________________________________________________________________ Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 Sender: Nicholas Treanor <•••@••.•••> Subject: Re: cj#614> ZAIRE AND YANKEE IMPERIALISM (fwd) On Tue, 3 Dec 1996, Richard K. Moore wrote: > The question I ask, assuming credibility for the analysis, regards > the scope of the actual U.S. objectives. Do the U.S. "imperialist > interests", whatever those might be, fully explain the promotion of > large-scale genocidal inter-tribal warfare? Could genocide itself, as > suggested in "cj#603> 'The only good Injun is a dead Injun' still", be a > covert objective? According to the analysis, the American interests and influence are with the Tutsi (the present group governing Rwanda). The most recent genocide in this area was undertaken by Hutus _against_ Tutsi. The question you should be asking, I think, is whether the government of France, which is actively involved (according to the analysis) with the Hutus, may have genocide as a covert objective. It wouldn't surprise me, judging by how little regard for humanity in general the French government recently demonstrated in its south Pacific nuclear tests. Nick. ________________________________________________________________ Dear Nick, Well, I wouldn't defend the French policies here, and clearly France and the U.S. are both major leaders in the drive toward neoliberal globalization. It's even possible France & the U.S. are acting in concert, playing at geopolitical games for other purposes. But my intuition tells me that France is more tangled up in traditional imperialist policies and national-pride issues, and isn't playing any deeper game. I suspect the U.S. of taking the more strategic position, viewing France's policies as a given, and choosing its own policy on the basis of how it will interact with France's, and what consequences that will lead to. This intuition arises partly from my reading of David Stockman's "In Search of Enemies", which described how the Angolan civil war got started. Basically what happened there is that the U.S. surveyed the various factions and picked one to back based on how effective they'd be in stirring up trouble. There was no concern with their ideology or likelihood of success, but rather the concern was for making as big a civil war as possible, so as to maximize the economic loss to the Soviets in backing the other side. And again, in the case of the Kurds, the U.S. repeatedly, over decades, alternated in backing them and abandoning them, as a pawn in playing off Iran and Iraq against each other, and more recently in making points with Turkey. Kissinger acknowledged this situation, and characterized it with some off-hand comment at the level of omelettes and broken eggs. The French may show "little regard" for humanity, but the U.S. seems more adept at outright cynical manipulation. Thoughts? -rkm ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~ Posted by Richard K. Moore - •••@••.••• - Wexford, Ireland Cyberlib: www | ftp --> ftp://ftp.iol.ie/users/rkmoore/cyberlib ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~
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