Global Research
Twenty Years Ago, The US was Behind the Genocide: Rwanda, Installing a US Proxy State in Central Africa
Author’s note
The world is currently commemorating the 20th
anniversary of the Rwandan genocide. The official story is that the
genocide directed against the Tutsi population was triggered by the
Interhamwe militia of the Habyarimana government in the wake of the
plane crash which led to the death of president Habyarimana. The
evidence suggests that the United States played a covert role in
shooting down the plane.
The geopolitics underlying the Rwandan genocide should be understood.
Whereas France was accused of supporting the
Habyarimana government. the United States played an undercover role in
triggering the genocide.
The ultimate objective was to displace France
from Central Africa. It is worth noting that that a similar situation is
unfolding in the Central African republic which historically has been
an area of French influence. Ethnic divisions between Christians and
Muslims are being fermented fomented the ultimate objective is to
establish a US proxy states in the Central African republic.
The 1994 Rwandan “genocide” served strictly strategic and geopolitical objectives. The ethnic massacres were a stumbling blow to France’s credibility which enabled the US to establish a neocolonial foothold in Central Africa. From a distinctly Franco-Belgian colonial setting, the Rwandan capital Kigali has become –under the expatriate Tutsi led RPF government– distinctly Anglo-American. English has become the dominant language in government and the private sector. Many private businesses owned by Hutus were taken over in 1994 by returning Tutsi expatriates. The latter had been exiled in Anglophone Africa, the US and Britain.The Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA) functions in English and Kinyarwanda, the University previously linked to France and Belgium functions in English. While English had become an official language alongside French and Kinyarwanda, French political and cultural influence will eventually be erased. Washington has become the new colonial master of a francophone country.
In the words of former Cooperation Minister Bernard Debré in the government of France’s Prime Minister Henri Balladur:
“What one forgets to say is that, if France was on one side, the Americans were on the other, arming the Ugandans, who armed the Tutsis. I don’t want to portray a showdown between the French and the Anglo-Saxons, but the truth must be told.” 43
Originally written in May 2000, published on
Global research in May 2003, the following text is Part II of Chapter 7
entitled “Economic Genocide in Rwanda”, Second Edition of The Globalization of Poverty and the New World Order , Global Research, 2003.
Michel Chossudovsky, April 6, 2014
* * *
Rwanda, Installing a US Protectorate in Central Africa. The US was Behind the Rwanda Genocide
by Michel ChossudovskyFirst published in May 2000, posted by Global Research May 2003
The civil war in Rwanda and the ethnic massacres were
an integral part of US foreign policy, carefully staged in accordance
with precise strategic and economic objectives.
From the outset of the Rwandan civil war in 1990, Washington’s hidden
agenda consisted in establishing an American sphere of influence in a
region historically dominated by France and Belgium. America’s design
was to displace France by supporting the Rwandan Patriotic Front and by
arming and equipping its military arm, the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA)
From the mid-1980s, the Kampala government under
President Yoweri Musaveni had become Washington’s African showpiece of
“democracy”. Uganda had also become a launchpad for US sponsored
guerilla movements into the Sudan, Rwanda and the Congo. Major General
Paul Kagame had been head of military intelligence in the Ugandan Armed
Forces; he had been trained at the U.S. Army Command and Staff College
(CGSC) in Leavenworth, Kansas which focuses on warfighting and military
strategy. Kagame returned from Leavenworth to lead the RPA, shortly
after the 1990 invasion.
Prior to the outbreak of the Rwandan civil war, the
RPA was part of the Ugandan Armed Forces. Shortly prior to the October
1990 invasion of Rwanda, military labels were switched. From one day to
the next, large numbers of Ugandan soldiers joined the ranks of the
Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA). Throughout the civil war, the RPA was
supplied from United People’s Defense Forces (UPDF) military bases
inside Uganda. The Tutsi commissioned officers in the Ugandan army took
over positions in the RPA. The October 1990 invasion by Ugandan forces
was presented to public opinion as a war of liberation by a Tutsi led
guerilla army.
