- Subjects
- Published
-
Oxford ; New York :
Oxford University Press
2009.
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Physical Description
- xxxviii, 529 p. : maps ; 25 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN
- 9780195374209
- Abbreviations
- Glossary
- Maps
- Introduction
- 1. Rwanda's mixed season of hope (July 1994-April 1995)
- The immediate aftermath
- The politics of national unity
- Justice and the killings
- Rwanda outside Rwanda: the world of the refugee camps
- The international community's attitudes
- 2. From Kibeho to the attack on Zaire (April 1995-October 1996)
- The Kibeho crisis
- The collapse of the national unity government
- The refugees and the Kivu cockpit
- North Kivu: ethnicity and the land conflict
- South Kivu: the Banyamulenge and the memories of 1965
- The impact of the Rwandese refugees on the Kivus
- The Burundi factor
- General Kagame goes to war
- 3. The Congo basin, its interlopers, and its onlookers
- Into the Zairian vortex
- The interlopers
- Sudanese and Ugandans
- Far from the Great Lakes: the Angolan conflict
- Standing by, trying to keep out: three uneasy onlookers
- 4. Winning a virtual war (September 1996-May 1997)
- Rwanda in Zaire: from refugee crisis to international war
- Laurent-Desire Kabila and the birth of AFDL
- The bogey of the multinational intervention force
- The refugee exodus
- The long walk into Kinshasa
- War and diplomacy
- The mining contracts: myths and realities
- The fate of the refugees
- 5. Losing the real peace (May 1997-August 1998)
- Kabila in power: a secretive and incoherent leadership
- Diplomacy and the refugee issue
- The economy: an ineffectual attempt at normalization
- Between Luanda and Brazzaville: the DRC's volatile West African environment
- The unquiet East: the Kivus and their neighbors
- 6. A continental war (August 1998-August 1999)
- Commander Kabarebe's failed Blitzkrieg
- Heading for an African war
- Kinshasa's friends: godfathers and discreet supporters
- Kinshasa's foes
- Fence-sitters and well-wishers
- Fighting down to a stalemate
- Behind and around the war: domestic politics, diplomacy and economics
- The Lusaka "peace" charade
- 7. Sinking into the quagmire (August 1999-January 2001)
- The war is dead, long live the war
- The East: confused rebels in confused fighting
- Westwards: the river wars
- Rwanda drives south into Katanga
- The shaky home fronts
- The Congo: an elusive search for national dialogue while the economy collapses
- Angola: the pressure begins to ease off
- Zimbabwe: trying to make the war pay for itself
- Rwanda and Uganda: the friendship grows violent
- The international dimension: giving aid, monitoring the looting, and waiting for MONUC
- Mzee's assassination
- 8. Not with a bang but with a whimper: the war's confused ending (January 2001-December 2002)
- Li'l Joseph's new political dispensation
- Diplomacy slowly deconstructs the continental conflict
- The actors start jockeying for position
- Negoitations, national dialogue, and disarmament in competition
- The South African breakthrough
- The bumpy road toward a transitional government
- The economy: slowly crawling out of the abyss
- The eastern sore: the continental conflict shrinks into sub-regional anarchy
- 9. From war to peace: Congolese transition and conflict deconstruction (January 2003-July 2007)
- The conflict's lingering aftermath (January 2003-December 2004)
- The peripheral actors drop off
- Rwanda and Uganda refuse to give up
- An attempt at violently upsetting the transition
- Tottering forward in Kinshasa
- Slouching toward Bethlehem: the transition slowly turns into reality (January 2005-November 2006)
- The pre-electoral struggles
- DDRRR, SSR, and assorted security headaches
- The elections
- The morning after syndrome (November 2006-July 2007)
- The risk of internal political paralysis
- The economy: donors, debts, and the Great Mining Robbery
- The east refuses to heal
- 10. Groping for meaning: the "Congolese" conflict and the crisis of contemporary Africa
- The war as an African phenomenon
- The purely East African origins of the conflagration
- Antigenocide, the myth of the "new leaders," and the spread of democracy in Africa: the world projects its own rationale on the situation
- The "New Congo," between African renaissance and African imperialism
- From crusading to looting: the "new leaders" age quickly
- The war as seen by the outside world
- What did all the diplomatic agitation actually achieve?
- Moral indignation in lieu of political resolve
- An attempt at a philosophical conclusion
- Appendix I. Seth Sendashonga's Murder
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review