almost Wrote:
konstantinl Wrote:
It's easy to critise the response to the genocide in Rwanda but what exactly was the international community supposed to do?
If one group of people in a country wants to annihilate an other group of people in that same country it's pretty difficult to prevent it. The genocide was over in 100 days and was unexpected. Very little time to plan and execute a co-ordinated relief effort with military backing.
How long for instance would it take to ship tanks or APC's from the US to an African port and then transport and deploy them (I think I'm right in saying Rwanda is landlocked) to where they were needed?
The major world powers and the UN didn't deal with the situation very well but often, while it's difficult to accept, it's impossible to prevent evil from happening.
If UN Peacekeepers are already there . . . then it's pretty easy, isn't it. I mean, they have guns, and genocide (by machete, which does not beat gun) is antithetical to peace. So
do your fucking job and it's practically cake.
I think your being rather naive. It's not that easy. 250,000 troops in Iraq can barely contain a much smaller situation in Iraq. UN troops in Rwanda would have been there in much smaller numbers and probably weren't equipped to do anything other than protect themselves.
91% of Rwanda's population lived in rural areas. It's a country of high mountains, jungle and swamp. Roads are poor or non existant. Communication links are patchy etc, etc. In the real world there are limitations on what you can actually do. You just can't magic solutions out of the air.