Militarization of Uganda
The militarization of Uganda was an integral part of
US foreign policy. The build-up of the Ugandan UPDF Forces and of the
Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA) had been supported by the US and Britain.
The British had provided military training at the Jinja military base:
“From 1989 onwards, America supported joint RPF [Rwandan Patriotic Front]-Ugandan attacks upon Rwanda… There were at least 56 ‘situation reports’ in [US] State Department files in 1991… As American and British relations with Uganda and the RPF strengthened, so hostilities between Uganda and Rwanda escalated… By August 1990 the RPF had begun preparing an invasion with the full knowledge and approval of British intelligence. 20
Troops from Rwanda’s RPA and Uganda’s UPDF had also
supported John Garang’s People’s Liberation Army in its secessionist war
in southern Sudan. Washington was firmly behind these initiatives with
covert support provided by the CIA. 21
Moreover, under the Africa Crisis Reaction Initiative (ACRI),Ugandan officers were also being trained by US Special Forces in collaboration with a mercenary outfit, Military Professional Resources Inc (MPRI)
which was on contract with the US Department of State. MPRI had
provided similar training to the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) and the
Croatian Armed Forces during the Yugoslav civil war and more recently to
the Colombian Military in the context of Plan Colombia.
Militarization and the Ugandan External Debt
The buildup of the Ugandan external debt under
President Musaveni coincided chronologically with the Rwandan and
Congolese civil wars. With the accession of Musaveni to the presidency
in 1986, the Ugandan external debt stood at 1.3 billion dollars. With
the gush of fresh money, the external debt spiraled overnight,
increasing almost threefold to 3.7 billion by 1997. In fact, Uganda had
no outstanding debt to the World Bank at the outset of its “economic
recovery program”. By 1997, it owed almost 2 billion dollars solely to
the World Bank. 22
Where did the money go? The foreign loans to the
Musaveni government had been tagged to support the country’s economic
and social reconstruction. In the wake of a protracted civil war, the
IMF sponsored “economic stabilization program” required massive budget
cuts of all civilian programs.
The World Bank was responsible for monitoring the
Ugandan budget on behalf of the creditors. Under the “public expenditure
review” (PER), the government was obliged to fully reveal the precise
allocation of its budget. In other words, every single category of
expenditure –including the budget of the Ministry of Defense– was open
to scrutiny by the World Bank. Despite the austerity measures (imposed
solely on “civilian” expenditures), the donors had allowed defense
spending to increase without impediment.
Part of the money tagged for civilian programs had
been diverted into funding the United People’s Defense Force (UPDF)
which in turn was involved in military operations in Rwanda and the
Congo. The Ugandan external debt was being used to finance these
military operations on behalf of Washington with the country and its
people ultimately footing the bill. In fact by curbing social
expenditures, the austerity measures had facilitated the reallocation of
State of revenue in favor of the Ugandan military.
Financing both Sides in the Civil War
A similar process of financing military expenditure
from the external debt had occurred in Rwanda under the Habyarimana
government. In a cruel irony, both sides in the civil war were financed
by the same donors institutions with the World Bank acting as a
Watchdog.
The Habyarimana regime had at its disposal an arsenal
of military equipment, including 83mm missile launchers, French made
Blindicide, Belgian and German made light weaponry, and automatic
weapons such as kalachnikovs made in Egypt, China and South Africa [as
well as ... armored AML-60 and M3 armored vehicles.23 While part of
these purchases had been financed by direct military aid from France,
the influx of development loans from the World Bank's soft lending
affiliate the International Development Association (IDA), the African
Development Fund (AFD), the European Development Fund (EDF) as well as
from Germany, the United States, Belgium and Canada had been diverted
into funding the military and Interhamwe militia.
