The Double Game: How Paul Kagame Wages War in the DRC While Selling Peace to the World
Rwanda's president deploys the Rwanda Defence Force as a combatant in eastern Congo and as a peacekeeping brand across Africa. US sanctions have placed that contradiction under unprecedented scrutiny — but the outcome remains dangerously uncertain.
Introduction
Paul Kagame has built one of the most carefully managed international reputations in contemporary African politics. To his Western sponsors, he is the disciplined reformer who pulled Rwanda from the wreckage of genocide and transformed it into a model of development and security governance. To the African Union and the United Nations, Rwanda is a reliable contributor of disciplined, professional troops — a rare commodity in a continent starved of credible peacekeeping capacity. To the people of eastern Congo, however, Rwanda is something altogether different: the external power behind the M23 armed group, a force that has killed thousands of civilians, displaced millions more, and plundered the mineral wealth of a sovereign neighbour with near-total impunity.
These two versions of Rwanda are not competitors for the truth. They are both true, and they coexist by design. Kagame has constructed a strategic architecture in which Rwanda's peacekeeping credentials in Mozambique, the Central African Republic, and Sudan serve to insulate him from accountability for what the Rwanda Defence Force (RDF) is doing in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The arrangement has worked for years. What is now uncertain is whether the US sanctions introduced in 2025, targeting Rwandan officials and the M23 supply chain, are capable of dismantling it.
Part One: The War Rwanda Fights in the Congo
The RDF and M23: Combat, Command, and Culpability
The participation of the Rwanda Defence Force in combat operations in eastern DRC is no longer a matter of serious dispute. It has been documented systematically by the United Nations Group of Experts, the US State Department, the European Union, the United Kingdom, and multiple independent investigative bodies. The question has moved beyond whether — it is now a question of scale, depth of command integration, and strategic purpose.
According to successive UN Group of Experts reports, RDF units operate embedded within M23 formations, providing tactical command, fire support, and operational direction. Rwandan artillery and mortar units have fired directly into Congolese Armed Forces (FARDC) positions. Rwandan troops have been documented crossing the border in significant numbers during major M23 offensive operations, including the assaults on Rutshuru, Kiwanja, and the encirclement of Goma — the capital of North Kivu province — in early 2025. The M23's capture of Goma represented the largest territorial seizure in the conflict's recent history, and it was not achieved by M23 alone.
Beyond direct combat, the RDF provides M23 with the logistical, intelligence, and materiel infrastructure without which the group could not sustain operations. Ammunition resupply has been documented through both aerial and ground routes. Signals intelligence and drone surveillance support M23 targeting operations. Wounded M23 fighters are treated in Rwandan military medical facilities. Commanders move between Kigali and eastern Congo. This is not passive support. This is joint warfare conducted under a constructed fiction of deniability.
The Mineral Dimension: War as Economic Strategy
The RDF's presence in eastern DRC cannot be understood without reference to the mineral economy it protects and extracts from. Eastern Congo holds some of the world's most significant deposits of coltan, cassiterite, wolframite, and gold — minerals that are essential to global technology supply chains. The UN Group of Experts has documented in precise detail how M23-controlled territories channel these minerals through Rwandan intermediary networks into international markets, generating revenue that finances the armed group and enriches connected Rwandan commercial interests.
Rubaya, a mining hub in Masisi territory, has become the symbolic centre of this extraction economy. Under M23 control, coltan production from Rubaya — which accounts for a significant share of global supply — is taxed, transported, and exported through Rwandan-linked channels. The taxes fund M23 operations. The minerals enter global supply chains laundered through Rwandan export documentation. This is resource predation conducted at industrial scale under military protection, and it constitutes one of the central economic rationales for Rwanda's continued military engagement in the DRC.
The strategic logic is clear: Rwanda lacks the mineral endowment of its much larger neighbour but possesses the military capacity and international credibility to control access to those resources. The RDF's role in eastern DRC is as much commercial as it is military. Kagame has constructed a protection racket operating across an international border, underwritten by Western diplomatic tolerance and justified by an endlessly recycled security narrative centred on the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR).
