Did We Really Care?

In 1994 the world watched a genocide and did NOTHING.

Beginning on April 6, 1994, Hutus began slaughtering the Tutsis in the African country of Rwanda. As the brutal killings continued, the world stood idly by and just watched the slaughter. Lasting 100 days, the Rwanda genocide left approximately 800,000 Tutsis and Hutu sympathizers dead.  Think about it 800,000 dead in just 100 days……not even the Nazis were capable of that……..

At 8:30 p.m. on April 6, 1994, President Juvénal Habyarimana of Rwanda was returning from a summit in Tanzania when a surface-to-air missile shot his plane out of the sky over Rwanda’s capital city of Kigali. All on board were killed in the crash.

Since 1973, President Habyarimana, a Hutu, had run a totalitarian regime in Rwanda, which had excluded all Tutsis from participating. That changed on August 3, 1993 when Habyarimana signed the Arusha Accords, which weakened the Hutu hold on Rwanda and allowed Tutsis to participate in the government. This greatly upset Hutu extremists.

Although it has never been determined who was truly responsible for the assassination, Hutu extremists profited the most from Habyarimana’s death. Within 24 hours after the crash, Hutu extremists had taken over the government, blamed the Tutsis for the assassination, and begun the slaughter.

While this was happening what was the rest of the world doing?  basically, ignoring the 800 lb gorilla in the room……..declassified documents tell part of the tale…….

Newly declassified cables from 1994 show that with Rwanda poised on the brink of genocide, world leaders were anxious to get UN peacekeeping forces out of the country as quickly as possible, reports the New York Times. They did so, and an estimated 800,000 people were massacred in 100 days. “It’s clear, in hindsight, that the pullout of peacekeeping was the green light for genocide,” says Tom Blanton of the National Security Archive at George Washington University. It obtained the 300 cables along with the Holocaust Museum and was highlighting them this week at a conference in the Hague on what world leaders did, and did not, do to stop the killing. (You can access the full trove here.)

The cables show that Bill Clinton’s White House—still stung from the “Black Hawk Down” disaster in Somalia only months earlier—pushed to remove the vast majority of the peacekeepers. One of the cables is from UN ambassador Madeleine Albright instructing the State Department to take that position. Albright recalls that she had been swayed by African criticism that a withdrawal would be a mistake, but she failed to convince the White House. “I was an instructed ambassador, not the secretary of state, but I do wish I had argued harder,” Albright tells the Times. The Security Council voted on April 21, 1994, to reduce the force from 2,100 troops to 270, and the Canadian leader of the force wrote that those who remained were “standing knee-deep in mutilated bodies.” Still classified are internal White House emails, which would shed further light on US decision-making.

We did NOTHING!  I realize that the central part of Africa holds little interests for us in the west…….but I recall someone after the holocaust saying that the world would never allow such a act again……idle words like so many of our other promises and statements.

We seem to be prepared to blame our prez and his staff for an incident in the recent past…..but if we hold them responsible for the inaction then I say lets hold ALL of them responsible…..for Beirut…..from Iraq…….ALL of them….unless all this is just what i think….a political game where No life is important just the outcome of an election.

And if that is the case then we are a PATHETIC LOT!

Day Of The Generals

I was going to be clever and write a piece about the situation with Bergdahl……but sine he is GUILTY…..at least he is in the minds of Americans because the media has made sure that he is seen as a guilty in the court of public opinion……I decided not to add any more to the mindless recriminations…….I shall move on.

Not much is being said these days about the 200+ girls that have been kidnapped in Nigeria…….that story was milked for all it was worth and having depleted the situation time for the media to move on…..unfortunately there are tenacious dicks like my self that will not let it go…..

I read the other day that the Nigerian government has banned the protests for the girls for they say it is not helping with the negotiations……..but digging below the media stuff I found a piece that could explain why Boko Haram is so well organized……

A report circulating through most major Nigerian newspapers says that ten Nigerian generals and five other senior officials in the Nigerian military have been found guilty of arming Boko Haram in a secret court-martial.

Nigeria’s military insists the reports are false, and part of a “plot” by persons unknown to harm Nigeria’s international standing.by portraying the military in a negative light.

The reports said that the generals were not only sending arms to the militants, but had also sent them information to help them ambush army convoys, and allowed rank-and-file soldiers to leave to go fight alongside Boko Haram and then return to barracks.

Leadership newspaper, which broke the story, quoted several unnamed military officers, who say they were told to keep the matter secret. President Goodluck Jonathan has previously said he believes some members of the military leadership and cabinet ministers are Boko Haram sympathizers.

There is the answer of why this situation has spiraled out of control……no matter the outcome of the girls situation Nigeria will remain a land of corruption, violence and uncertainty.

Side Note:

another police statement denied issuing any protest banning order, insisting that they had only released an “advisory notice”.

It said that there was a risk of the protest rallies being attacked by “criminal elements having links with insurgents”.

Those wanting to attend such gatherings should “seek proper advice and guidance from the police” in order to “avoid any unpleasant circumstances”, the statement said.