What was Romeo Dallaire doing in Rwanda

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
interview Kieth Harmon Snow and Paul Rusesabagina, of Hotel Rwanda fame



KHS: What role did Canadian General Romeo play? (27) Because it's claimed by ICTR lawyers—for the defense—that Dallaire and the UNAMIR forces closed down half the runway, eliminating one possible approach, which made it possible to shoot down the plane carrying the two presidents. (28)

PR: Well, General Dallaire openly helped the RPF rebels, unfortunately.

KHS: He was working for the RPF…

PR: I couldn’t tell exactly who he was working for. For me, what I cannot understand: A Canadian general who came to Rwanda in 1993, who has 2,500 soldiers, and when they are in the genocide [period] and 10 Belgian soldiers were killed, the Belgian government decided to pullout [of Rwanda]. And they [Belgium] had about 350 soldiers in the U.N. [UNAMIR], supported by the United States, and the United Kingdom, and the whole world decided to pull out, and to abandon the whole [peacekeeping] mission, to abandon Rwanda. When they decided to abandon, the General [Dallaire] himself decided to remain, this time not with 2,500 soldiers, but with 200 soldiers. Can you imagine a Canadian general commanding 200 African soldiers? That is a big question mark. I can't imagine, a U.S. or Canadian general commanding 200 soldiers, and African soldiers… maybe if he was a lieutenant he could have done that…

KHS: So you are saying it was highly irregular for a Canadian General to stay in Rwanda at the time and be commanding only 200 soldiers… So the question then arises: what was a Canadian General doing with 200 African soldiers? Was he working for Canada?

PR: No, not as a Canadian, but maybe on his own.

KHS: Not officially for Canada...

PR: No, not officially.

KHS: But he wasn't officially U.N. anymore either, is that right?

PR: But he was still, in the end, he was still supposed to be a United Nations commander. But myself, I don't imagine a Canadian general commanding 200 soldiers. Can you imagine? And knowing, purposely, that he is unable to do anything to protect any one civilian? And with only 200 soldiers for the whole country: you can imagine what it means: nothing, zero.

KHS: Why did he stay?

PR: Why did he stay? That remains a mystery to me. I haven't understood. But maybe if I was in his position—myself, I would have resigned. Because giving me 200 soldiers, that is a humiliation for a general. So resigning, and staying, remaining, knowing purposely that he was not going to change anything… that was a game. Or maybe secretly he [Dallaire] was working for someone else.

KHS: In other words, the only sensible conclusion is that General Romeo Dallaire remained in Rwanda—after the UNAMIR “peacekeeping” mission was aborted—because he was expected to play a role in the overthrow of the Habyarimana government. And he did play a role: he supported the RPF.

PR: Well, that is a big question mark. Dallaire’s army, his [UNAMIR] soldiers were bringing RPF soldiers, in their [UNAMIR] cars, from the RPF side, to the CND, the house of the parliament in Kigali. (29)

KHS: You are saying that UNAMIR was transporting RPF soldiers from the RPF side of Rwanda, across the ceasefire zone, to Kigali, and this was before April 1994?

PR: Yes, before April 6, 1994. Initially there were supposed to be 600 soldiers, but in [April] 1994 when the genocide broke out there were about 4000 RPF soldiers.

KHS: And what was the official number of RPF soldiers allowed to be in Kigali? Wasn’t there a restriction of RPF soldiers in Kigali according to the Arusha Peace Accords of 1993?

PR: Yes. Under the Arusha Accords it was 600 [RPA] soldiers.

KHS: So, officially, only 600 RPA soldiers were allowed in Kigali, but in fact there were almost 4000 RPA. So obviously Habyarimana knew that, but he couldn’t do anything about it.

PR: Yes, and that is why he [Habyarimana] was angry against each and every one. He was always upset.

KHS: Did you ever hear anything about the investigations into the shooting down of the presidential plane? The 6 April 1994 event that is always credited with “sparking the genocide?”

PR: Well, I heard about the investigations, and I heard that, at a given time, they had come up with a result. But they couldn't declare the results [at the International Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda], because the prosecutors didn't want the results to appear. And even today, which is still a mystery, the prosecutor does not take the assassination of President Habyarimana into his mission. And yet according to his mission given by his security council, given by the U.N. resolution of 1994, he was supposed to deal with the Rwandan genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes between January 1 and December 31, 1994, the whole year. So he is excluding the most important point of his mission—the investigation of the death of the presidents of Rwanda and Burundi. And he does not consider this, even now: the ICTR IS not concerned about Habyarimana’s death.

KHS: Right. It's inside the bounds of the court—the ICTR—what the court is allowed and required or mandated to investigate, but they have ignored it completely, and they are still ignoring it, and they have told you that they will continue to ignore it.

PR: Yes. And myself, I will never understand. An International Court for Rwanda, given a mission—a mission of recon Global Research, April 27, 2007
 

EagleSmack

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Feb 16, 2005
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DB... who is KHS and who is PR?


We can all agree on one thing... the Canadian General did noting to stop the genocide.
 

TenPenny

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Jun 9, 2004
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DB... who is KHS and who is PR?


We can all agree on one thing... the Canadian General did noting to stop the genocide.

No, we can't agree on that.

If you possessed even the most basic reading skills, you'd know who KHS and PR are, but since you don't even know that, anything else you say is suspect. You can't read, so you are unlikely to know anything of substance.
 

