(globalPost) 7 armed conflicts the world failed to stop, proving we learned little from the Rwanda genocide

From: Biniam Tekle <biniamt_at_dehai.org_at_dehai.org>
Date: Thu, 10 Apr 2014 17:00:40 -0400

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/war/140407/7-armed-conflicts-prove-we-learned-nothing-rwanda-genocide-drc-syria-iraq-darfur-sudan-liberia-mexico

7 armed conflicts the world failed to stop, proving we learned little from
the Rwanda genocide

For 20 years, the world has been promising "never again." It's been an
empty promise.

Timothy McGrathApril 8, 2014 13:30

For those who lived through the genocide in Rwanda, the mass killings were
an indescribable horror. For those who watched from afar, it was an
international shame.

The world stood idle as an estimated 800,000 men, women, and children were
slaughtered in the course of 100 days in 1994. After, hanging its
collective head, the world promised that "never
again<http://www.neveragainrwanda.org/index.php/en/>"
would it allow such a horrifying conflict to unfold.

But even while making that promise, the world watched as people in Liberia
and the Democratic Republic of Congo killed and displaced each other by the
millions. Conflicts in Darfur and Syria would also later test the world's
"never again" resolve. The US invasion of Iraq and Mexico's drug war
created new armed conflicts that also failed to live up to the lofty
promise.

"Never again," it seems, was an empty promise. The world of international
actors capable of preventing or intervening in such conflicts has over and
over again avoided doing so, even when there was the political and public
will to do so.

Here are just seven examples:
1) Democratic Republic of Congo: First and Second Congo Wars and aftermath
(1996 - present)

Government soldiers in Zaire march after surrendering to the rebel forces
in 1997. (Alexander Joe/AFP/Getty Images)

Deaths: *5,000,000+*

The First and Second Congo Wars
developed<http://www.economist.com/node/18617876> directly
out of the Rwandan genocide. Mobutu Sese Seko, the president of the
Congolese nation then called Zaire, had supported the Hutu-led government
in Rwanda. When a Tutsi insurgency claimed power in Rwanda, more than a
million Hutus, many of whom had perpetrated the genocide against the
Tutsis, fled into Zaire and regrouped. Rwanda's Tutsi-led government then
supported an uprising against Mobuntu led by Laurent Kabila. Kabila seized
power on May 17, 1997, named himself president, and Zaire become the
Democratic Republic of Congo.

Kabila's rule over the DRC was not
very<http://partners.nytimes.com/library/world/africa/051797zaire-mobutu.html>
different
from Mobuntu's over Zaire. In an attempt to consolidate power, he expelled
foreign forces, including the Rwandan and Ugandan military forces that had
helped him win the rebellion. That sparked the second phase of the
conflict, which involved nine African nations, 20 rebel groups, and 40 to
50 sub-conflicts.

Despite peace accords signed in 2003, violence, famine, displacement, and
rape remain parts of daily life in the DRC, which is now host to one of the
world's worst humanitarian crises.
2) First and Second Liberian Civil Wars (1989-2003)

An 8-year-old boy, Kalashnikov gun in hand, loyal to the warlord Charles
Taylor, leads a group of soldiers in 1996 in Monrovia (AFP/Getty Images)

Deaths: *300,000+*

The First and Second Liberian Civil Wars involved
<http://www.policymic.com/articles/52977/this-is-what-liberia-looks-like-10-years-after-a-devastating-civil-war>the
rise and fall of the guerrilla revolutionary, eventual dictator and war
criminal Charles Taylor. Taylor became president of Liberia in 1997 after
leading a violent anti-government rebellion against President Samuel Doe in
1989. That was the First Liberian Civil War. Ten years later, a rebel group
supported by neighboring Guinea -- the Liberians United for Reconciliation
and Democracy --
reignited<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/02/weekinreview/02polgreen.html?pagewanted=all>
the
war against Taylor. Another rebel group, the Movement for Democracy in
Liberia, which was backed by the Ivory Coast, joined the fighting in 2003.
International pressure sent Taylor into exile and in 2012 the International
Criminal Court convicted Taylor of 11 war crimes related to his support of
rebels in Sierra Leone. He was sentenced to 50 years in prison.
3) Eritrean - Ethiopian War (1998-2000)

Eritrean soldiers in 1999, training at the Tsorona front line, south of
Asmara (AFP/Getty Images)

Deaths: *150,000 - 300,000*

A short and costly war, this one.

