Monday, December 3, 2012
Rice and African Real estate
Susan Rice has been involved in a strange real estate grab in Africa. You grab the land by killing millions of people in Rwanda, Burundi, and Congo.
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice is guilty of lying on behalf of President Obama to the American public, and the world, about the events in Benghazi, Libya on 9/11/12, that led to the deaths of four Americans, including U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens. That is a fact, which in itself absolutely disqualifies Rice from being nominated to become U.S. Secretary of State. Lyndon LaRouche in his November 30, 2012 webcast has brought additional focus on Rice's activities against the populations of African nations, first as a government official from 1993-2001 under President Clinton, and currently as ambassador to the UN for the last four years under Obama, telling his audience, that "she's well known from back twenty years or so ago, as a mass murderer in Africa."
Two of the clearest cases where Rice's involvement in supporting policies that have led to the deaths of millions and the weakening of those nations' sovereignty are: the Democratic Republic of the Congo (D.R.C.), and Sudan, the two largest nations on the continent, before the break-up of Sudan in 2011. This has resulted in a permanent destabilization of the countries of the Great Lakes region and parts of the Horn of Africa.
Beginning in 1996, the D.R.C. has been the target of uninterrupted war and looting of its abundant natural resources, which has resulted in the greatest loss of life of any nation in the world since the end of World War II, equaling or surpassing 6 million deaths: making the Congolese people the victims of the greatest genocide from the 20th into the 21st century. Over this long period, the invasions of armies backed by the governments of Rwanda and Uganda, documented in numerous UN reports — including Rwanda's present support for the Mouvement de 23 Mars, or M23 rebels, who are attempting to carve up and destroy the D.R.C. — would not have been possible without support provided by Rice, who did more than give a "wink and a nod" to their mass killings and wanton destruction.
The Crimes of Susan Rice in the Great Lakes Region
1994: Rice, then Director for International Organizations and Peacekeeping at the National Security Council while the Rwanda genocide was in process, is quoted as saying: "If we use the word 'genocide' and are seen as doing nothing, what will be the effect on the November [Congressional] election?"
1996: Rice as Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director of African Affairs, allowed the armies of Rwanda and Uganda to invade D.R.C. (then Zaire), and to install Laurent Kabila as its new President.
1997-1998: Rice after returning from her first trip to the Great Lakes region as the newly installed Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, agreed to have over 1 million Hutu refugees in UN camps inside the D.R.C. removed by the armies D.R.C. neighbors Uganda and Rwanda. Rice is quoted a saying that: "Museveni [of Uganda] and Kagame [of Rwanda] agree that the basic problem in the Great Lakes is the danger of a resurgence of genocide [referring to the Rwandan Hutus who fled to the D.R.C. after Kagame took over Rwanda—LKF], and they know how to deal with that. The only thing we have to do is look the other way." Rice's "looking the other way" was followed by a decade of killing and the looting in the D.R.C. by armed groups supported by Rice's chosen "leaders" in the region, Uganda's Yoweri Museveni and Rwanda's Paul Kagama.
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