
In October 1996, a motley crew of ageing Marxists and unemployed youth coalesced to revolt against Mobutu Seso Seko, president of Zaire/Congo since 1965. Backed by a Rwanda-led regional coalition that drew support from Asmara to Luanda, the rebels of the AFDL marched over 1500 kilometers in seven months to crush the dictatorship. To the Congolese rebels and their Pan-Africanist allies, the vanquishing of the Mobutu regime represented nothing short of a 'second independence' for Congo and Central Africa as a whole and the dawning of a new regional order of peace and security. Within fifteen months, however, Central Africa's 'liberation peace' would collapse, triggering a cataclysmic fratricide between the heroes of the war against Mobutu and igniting the deadliest conflict since World War II. Uniquely drawing on hundreds of interviews with protagonists from Congo, Rwanda, Angola, Uganda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Eritrea, South Africa, Belgium, France, the UK and the US, Why Comrades Go To War offers a novel theoretical and empirical account of Africa's Great War. It argues that the seeds of Africa's Great War were sown in the revolutionary struggle against Mobutu-the way the revolution came together, the way it was organized, and, paradoxically, the very way it succeeded. In particular, the book argues that the overthrow of Mobutu proved a Pyrrhic victory because the protagonists ignored the philosophy of Julius Nyerere, the father of Africa's liberation movements: they put the gun before the unglamorous but essential task of building the domestic and regional political institutions and organizational structures necessary to consolidate peace after revolution.
Why did the liberation movement that successfully overthrew Mobutu Seso Seko in 1996 collapse into the deadliest conflict since World War II? Harry Verhoeven and Philip Roessler, both established scholars in African politics and security, argue that the very mechanisms of the revolution—specifically the prioritization of military force over the construction of stable political and regional institutions—created the conditions for the subsequent regional war. By analyzing the organizational failures of the AFDL and its allies, the authors demonstrate how the lack of institutional consolidation transformed a perceived 'second independence' into a catastrophic regional collapse.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in African security studies frequently cite this work for its extensive use of primary source interviews with key regional protagonists. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous, evidence-based framework for understanding the complexities of Central African geopolitics.
Page Count:
512
Publication Date:
2016-11-15
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190611359
ISBN-13:
9780190611354
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