The FDLR Justification: A Narrative of Convenience
Rwanda's standard justification for its engagement in eastern DRC is the presence of the FDLR — a Rwandan Hutu armed group formed by elements who fled Rwanda after the 1994 genocide. Kigali argues that the FDLR represents an existential security threat to Rwanda, that the Congolese state has failed to neutralise it, and that Rwandan intervention is therefore a legitimate act of self-defence.
This argument does not survive analytical scrutiny. The FDLR has been a degraded and fragmented force for well over a decade. Its numbers have never been independently verified, and credible estimates suggest a fighting strength far below the figure of 4,000 that Rwandan officials routinely invoke. More critically, the FDLR operates primarily in South Kivu, not in North Kivu — the territory where M23 and the RDF have been most active. The geographical disjunction between the stated threat and the actual operations is not an oversight. It reflects the fact that the FDLR narrative is a justificatory frame rather than an operational reality.
No independent verification mechanism has confirmed that M23 or RDF operations have targeted FDLR positions as a primary objective. The UN Group of Experts has consistently found that M23 military operations are directed against FARDC positions and civilian areas, not FDLR encampments. Rwanda has, on multiple occasions, actively obstructed joint verification mechanisms designed to assess FDLR strength and location. A state genuinely motivated by the FDLR threat would welcome verification. Rwanda's consistent obstruction of it reveals the narrative's true function.
Part Two: The Peace Business Rwanda Sells to the World
Mozambique: The Cabo Delgado Deployment
In July 2021, Rwanda deployed approximately 1,000 troops to Cabo Delgado province in northern Mozambique, where an Islamist insurgency affiliated with the Islamic State — locally known as Al-Shabaab or Ansar al-Sunna Wa-Jama'a — had waged a brutal campaign since 2017, culminating in the massacre at Mocimboa da Praia. The Rwandan deployment, which preceded and in many respects overshadowed the subsequent Southern African Development Community Mission in Mozambique (SAMIM), achieved rapid early successes, recapturing key towns and reopening the strategic port.
The Mozambique deployment was carefully curated for international visibility. Rwandan troops were professional, disciplined, and operationally effective. Kigali leveraged the deployment to consolidate its relationship with Maputo, access economic opportunities tied to the Cabo Delgado liquefied natural gas sector — in which TotalEnergies holds major interests — and reinforce its international profile as a reliable security partner. Western governments praised the intervention. France, given TotalEnergies' exposure, was particularly effusive.
What went largely unremarked upon was the simultaneity. As Rwandan troops were praised for protecting civilians in Mozambique, Rwandan military planners were deepening the RDF's integration with M23 in North Kivu. The same institution — the Rwanda Defence Force — was performing both functions at the same time. The contradictions of this position were not publicly examined by any of the governments that praised Kigali's contribution to Mozambican stability.
The Central African Republic: Security for Access
Rwanda's deployment to the Central African Republic operates within the framework of the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilisation Mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA), to which Rwanda is a significant troop contributor. Rwandan forces have been deployed to some of the most contested areas of the country, including regions where the Coalition of Patriots for Change — backed by Wagner Group/Africa Corps mercenaries — has competed for territorial control.
Rwanda's presence in CAR reflects a pattern consistent with its Mozambique deployment: security provision is traded for political access and economic positioning. Rwanda has cultivated a bilateral security relationship with the government of President Faustin-Archange Touadera that extends beyond MINUSCA. Rwandan presidential guard elements have been documented providing close protection to Touadera, deepening a personal security dependency that translates into political leverage. For a small, landlocked country with no contiguous border with CAR, Rwanda's sustained engagement in Bangui is a deliberate projection of influence, not an altruistic contribution to African peace.
The irony is structurally identical to the Mozambique case: a state simultaneously providing peacekeeping services to one African government and waging proxy war against another. The Central African Republic deployment provides Rwanda with UN-laundered legitimacy; the DRC operation provides Rwanda with territorial control and mineral revenues. Both are instruments of the same strategic vision.
