The French Betrayal of Rwanda

INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780253219749

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By Daniela Kroslak
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INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
235 x 156 mm
Weight:
430 g
Pages:
322

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Description

Daniela Kroslak is a conflict analyst at the United Nations Mission to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Acknowledgments Abbreviations Glossary Personalities 1. The Rwandan Genocide and French Responsibility 2. What Led to the Genocide: A Historical Background 3. The Complexity of French Policy in Africa 4. Preparing for the Unimaginable: What the French Knew 5. The "Chapitre Noir " of French African Policy 6. Prevention Possible? What the French Could Have Done 7. "We Know but We Won't Tell" 8. Too Little Too Late 9. What the French Could Have Done 10. Facing Responsibility Appendix 1: Chronology Appendix 2: Genocide Convention Bibliography Index

"Increasingly, genocide scholars question whether the Rwandan catastrophe would have occurred were it not for policies shaped in Paris. From the beginning of the slaughter, France was proactive in supporting the regime that promoted Hutu superiority and opposing the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) that finally did end the genocide. Unlike the US (see Jared Cohen's One Hundred Days of Silence, CH, Aug'07, 44-7088), France did send troops into the country with its Operation Turquoise in June 1994. But they chose to conceptualize the conflict as a civil war, remaining neutral, rather than prioritize ending the genocide. They failed to save many Tutsis who were defenseless. French troops even refused to arrest or detain the genocidaires and facilitated their escape. Many argue that the subsequent bloodbath in the Congo-including atrocities on the part of the RPF-would have been less likely to occur were it not for those policies. Most of this book is based on Kroslak's 2002 dissertation. Her criteria for judging France's responsibility were knowledge, involvement, and capacity. Altogether, her verdict is reasonable. This book significantly contributes to literature that documents duplicitous and disreputable policies still denied in Paris. Summing Up: Essential. General readers, upper-division undergraduate students, graduate students, and research faculty."-P.G. Conway, Suny College at Oneonta "[The athour] Kroslak demonstrates extraordinary familiarity with the primary sources in this excellent study.7/1/2010"-Mac Dixon-Fyle, DePauw Univeristy "Daniela Kroslak provides a systematic analysis of the French involvement in the Rwandan genocide... Kroslak's conclusions are incontrovertible: while France was not a perpetrator of the genocide, it 'can be held responsible for acts of commission and omission.' -Emmanuel Viret, Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches Internationales (CERI), Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris [Sciences-Po]"-AFRICAN STUDIES REVIEW ". . . both succinct and comprehensive, as well as poignantly written. Her chapter on 'What the French Could Have Done' (chapter 9) once the genocide had started is particularly devastating, because she shows clearly that they could have done a great deal with resources that were not only available but also already present in Rwanda . . . . It is difficult to read such passages and remain unmoved.Sept. 2009"-Eugenia Zorbas, Centre for International Policy Studies, University of Ottowa ". . . [Kroslak] expertly marshals the evidence . . . and she has provided a valuable contribution to the study of the events of 1994.Jan/Feb 2009"-Nicolas Van De Walle, Africa reviewer "This book significantly contributes to literature that documents duplicitous and disreputable policies still denied in Paris. . . . Essential.October 2008"-P.G. Conway, Suny College at Oneonta "This book goes much further than just explaining the disaster of French policy and proving French responsibility. It presents a fundamental set of questions regarding international responsibility and action against mass murder which are still relevant [today]."-Francois Grignon, former Central Africa director, International Crisis Group

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