Eritrea split from Ethiopia in 1991 after a decades-long
war<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eritrean%E2%80%93Ethiopian_War> of
independence that began in 1961. It overlapped with the Ethiopian Civil War
that began in 1974. The 1998 war between the two enemy nations was over a
disputed territory called Badme, which the United Nations determined should
be under Eritrean control but remains occupied by Ethiopia to this day.
4) Darfur conflict (2003 - present)

Relatives mourn the death of 1-year-old Ali, who died of malnutrition at a
refugee camp in Darfour in 2004. (AFP/Getty Images)

Deaths: *300,000+*

In 2003, two rebel groups in the Darfur region of southwestern Sudan, the
Sudan Liberation Army and the Justice and Equality Movement, took up
arms<http://www.trust.org/spotlight/Darfur-conflict/> against
Omar al-Bashir's government in Khartoum, which they accused of oppressing
non-Arab Sudanese.

Khartoum responded <http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-22336600)> brutally.
Government forces joined with a Sudanese militia group, the Janjaweed, to
wage a campaign against Darfur that many in the international community,
including US Secretary of State Colin Powell, called genocide. Both sides
reached a cease-fire agreement in 2010, but violence has continued -- though
at diminished levels -- and a lasting peace seems unlikely to come any time
soon.

Bashir remains president of Sudan. He is the first sitting head-of-state to
be indicted for war
crimes<http://(http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/03/world/africa/africa-europe-summit-meeting.html>
by
the International Criminal Court.
5) Iraq: US invasion, insurgency, civil war (2003 - present)

Deaths: *100,000 - 600,000*
(disputed<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Iraq_War>
)

The US war in Iraq and the subsequent insurgency cost at least 100,000
military and civilian lives. (Some sources, including Lancet and PLOS
Medicine Survey, put the number at more than 500,000.) Among the dead were
nearly 4,500 American military personnel.

Since the withdrawal of US troops, sectarian violence has only
escalated<http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2014/04/deadly-violence-strikes-iraq-ahead-polls-20144611529617503.html>.
Recent violence has at times exceeded the worst of the war.

While the US invaded Iraq on what it claimed were humanitarian and security
reasons -- to free Iraqis from Saddam Hussein and prevent the leader from
using his weapons of mass destruction -- no such weapons were ever found and
with no post-war plan for rebuilding, the country unraveled into violent
chaos. Despite ongoing sectarian conflict and near daily bombings, Iraq is
all but ignored these days.
6) Mexican Drug War (2006 - present)

Military police stand guard at the scene of a murder on March 23, 2010 in
Juarez, Mexico (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Deaths: *60,000+*

Since 2006, rival drug cartels have turned some parts of Mexico into war
zones. Mexican police and military forces seem unable to control the
violence. Across the border in the United States, demand for drugs, gun
trafficking, and ineffectual drug policy fuel the killing.

Mexico's government put the official death
toll<http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/calderon-finishes-his-six-year-drug-war-at-stalemate/2012/11/26/82c90a94-31eb-11e2-92f0-496af208bf23_story_1.html>
at
60,000 at the end of 2012.

The actual death toll is likely much
higher<http://justiceinmexico.org/data-portal/homicides/>,
but experts are encountering something the Justice in Mexico Project, a
research initiative at the University of California in San Diego, calls a
"methodological problem." While news media refer to "drug-related
homicides," there's no formal definition of "drug-related homicide" in
Mexican criminal law, so it's difficult to account for the total deaths
directly or indirectly related to the Mexican drug war.

Suffice to say, it's bad.
7) Syrian conflict (2011 - present)

President Bashar al-Assad attends an Arab-African joint summit in the
Libyan coastal city of Sirte in 2010 (KHALED DESOUKI AFP/Getty Images)

Deaths: *150,000+*

Syria's peaceful Arab Spring
uprising<http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/thomson-reuters/140407/syrias-assad-secure-will-seek-re-election-hezbollah-leader>
against
President Bashar al-Assad has turned into a nightmare lasting three years
and counting. Assad reacted to the protests brutally, giving rise to an
armed rebel movement. Foreign militants then seized on the chaos, entering
the country to fight for their own ends, turning some segments of the
rebels into Al Qaeda-styled terrorist groups. It only gets more complicated
from there. The international community, wary of supporting the wrong
rebels, is instead sitting on its collective hands. Meanwhile, the death
toll rises and the slogan "never again" appears as distant as ever.
GlobalPost covers<http://www.globalpost.com/globalpost-blogs/meanwhile-syria>
the
Syrian crisis daily.
Received on Thu Apr 10 2014 - 17:00:41 EDT

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