · Correct-Amundo: Tech & society · Discarded Lies: Ev & Zorkie · The Flying Kiwi: Donovan Janus · The Glittering Eye: Dave Schuler · Gumptionology: Nortius Maximus · Hot Needle of Inquiry: 'Jinnderella' · Laughing Wolf: C. Blake Powers · Out The Mazoo: 'Mazoo' · Power and Control: M. Simon · Praktike's Place: 'Praktike' · Random Probabilities: Robin Burk · Siberian Light: covering Russia · The Spirit of Man · Good News From the Front · WATCH/: covering the war on terror
Archives By Category
-FEATURES: 48 Ways to Wisdom (24)
-FEATURES: Diaries & Roundups (10) -FEATURES: Military Transformation Uplink (12) -FEATURES: New Energy Currents (20) -FEATURES: Reader Highlights (2) -FEATURES: Regional Briefings (166) -FEATURES: Sufi Wisdom (158) -FEATURES: The Bard's Breath (32) -FEATURES: Winds of Discovery (6) -FEATURES: Winds of War [WoT] (445) 4 HA: 4th-Gen Warfare (103) 4 HA: al-Qaeda (159) 4 HA: Crime, Organized (26) 4 HA: Evil Exists (111) 4 HA: Intelligence/Spycraft (101) 4 HA: Military (531) 4 HA: Nukes, Poisons, Germs (136) 4 HA: Statecraft (29) 4 HA: War on Terror articles (710) Best Of... (180) BIZ: Business & Organizations (137) BIZ: Economics (103) BIZ: Energy (75) CIVIS (236) CIVIS: Copyright Wars (25) CIVIS: Drug Wars (18) CIVIS: Edu-Kooks (76) CIVIS: Free Societies (296) CIVIS: Hall of Shame (164) CIVIS: Hatred Rising (114) CIVIS: Journalism & Media (413) CIVIS: Spirit of America.NET (32) CIVIS: War Within the West (313) COLUMNISTS: M. Simon (13) COLUMNISTS: Tarek Heggy (33) GEO: Afghanistan (80) GEO: Africa (104) GEO: Asia (117) GEO: Aussies & Kiwis (22) GEO: Canada (72) GEO: China (87) GEO: Europe (183) GEO: France (71) GEO: India-Pakistan (114) GEO: Iran (224) GEO: Iraq (968) GEO: Israel (249) GEO: Koreas (64) GEO: Latin America (63) GEO: Middle East (257) GEO: Russia (83) GEO: Saudi Arabia (64) GEO: Sudan (36) GEO: U.K. (71) GEO: U.N. (61) GEO: U.S. of A (506) HUMANITY (89) HUMANITY: Art & Culture (161) HUMANITY: Art - Music (32) HUMANITY: Art - Poetry (6) HUMANITY: Christianity (53) HUMANITY: Heroes & Achievements (232) HUMANITY: History (126) HUMANITY: Islam (184) HUMANITY: Judaism (137) HUMANITY: Love (32) HUMANITY: Philosophy (49) HUMANITY: Spirituality & Religion (74) HUMANITY: Zen & Buddhism (28) Humour (200) Misc. (44) NET: Blogosphere (397) NET: Cyber-Security (16) NET: Grid Computing (3) NET: Spam (24) NET: The Internet (39) NET: The Open Source Meme (18) Personal (199) SCI-TECH: Biotech & Medical (84) SCI-TECH: Eco-tech (82) SCI-TECH: Nanotech (27) SCI-TECH: Science (113) SCI-TECH: Space (75) SCI-TECH: Technology (146) SPORTS (45) SPORTS: Baseball (76) Trends (66) USA: America Catch-all (20) USA: Anti-Americanism (6) USA: California Politics (16) USA: Conservatives & GOP (43) USA: Dem Party Renewal (77) USA: Domestic Issues (56) USA: Elections (132) USA: Grand Strategy (15) USA: Homeland Security (106) VictoryPAC (3) Winds of Change.NET (56)
Archives by Date
December 2008
November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 September 2007 August 2007 July 2007 June 2007 May 2007 April 2007 March 2007 February 2007 January 2007 December 2006 November 2006 October 2006 September 2006 August 2006 July 2006 June 2006 May 2006 April 2006 March 2006 February 2006 January 2006 December 2005 November 2005 October 2005 September 2005 August 2005 July 2005 June 2005 May 2005 April 2005 March 2005 February 2005 January 2005 December 2004 November 2004 October 2004 September 2004 August 2004 July 2004 June 2004 May 2004 April 2004 March 2004 February 2004 January 2004 December 2003 November 2003 October 2003 September 2003 August 2003 July 2003 June 2003 May 2003 April 2003 March 2003 February 2003 January 2003 November 2002 October 2002 September 2002 August 2002 July 2002 June 2002 May 2002 April 2002 Joe's Old Archives, By Title: April - June 2002 July - December 2002
Winds Blogroll
Top Prospects
SP Normblog (LHP) SP Solomonia (RHP) RF Mader Blog CF Donklephant LF Harry's Place C Critical Mass 1B Tigerhawk 2B Gideon's Blog SS Alexander the Average 3B Democracy Arsenal UT INF Pundita DH Counterterrorism Blog PEN Liberals Against Terrorism CL Gates of Vienna MASCOT Huffington's Toast MGR Robert Tagorda GM Conservative Grapevine Humour Blogs
Support VictoryPAC· Cox & Forkum (cartoons) · Day By Day (cartoons) · User Friendly (cartoons) · Iowahawk (satire) · Scrappleface (satire) Religious Blogs · Conscientia (baha'i) · Unlearned Hand (bud) · Eve Tushnet (cath) · Muslim Under Progress (isl) · Ideofact (isl) · Kesher Talk (jew) · Rabbi Lazer Brody (jew) · Rishon Rishon (jew) · Rev. Donald Sensing (prot) Other Team Memberships · AlwaysOn [JK] · Blogcritics.org [JK] · Tech Central Station [JK] Blog Services< · NZ Bear's Ecosystem · Blogstreet · Daypop Top 40 · Technorati · Movable Type.org · New York Times Permalinks · Write A Better Blog |
http://www.windsofchange.net/windsopcentre-cms/trackback.cgi/1813
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference
"From Rwanda, Truth"