A detailed investigation of government files,
accounts and correspondence conducted in Rwanda in 1996-97 by the author
--together with Belgian economist Pierre Galand-- confirmed that many
of the arms purchases had been negotiated outside the framework of
government to government military aid agreements through various
intermediaries and private arms dealers. These transactions --recorded
as bona fide government expenditures-- had nonetheless been included in
the State budget which was under the supervision of the World Bank.
Large quantities of machetes and other items used in the 1994 ethnic
massacres --routinely classified as "civilian commodities" -- had been
imported through regular trading channels. 24
According to the files of the National Bank of Rwanda
(NBR), some of these imports had been financed in violation of
agreements signed with the donors. According to NBR records of import
invoices, approximately one million machetes had been imported through
various channels including Radio Mille Collines, an organization linked
to the Interhamwe militia and used to foment ethnic hatred. 25
The money had been earmarked by the donors to support
Rwanda's economic and social development. It was clearly stipulated
that funds could not be used to import: "military expenditures on arms,
ammunition and other military material". 26 In fact, the loan agreement
with the World Bank's IDA was even more stringent. The money could not
be used to import civilian commodities such as fuel, foodstuffs,
medicine, clothing and footwear "destined for military or paramilitary
use". The records of the NBR nonetheless confirm that the Habyarimana
government used World Bank money to finance the import of machetes which
had been routinely classified as imports of "civilian commodities." 27
An army of consultants and auditors had been sent in
by the World Bank to assess the Habyarimana government's "policy
performance" under the loan agreement.28 The use of donor funds to
import machetes and other material used in the massacres of civilians
did not show up in the independent audit commissioned by the government
and the World Bank. (under the IDA loan agreement. (IDA Credit
Agreement. 2271-RW).29 In 1993, the World Bank decided to suspend the
disbursement of the second installment of its IDA loan. There had been,
according to the World Bank mission unfortunate "slip-ups" and "delays"
in policy implementation. The free market reforms were no longer "on
track", the conditionalities --including the privatization of state
assets-- had not been met. The fact that the country was involved in a
civil war was not even mentioned. How the money was spent was never an
issue.30
Whereas the World Bank had frozen the second
installment (tranche) of the IDA loan, the money granted in 1991 had
been deposited in a Special Account at the Banque Bruxelles Lambert in
Brussels. This account remained open and accessible to the former regime
(in exile), two months after the April 1994 ethnic massacres.31
Postwar Cover-up
In the wake of the civil war, the World Bank sent a
mission to Kigali with a view to drafting a so-called loan "Completion
Report".32 This was a routine exercise, largely focussing on
macro-economic rather than political issues. The report acknowledged
that "the war effort prompted the [former] government to increase
substantially spending, well beyond the fiscal targets agreed under the
SAP.33 The misappropriation of World Bank money was not mentioned.
Instead the Habyarimana government was praised for having “made genuine
major efforts– especially in 1991– to reduce domestic and external
financial imbalances, eliminate distortions hampering export growth and
diversification and introduce market based mechanisms for resource
allocation…” 34, The massacres of civilians were not mentioned; from the
point of view of the donors, “nothing had happened”. In fact the World
Bank completion report failed to even acknowledge the existence of a
civil war prior to April 1994.
In the wake of the Civil War: Reinstating the IMF’s Deadly Economic Reforms
In 1995, barely a year after the 1994 ethnic
massacres. Rwanda’s external creditors entered into discussions with the
Tutsi led RPF government regarding the debts of the former regime which
had been used to finance the massacres. The RPF decided to fully
recognize the legitimacy of the “odious debts” of the 1990-94. RPF
strongman Vice-President Paul Kagame [now President] instructed the
Cabinet not to pursue the matter nor to approach the World Bank. Under
pressure from Washington, the RPF was not to enter into any form of
negotiations, let alone an informal dialogue with the donors.
The legitimacy of the wartime debts was never
questioned. Instead, the creditors had carefully set up procedures to
ensure their prompt reimbursement. In 1998 at a special donors’ meeting
in Stockholm, a Multilateral Trust Fund of 55.2 million dollars was set
up under the banner of postwar reconstruction.35 In fact, none of this
money was destined for Rwanda. It had been earmarked to service Rwanda’s
“odious debts” with the World Bank (–i.e. IDA debt), the African
Development Bank and the International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD).