Sudan: The Newest Theatre
Rwanda has also contributed forces to the African Union-United Nations Hybrid Operation in Darfur (UNAMID) and, more recently, signalled its willingness to participate in potential stabilisation frameworks tied to the Sudan conflict that erupted in April 2023 between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces. Rwanda's engagement in Sudan is newer and less institutionally embedded than its deployments in Mozambique or CAR, but it follows the same pattern: positioning Rwanda as an indispensable security actor whose goodwill Western and AU partners cannot afford to alienate.
The Sudan positioning is particularly significant given the geopolitical realignments triggered by the war. As the UAE and other Gulf actors have been drawn into Sudan's conflict through their relationships with the RSF, Rwanda has positioned itself as a potential neutral stabiliser — a role that benefits directly from the perception of Kigali as a professional peacekeeping state rather than a belligerent. The branding exercise runs on a different timetable to the conflict it is designed to obscure.
Part Three: US Sanctions and the Uncertain Reckoning
What the Sanctions Cover — and What They Do Not
In 2025, the United States imposed targeted sanctions on Rwandan officials and entities connected to the M23 supply chain and the exploitation of Congolese mineral resources. The measures, introduced under the Global Magnitsky Act framework, represent the most significant punitive action taken by any Western government against Rwanda in connection with the DRC conflict. They signal a meaningful, if belated, shift in US policy — from studied tolerance of Rwandan behaviour to active, named accountability.
The sanctions target specific individuals and commercial entities involved in mineral trafficking and M23 financing. They do not, as currently framed, constitute a comprehensive rupture of the US-Rwanda security relationship. Rwanda's status as a peacekeeping contributor has not been formally reviewed. US security assistance to Rwanda has not been suspended in its entirety. The bilateral defence relationship that has underwritten Rwanda's military modernisation for three decades remains nominally intact, even as specific actors within that system are designated.
This selective architecture creates a structural ambiguity at the heart of US policy. Washington is simultaneously sanctioning Rwanda's war machine in the DRC and relying on the same institutional apparatus — the RDF — for peacekeeping contributions it values diplomatically. The two positions are not easily reconciled, and the Rwandan government has read the gap between them with characteristic precision.
Kagame's Response: Defiance as a Diplomatic Posture
Kagame's public response to Western sanctions pressure has been one of calculated defiance. In multiple public statements, he has framed external criticism of Rwanda's DRC operations as neo-colonial interference, invoked Rwanda's genocide history as a shield against accountability, and accused Western governments of hypocrisy given their own historical failures in the Great Lakes region. This posture is not simply rhetorical. It is a deliberate signal to domestic audiences, regional partners, and Western governments that Kigali will not capitulate to pressure framed in the language of human rights.
The defiance posture has a further strategic function: it tests the resolve of sanctioning governments. Kagame has calculated, not unreasonably, that Western governments value Rwanda's peacekeeping contributions, its regional influence, and its role in managing refugee populations sufficiently to stop short of a comprehensive rupture. Every time a Western government criticises Rwanda verbally while maintaining its security partnership, that calculation is confirmed. The sanctions represent the first serious disruption to this dynamic, but their ultimate impact will depend on whether they are sustained, deepened, and coordinated with other levers of pressure.
The Peacekeeping Shield and Its Vulnerabilities
Rwanda's peacekeeping deployments serve as an implicit guarantee against comprehensive Western sanctions. The logic is straightforward: Mozambique, the Central African Republic, and Sudan all require Rwandan troops for stability operations that Western governments cannot or will not provide themselves. Withdrawing or threatening to withdraw those troops is a card Kigali can play in any pressure scenario. The threat need not be made explicitly; the dependency is understood by all parties.
This dynamic is structurally identical to the logic Turkey has deployed within NATO: the provision of security services that other members depend upon creates leverage that insulates the provider from accountability for behaviour those same members nominally oppose. Rwanda is not a NATO member, but the principle operates with equal force in the AU-UN peacekeeping architecture.
However, there are signs that this shield is developing cracks. The scale of M23's advance — including the capture of Goma and the humanitarian catastrophe that followed — has generated a level of international visibility that Rwanda's peacekeeping reputation alone cannot absorb. The visual and documentary evidence of RDF involvement in the DRC has become too extensive to credibly deny. European governments that maintained studied ambiguity have begun shifting towards more explicit positions. The EU and UK sanctions introduced alongside US measures suggest the beginning of a coordinated Western posture rather than isolated national decisions.