Zzarchov

House Member
Aug 28, 2006
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Uh huh.

Read a history book. He wasn't in charge of 200 african soldiers. He was in charge of 260 UN soldiers, now, they may have been from African nations, but they were under UN command. He was the soldier assigned there.

As for any talks about assasinating presidents. Even should that have been a PR attack, that would still make them innocent of any crime against humanity.

Attacking the commander in chief of another nation is an act of war. Committing genocide on innocent civilians because you have new French weapons and backing (Romeo was the one who opposed frances plan to recolonize the region and finally got UN intervention) isn't an acceptable response, thats a crime against humanity.

We can all agree on one thing... the Canadian General did noting to stop the genocide.

Actually, he is one of the only people who did anything to stop the genocide. Read a book. When everyone else booked and ran he was the one who stood his ground and risked his life because it was right thing to do.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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Actually if you follow the link and read the article and following interview you'll find something that I didn't find in Dallaires book Shake Hands With The Devil. Ultimately the trail leads from Congo to Rwanda to Sudan , same actors same nation.
 

EagleSmack

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Feb 16, 2005
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No, we can't agree on that.

If you possessed even the most basic reading skills, you'd know who KHS and PR are, but since you don't even know that, anything else you say is suspect. You can't read, so you are unlikely to know anything of substance.

Well well... looks like you got up on the wrong side of the fur trap. Too much hockey last night? :lol:
 

EagleSmack

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Feb 16, 2005
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The Canadian General risked his life? Hardly. He managed to get a whole bunch of Belgian soldiers killed though while keeping his own butt and Canadian troops safe.
 

TenPenny

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Jun 9, 2004
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PR: I couldn’t tell exactly who he was working for. For me, what I cannot understand: A Canadian general who came to Rwanda in 1993, who has 2,500 soldiers, and when they are in the genocide [period] and 10 Belgian soldiers were killed, the Belgian government decided to pullout [of Rwanda]. And they [Belgium] had about 350 soldiers in the U.N. [UNAMIR], supported by the United States, and the United Kingdom, and the whole world decided to pull out, and to abandon the whole [peacekeeping] mission, to abandon Rwanda. When they decided to abandon, the General [Dallaire] himself decided to remain, this time not with 2,500 soldiers, but with 200 soldiers. Can you imagine a Canadian general commanding 200 African soldiers? That is a big question mark. I can't imagine, a U.S. or Canadian general commanding 200 soldiers, and African soldiers… maybe if he was a lieutenant he could have done that…

KHS: So you are saying it was highly irregular for a Canadian General to stay in Rwanda at the time and be commanding only 200 soldiers… So the question then arises: what was a Canadian General doing with 200 African soldiers? Was he working for Canada?

How about the idea that he stayed as the UN guy, in charge of the UN troops, after the Belgians pulled out? How about the idea the he was on a UN mission, and stayed to do it, not to give up like everyone seems to want to do?

What a crock of ****e from the Hotel Rwanda.
 

Logic 7

Council Member
Jul 17, 2006
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interview Kieth Harmon Snow and Paul Rusesabagina, of Hotel Rwanda fame



KHS: What role did Canadian General Romeo play? (27) Because it's claimed by ICTR lawyers—for the defense—that Dallaire and the UNAMIR forces closed down half the runway, eliminating one possible approach, which made it possible to shoot down the plane carrying the two presidents. (28)
Global Research, April 27, 2007



Roméo dallaire is an idiot at the highest level, i have no respect for this whatever how he calls himself, who always make headlines in quebec, saying like " warning to pacifist, in afganisthan we are fighting for our values, so there is a price to pay".


I didnt know canadians values was to terrorize peoples on the other planet for their own interest. great canada i guess.
 

RomSpaceKnight

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Oct 30, 2006
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DB... who is KHS and who is PR?


We can all agree on one thing... the Canadian General did noting to stop the genocide.

And what did your great superpower army do.........jack squat. So much for being the world's cop. More like the world's copout. A ragtag bunch of Somalians ran the US out of Somalia. You guys can't even beat a bunch of illiterate goat herders.

Gen. R. Dallaire is and was a hero. 200, 200 or 2000 troops. He stayed and did his best. As a general he could have been one of the first to leave not one of the last.
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
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And what did your great superpower army do.........jack squat.
Actually, the US military intelligence withheld information they had from the UN, and actively voted against allowing the UN forces to proactively do anything.

So, as opposed to doing jack squat, the US, along with France and Belgium, actively prevented the UN forces from doing any good. That's why some people on this forum have to make the posts they do.
 

lysyfacet

Life is good!
Apr 12, 2007
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very interesting thread. Actually in my grade 12 "World Issues Class" we watched his entire documentary on his return to Rwanda. And Remeo in the video explained a lot of what his goal and purpose was for going into the Rwanda Genocide with the UN peace keeping units. The movie was titled, "Shake Hands with the Devil", as well he has a book out with the same title. Watching the video and learning about the man "Romeo Dallaire", i was very surprised and learned a lot about how this man made a difference. A lot of people critized his work and how he went about completeing his mission, but what the man did was not only a Brave assignment, but he can almost be called a "Hero". My respect to the man and what he did :). If any of you know why he titled his book "Shake hands with the Devil"...its very scary and at the same time very interesting.