In other words, “fresh money” –which Rwanda will
eventually have to reimburse– was lent to enable Rwanda to service the
debts used to finance the massacres. Old loans had been swapped for new
debts under the banner of post-war reconstruction.36 The “odious debts”
had been whitewashed, they had disappeared from the books. The
creditor’s responsibility had been erased. Moreover, the scam was also
conditional upon the acceptance of a new wave of IMF-World Bank reforms.
Post War “Reconstruction and Reconciliation”
Bitter economic medicine was imposed under the banner
of “reconstruction and reconciliation”. In fact the IMF post-conflict
reform package was far stringent than that imposed at the outset of the
civil war in 1990. While wages and employment had fallen to abysmally
low levels, the IMF had demanded a freeze on civil service wages
alongside a massive retrenchment of teachers and health workers. The
objective was to “restore macro-economic stability”. A downsizing of the
civil service was launched.37 Civil service wages were not to exceed
4.5 percent of GDP, so-called “unqualified civil servants” (mainly
teachers) were to be removed from the State payroll. 38
Meanwhile, the country’s per capita income had collapsed from $360
(prior to the war) to $140 in 1995. State revenues had been tagged to
service the external debt. Kigali’s Paris Club debts were rescheduled in
exchange for “free market” reforms. Remaining State assets were sold
off to foreign capital at bargain prices.
The Tutsi led RPF government rather than demanding
the cancellation of Rwanda’s odious debts, had welcomed the Bretton
Woods institutions with open arms. They needed the IMF “greenlight” to
boost the development of the military.
Despite the austerity measures, defense expenditure
continued to grow. The 1990-94 pattern had been reinstated. The
development loans granted since 1995 were not used to finance the
country’s economic and social development. Outside money had again been
diverted into financing a military buildup, this time of the Rwandan
Patriotic Army (RPA). And this build-up of the RPA occurred in the
period immediately preceding the outbreak of civil war in former Zaire.
Civil War in the Congo
Following the installation of a US client regime in
Rwanda in 1994, US trained Rwandan and Ugandan forces intervened in
former Zaire –a stronghold of French and Belgian influence under
President Mobutu Sese Seko. Amply documented, US special operations
troops — mainly Green Berets from the 3rd Special Forces Group based at
Fort Bragg, N.C.– had been actively training the RPA. This program was a
continuation of the covert support and military aid provided to the RPA
prior to 1994. In turn, the tragic outcome of the Rwandan civil war
including the refugee crisis had set the stage for the participation of
Ugandan and Rwandan RPA in the civil war in the Congo:
“Washington pumped military aid into Kagame’s army, and U.S. Army Special Forces and other military personnel trained hundreds of Rwandan troops. But Kagame and his colleagues had designs of their own. While the Green Berets trained the Rwandan Patriotic Army, that army was itself secretly training Zairian rebels.… [In] Rwanda, U.S. officials publicly portrayed their engagement with the army as almost entirely devoted to human rights training. But the Special Forces exercises also covered other areas, including combat skills… Hundreds of soldiers and officers were enrolled in U.S. training programs, both in Rwanda and in the United States… [C]onducted by U.S. Special Forces, Rwandans studied camouflage techniques, small-unit movement, troop-leading procedures, soldier-team development, [etc]… And while the training went on, U.S. officials were meeting regularly with Kagame and other senior Rwandan leaders to discuss the continuing military threat faced by the [former Rwandan] government [in exile] from inside Zaire… Clearly, the focus of Rwandan-U.S. military discussion had shifted from how to build human