It's the fact that we could have gone in and help.  Instead we just looked away.
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Doug White
  To: CF-Community
  Sent: Tuesday, April 06, 2004 3:36 PM
  Subject: Re: Rwandan Genocides

  What a bunch of BS - Why in the world doesn't the finger point where it belongs,
  that is to the criminals in Ruwanda that are doing the genocide?

  I get so sick and tired of the "God made me do it" syndrome.

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Angel Stewart
    To: CF-Community
    Sent: Tuesday, April 06, 2004 3:04 PM
    Subject: Rwandan Genocides

    Well. If it was anywhere that was 'morally' correct to invade, protect,
    and do some nation building it was here.

    But of course, no oil. No strategic importance. no assistance.

    HYPERLINK
    "http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4668624/"http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/466862
    4/

    "KIGALI, Rwanda - Western powers bear "criminal responsibility" for
    Rwanda's 1994 genocide because they did not care enough to stop it, the
    commander of the beleaguered U.N. peacekeeping force at the time said on
    Tuesday.

    The international community didn't give one damn for Rwandans because
    Rwanda was a country of no strategic importance," Canadian General Romeo
    Dallaire told a conference in Kigali marking the 10th anniversary of the
    slaughter.

    "It's up to Rwanda not to let others forget they are criminally
    responsible for the genocide," he said, singling out France, Britain and
    the United States. "The genocide was brutal, criminal and disgusting and
    continued for 100 days under the eyes of the international community."

    The retired Canadian soldier has been deeply traumatized by his
    mission's failure to prevent the deaths of some 800,000 Tutsis and Hutu
    moderates, butchered by Hutu extremists who often killed with machetes
    and spiked clubs.

    Rwanda's genocide began on the night of April 6, 1994, after the
    shooting down of a plane carrying the Rwandan and Burundian presidents,
    who both died in the crash near Kigali.

    Dallaire battled for a more robust U.N. peacekeeping mission with a
    mandate to stop the killings, but Security Council members voted instead
    to slash his force from 2,500 troops to 450 poorly trained and
    ill-equipped men."

    It would be interesting to hear from people who constantly profess that
    America is before all else a Morally upright country-who's interest in
    International affairs is first and foremost moral. Who claim that
    America's charge into Iraq was because of a moral obligation to the
    Iraqi people-it would be interesting to hear why action was not taken in
    Rwanda. Where there was even *less* of a risk to American lives by
    chemical or biological attack.

    To be honest, back in 1994 I was not as interested in world affairs as I
    am now, so I don't even have a firm grip on what happened in 1994 or why
    :)

    -Gel
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