Last week, news came over the wire that all the countries of the Great Lakes region had agreed to send a neutral force to attack the M23 and FDLR rebels. Can it be? Are we entering into a new phase of the Congolese crisis?
Maybe, but we should reserve some
healthy skepticism.
First, a few words about the deal
itself (it can be read here), which was the result of consultations among
members of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR). The
most important points are:
- The ICGLR will work with the AU and the UN to create a neutral force "to eradicate M23, FDLR and all other Negative Forces in the Eastern DRC;
- The Congolese and Rwandan governments should operationalize the Joint Verification Mechanism and open it to other ICGLR member states;
- The UN should help create a new (old) team of Special Envoys led (again) by Benjamin Mkapa and Olusegun Obasanjo;
- The ICLGR will set up its own Group of Experts to compile a report (on what?) for the Conference.
I will skip over some of these
points, although some of them, like sending Obasanjo back to the region, have
raised many eyebrows. One might also wonder why we need another Group of Experts
- is it to fact-check the UN Group of Experts? (Hint: yes).
Of course, the most important
decision was the creation of a new military mission. The details are supposed to
be hammered out in a bilateral meeting in Uganda on August 7.
The geo-politics is intriguing:
It apparently took a lot of convincing to make the Rwandan government accept to
give M23 the same "negative forces" status as the FDLR, and some say the Ugandan
foreign minister helped pressure Rwanda into accepting this deal. The South
Africans, who are now at the helm of the African Union and have their own axe to
grind with Rwanda over the Kayumba Nyamwasa assassination attempt in their
country, were also reportedly outspoken.
In any case, it would indeed be a
sight to behold if AU troops were deployed to hunt down M23 officers in the
hills of Runyoni. But will this ever happen?
Deploying such a mission will
require political will and deep pockets, two factors that have been in
relatively short supply with regards to these questions in the past. As a
reminder, the region wanted MONUC to have the role of hunting down the FDLR in
its initial mandate, but the UN Security Council demurred. As recent as 2005, an
African Union force of 10,000 was tabled to pursue FDLR and other "negative
forces" in the region, but it never materialized.
Given this past, did the ICLGR
bite off more than it can chew? Some Congolese diplomats I have spoken with
worry that by asking too much, the ICGLR is setting itself up for failure. Why
not pursue the more achievable goal of creating mixed patrols out of Congolese,
Rwanda and UN troops along the Rwandan border, across which the alleged supply
lines for the M23 pass? This could have been set up relatively quickly, whereas
a neutral force could take months of not years to deploy, during which time the
situation on the ground could change. Was this not a way, these diplomats asked,
to win some time for the M23 to advance?
In the meantime, the diplomatic
dance has continued. US Special Advisor Barry Walkley visited Kigali two weeks
ago and met with foreign minister Louise Mushikwabo; the message was reportedly
stern, and the answer unsurprising. There have also been calls between
Washington and Kigali, and the US has cut a symbolic amount of $200,000 in
military support to Rwanda, and has canceled a couple high-levels trips to
Kigali. However it is less clear whether the visit by British Development
Secretary Andrew Mitchell to Kigali was similarly critical.
In the meantime, the situation is
changing on the ground. According to several reports, a coalition of Mai-Mai and
Raia Mutomboki took control of Walikale this morning. They suggest that Tsheka
Ntaberi, a notorious Mai-Mai commander, figured in this coalition. This raises
the possibility that the offensive is linked to the M23, as Tsheka has had tight
links with Bosco Ntaganda and other ex-CNDP commanders in the past. Also, there
are reports from both South Kivu and Ituri that M23 has been intensifying its
outreach efforts to armed groups there, as already was documented in the UN
Group of Experts report; it is not yet clear how successful these efforts have
been.
So back to the initial question:
Can a neutral force save the Kivus? Perhaps, although it would be a further
militarization of an already militarized approach to the conflict in the region.
But more to the point, it is far from sure than such a force will ever
materialize.
Source: Congo Siasa Blog, Tuesday, July 17, 2012
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