rights to how to combat an insurgency… With [Ugandan President] Museveni’s support, Kagame conceived a plan to back a rebel movement in eastern Zaire [headed by Laurent Desire Kabila] … The operation was launched in October 1996, just a few weeks after Kagame’s trip to Washington and the completion of the Special Forces training mission… Once the war [in the Congo] started, the United States provided “political assistance” to Rwanda,… An official of the U.S. Embassy in Kigali traveled to eastern Zaire numerous times to liaise with Kabila. Soon, the rebels had moved on. Brushing off the Zairian army with the help of the Rwandan forces, they marched through Africa’s third-largest nation in seven months, with only a few significant military engagements. Mobutu fled the capital, Kinshasa, in May 1997, and Kabila took power, changing the name of the country to Congo…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.39
American Mining Interests
At stake in these military operations in the Congo
were the extensive mining resources of Eastern and Southern Zaire
including strategic reserves of cobalt — of crucial importance for the
US defense industry. During the civil war several months before the
downfall of Mobutu, Laurent Desire Kabila based in Goma, Eastern Zaire
had renegotiated the mining contracts with several US and British mining
companies including American Mineral Fields (AMF), a company
headquartered in President Bill Clinton’s hometown of Hope, Arkansas.40
Meanwhile back in Washington, IMF officials were busy
reviewing Zaire’s macro-economic situation. No time was lost. The
post-Mobutu economic agenda had already been decided upon. In a study
released in April 1997 barely a month before President Mobutu Sese Seko
fled the country, the IMF had recommended “halting currency issue
completely and abruptly” as part of an economic recovery programme.41
And a few months later upon assuming power in Kinshasa, the new
government of Laurent Kabila Desire was ordered by the IMF to freeze
civil service wages with a view to “restoring macro-economic stability.”
Eroded by hyperinflation, the average public sector wage had fallen to
30,000 new Zaires (NZ) a month, the equivalent of one U.S. dollar.42
The IMF’s demands were tantamount to maintaining the
entire population in abysmal poverty. They precluded from the outset a
meaningful post-war economic reconstruction, thereby contributing to
fuelling the continuation of the Congolese civil war in which close to 2
million people have died.
Concluding Remarks
The civil war in Rwanda was a brutal struggle for
political power between the Hutu-led Habyarimana government supported by
France and the Tutsi Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) backed financially
and militarily by Washington. Ethnic rivalries were used deliberately in
the pursuit of geopolitical objectives. Both the CIA and French
intelligence were involved.
In the words of former Cooperation Minister Bernard Debré in the government of France’s Prime Minister Henri Balladur:
“What one forgets to say is that, if France was on one side, the Americans were on the other, arming the Ugandans, who armed the Tutsis. I don’t want to portray a showdown between the French and the Anglo-Saxons, but the truth must be told.” 43
In addition to military aid to the warring factions,
the influx of development loans played an important role in “financing
the conflict.” In other words, both the Ugandan and Rwanda external
debts were diverted into supporting the military and paramilitary.
Uganda’s external debt increased by more than 2 billion dollars, –i.e.
at a significantly faster pace than that of Rwanda (an increase of
approximately 250 million dollars from 1990 to 1994). In retrospect, the
RPA — financed by US military aid and Uganda’s external debt– was much
better equipped and trained than the Forces Armées du Rwanda (FAR) loyal
to President Habyarimana. From the outset, the RPA had a definite
military advantage over the FAR.
