What Will it Take for the United States and Others to Address the Crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo?
from Africa in Transition

What Will it Take for the United States and Others to Address the Crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo?

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China

Sub-Saharan Africa

Democratic Republic of Congo

Corruption

Wars and Conflict

There is a useful new feature on cfr.org, the Council on Foreign Relations’ website. Ask a CFR Expert invites members of the public to submit questions on U.S. foreign policy, and CFR fellows respond to questions that pertain to their own areas of expertise and research.

The following question was recently proposed to me: “What will it take for the United States and others to address the crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo?”

This was my response.

Congo’s natural wealth makes it an African arena of competing ambitions. It is an open secret that senior political and military figures from Rwanda and Uganda sponsor irregular militias in eastern Congo to access its mineral resources for personal enrichment. Corrupt Congolese politicians similarly enrich themselves, while Congo’s government provides almost no security, health services or education. Human rights organizations credibly accuse government agents, the military, and local militias of committing atrocities to coerce the local population.

The United States, Belgium, China, and African states could pressure the Ugandan and Rwandan governments to cease supporting militias. They could urge the Congo government to reform its military and the police and reduce official corruption. With its economic heft in central Africa, China could play a positive role in a diplomatic push against Ugandan and Rwandan support for the militias. But, Congo is not a high international priority, and China is reluctant to intervene in the internal affairs of their trading partners. Instead, the international response is to leave Congo to the United Nations to meet minimal humanitarian needs.

Congo’s government would need international assistance for reform and to move against corruption, but it may not have the capacity to challenge the powerful individuals who benefit from the present system. In sum, the exploitation of Congo’s vast resources by competing elites and militaries for personal enrichment promotes insecurity and stymies development. Only very strong Western and African public outcry and a change in China’s nonintervention approach might open the possibilities for change.

I encourage others to submit questions as well, whether they are on U.S. policy toward Africa or other areas of foreign policy.

More on:

China

Sub-Saharan Africa

Democratic Republic of Congo

Corruption

Wars and Conflict