According to the testimony of Paul Mugabe, a former
member of the RPF High Command Unit, Major General Paul Kagame had
personally ordered the shooting down of President Habyarimana’s plane
with a view to taking control of the country. He was fully aware that
the assassination of Habyarimana would unleash “a genocide” against
Tutsi civilians. RPA forces had been fully deployed in Kigali at the
time the ethnic massacres took place and did not act to prevent it from
happening:
The decision of Paul Kagame to shoot Pres. Habyarimana’s aircraft was the catalyst of an unprecedented drama in Rwandan history, and Major-General Paul Kagame took that decision with all awareness. Kagame’s ambition caused the extermination of all of our families: Tutsis, Hutus and Twas. We all lost. Kagame’s take-over took away the lives of a large number of Tutsis and caused the unnecessary exodus of millions of Hutus, many of whom were innocent under the hands of the genocide ringleaders. Some naive Rwandans proclaimed Kagame as their savior, but time has demonstrated that it was he who caused our suffering and misfortunes… Can Kagame explain to the Rwandan people why he sent Claude Dusaidi and Charles Muligande to New York and Washington to stop the UN military intervention which was supposed to be sent and protect the Rwandan people from the genocide? The reason behind avoiding that military intervention was to allow the RPF leadership the takeover of the Kigali Government and to show the world that they – the RPF – were the ones who stopped the genocide. We will all remember that the genocide occurred during three months, even though Kagame has said that he was capable of stopping it the first week after the aircraft crash. Can Major-General Paul Kagame explain why he asked to MINUAR to leave Rwandan soil within hours while the UN was examining the possibility of increasing its troops in Rwanda in order to stop the genocide?44
Paul Mugabe’s testimony regarding the shooting down
of Habyarimana’s plane ordered by Kagame is corroborated by intelligence
documents and information presented to the French parliamentary
inquiry. Major General Paul Kagame was an instrument of Washington. The
loss of African lives did not matter. The civil war in Rwanda and the
ethnic massacres were an integral part of US foreign policy, carefully
staged in accordance with precise strategic and economic objectives.
Despite the good diplomatic relations between Paris
and Washington and the apparent unity of the Western military alliance,
it was an undeclared war between France and America. By supporting the
build up of Ugandan and Rwandan forces and by directly intervening in
the Congolese civil war, Washington also bears a direct responsibility
for the ethnic massacres committed in the Eastern Congo including
several hundred thousand people who died in refugee camps.
US policy-makers were fully aware that a catastrophe
was imminent. In fact four months before the genocide, the CIA had
warned the US State Department in a confidential brief that the Arusha
Accords would fail and “that if hostilities resumed, then upward of half
a million people would die”. 45 This information was withheld from the
United Nations: “it was not until the genocide was over that information
was passed to Maj.-Gen. Dallaire [who was in charge of UN forces in
Rwanda].” 46
Washington’s objective was to displace France,
discredit the French government (which had supported the Habyarimana
regime) and install an Anglo-American protectorate in Rwanda under Major
General Paul Kagame. Washington deliberately did nothing to prevent the
ethnic massacres.
When a UN force was put forth, Major General Paul
Kagame sought to delay its implementation stating that he would only
accept a peacekeeping force once the RPA was in control of Kigali.
Kagame “feared [that] the proposed United Nations force of more than
5,000 troops… [might] intervene to deprive them [the RPA] of victory”.47
Meanwhile the Security Council after deliberation and a report from
Secretary General Boutros Boutros Ghali decided to postpone its
intervention.
The 1994 Rwandan “genocide” served strictly strategic
and geopolitical objectives. The ethnic massacres were a stumbling blow
to France’s credibility which enabled the US to establish a neocolonial
foothold in Central Africa. From a distinctly Franco-Belgian colonial
setting, the Rwandan capital Kigali has become –under the expatriate
Tutsi led RPF government– distinctly Anglo-American. English has become
the dominant language in government and the private sector. Many private
businesses owned by Hutus were taken over in 1994 by returning Tutsi
expatriates. The latter had been exiled in Anglophone Africa, the US and
Britain.
The Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA) functions in English
and Kinyarwanda, the University previously linked to France and Belgium
functions in English. While English had become an official language
alongside French and Kinyarwanda, French political and cultural
influence will eventually be erased. Washington has become the new
colonial master of a francophone country.
Several other francophone countries in Sub-Saharan
Africa have entered into military cooperation agreements with the US.
These countries are slated by Washington to follow suit on the pattern
set in Rwanda. Meanwhile in francophone West Africa, the US dollar is
rapidly displacing the CFA Franc — which is linked in a currency board
arrangement to the French Treasury.
Notes (Endnote numbering as in the original chapter)
- Written in 1999, the following text is Part II of Chapter 5 of the Second Edition of The Globalization of Poverty and the New World Order. The first part of this chapter published in the first edition was written in 1994.
- Africa Direct, Submission to the UN Tribunal on Rwanda, http://www.junius.co.uk/africa- direct/tribunal.html Ibid.
- Africa’s New Look, Jane’s Foreign Report, August 14, 1997.
- Jim Mugunga, Uganda foreign debt hits Shs 4 trillion, The Monitor, Kampala, 19 February 1997.
- Michel Chossudovsky and Pierre Galand, L’usage de la dette exterieure du Rwanda, la responsabilité des créanciers, mission report, United Nations Development Program and Government of Rwanda, Ottawa and Brussels, 1997.
- Ibid
- Ibid
- ibid, the imports recorded were of the order of kg. 500.000 of machetes or approximately one million machetes.
- Ibid
- Ibid. See also schedule 1.2 of the Development Credit Agreement with IDA, Washington, 27 June 1991, CREDIT IDA 2271 RW.
- Chossudovsky and Galand, op cit
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- World Bank completion report, quoted in Chossudovsky and Galand, op cit.
- Ibid
- Ibid
- See World Bank, Rwanda at http://www.worldbank.org/afr/rw2.htm.
- Ibid, italics added
- A ceiling on the number of public employees had been set at 38,000 for 1998 down from 40,600 in 1997. See Letter of Intent of the Government of Rwanda including cover letter addressed to IMF Managing Director Michel Camdessus, IMF, Washington, http://www.imf.org/external/np/loi/060498.htm , 1998.
- Ibid.
- Lynne Duke Africans Use US Military Training in Unexpected Ways, Washington Post. July 14, 1998; p.A01.
- Musengwa Kayaya, U.S. Company To Invest in Zaire, Pan African News, 9 May 1997.
- International Monetary Fund, Zaire Hyperinflation 1990-1996, Washington, April 1997.
- Alain Shungu Ngongo, Zaire-Economy: How to Survive On a Dollar a Month, International Press Service, 6 June 1996.
- Quoted in Therese LeClerc. “Who is responsible for the genocide in Rwanda?”, World Socialist website at http://www.wsws.org/index.shtml , 29 April 1998.
- Paul Mugabe, The Shooting Down Of The Aircraft Carrying Rwandan President Habyarimama , testimony to the International Strategic Studies Association (ISSA), Alexandria, Virginia, 24 April 2000.
- Linda Melvern, Betrayal of the Century, Ottawa Citizen, Ottawa, 8 April 2000.
- Ibid
- Scott Peterson, Peacekeepers will not halt carnage, say Rwanda, rebels, Daily Telegraph, London, May 12, 1994.
About the author:
Michel Chossudovsky is an award-winning author, Professor of Economics (emeritus) at the University of Ottawa, Founder and Director of the Centre for Research on Globalization (CRG), Montreal and Editor of the globalresearch.ca website. He is the author of The Globalization of Poverty and The New World Order (2003) and America’s “War on Terrorism”(2005). His most recent book is entitled Towards a World War III Scenario: The Dangers of Nuclear War (2011). He is also a contributor to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. His writings have been published in more than twenty languages. He can be reached at crgeditor@yahoo.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Michel Chossudovsky est directeur du Centre de recherche sur la mondialisation et professeur émérite de sciences économiques à l’Université d’Ottawa. Il est l’auteur de "Guerre et mondialisation, La vérité derrière le 11 septembre", "La Mondialisation de la pauvreté et nouvel ordre mondial" (best-seller international publié en plus de 10 langues). Contact : crgeditor@yahoo.comRelated content:
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www.globalresearch.ca contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available to our readers under the provisions of "fair use" in an effort to advance a better understanding of political, economic and social issues. The material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material for purposes other than "fair use" you must request permission from the copyright owner.
For media inquiries: publications@globalresearch.ca
Copyright © Prof Michel Chossudovsky, Global Research, 2014
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