The Sanctions Dilemma: Which Rwanda Is Being Punished?
The central dilemma of the current sanctions architecture is institutional: the RDF is simultaneously the entity committing crimes in the DRC and the entity providing peacekeeping services in Mozambique, CAR, and Sudan. Sanctioning Rwandan officials and mineral trafficking networks applies pressure to the war economy without directly addressing the military institution whose conduct is at issue. Broadening sanctions to encompass the RDF itself would strike at the peacekeeping deployments that Western governments rely upon.
This is not an abstract dilemma. It reflects a genuine policy contradiction that Kagame has engineered over decades. The integration of the war Rwanda wages and the peace Rwanda sells into a single institutional framework — the RDF — makes disaggregated accountability structurally difficult. Any pressure applied to one function of the institution inevitably affects the other. Kagame's strategic genius has been to make the costs of accountability indistinguishable from the costs of instability.
What this analysis demands of Western governments is not a choice between accountability and stability, but a recognition that the current arrangement produces neither. Rwanda's peacekeeping contributions do not compensate for a war that has displaced over seven million people and killed tens of thousands. The stability those contributions nominally serve is undermined by the same institution that provides them. There is no sustainable policy built on the premise that one arm of the RDF can be rewarded while the other goes unpunished.
Conclusion: Accountability Cannot Wait for Convenient Timing
The architecture Paul Kagame has constructed — war in the DRC, peace elsewhere, and a Western dependency on both — represents one of the most sophisticated exercises in impunity management of the post-Cold War era. It has worked because Western governments have chosen, repeatedly and deliberately, to treat the two faces of Rwandan foreign policy as separable phenomena rather than as an integrated strategy. They are not separable. They are the same policy, serving the same ends, executed by the same institution.
US sanctions represent the first serious disruption to this arrangement, but their impact will be determined not by their initial scope but by the political will to sustain and expand them in the face of Rwandan defiance and peacekeeping leverage. The fundamental question facing Washington, Brussels, and London is whether they are prepared to accept the temporary instability of withdrawing their tolerance from a state that has weaponised that tolerance for thirty years. There is no costless path to accountability.
What is not acceptable, morally or strategically, is the continuation of an arrangement in which the same governments that decry the humanitarian catastrophe in eastern Congo continue to fund, equip, and politically legitimise the state primarily responsible for it. The Congolese people — seven million displaced, thousands killed in the recent M23 offensive alone — are not a geopolitical abstraction. They are the price being paid for the fiction that Rwanda can be simultaneously a war-maker and a peacekeeper, a partner and a perpetrator, and that Western governments need not choose between them.
That fiction must end. The US sanctions are a beginning. What follows will determine whether they represent genuine accountability or merely a repositioning of tolerance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Rwanda officially at war with the DRC?
Rwanda has never formally declared war on the DRC. Instead, it maintains a posture of plausible deniability, describing its forces in eastern Congo as protecting Rwandan security interests from the FDLR. However, the UN Group of Experts, the US State Department, the EU, and the UK have all documented the direct participation of the Rwanda Defence Force in M23 combat operations. The absence of a formal declaration does not alter the operational reality.
What do US sanctions on Rwanda cover?
Sanctions introduced in 2025 under the Global Magnitsky Act framework target specific Rwandan officials and commercial entities involved in M23 financing and the trafficking of Congolese minerals, particularly coltan from the Rubaya mining area. They do not currently extend to the RDF as an institution or to the bilateral defence relationship between the US and Rwanda as a whole.
How many Rwandan troops are deployed in peacekeeping missions?
Rwanda is consistently among the top five troop-contributing countries to UN and AU peacekeeping missions globally. At its peak, Rwanda deployed approximately 6,000 troops across missions including in Mozambique, the Central African Republic, and Sudan. These deployments have been internationally praised and generate both diplomatic capital and financial reimbursement from the UN.
Why have Western governments not sanctioned Rwanda more comprehensively?
Western governments face a structural dilemma: the Rwanda Defence Force is both the institution committing crimes in the DRC and the institution providing peacekeeping services they depend upon. Comprehensive RDF sanctions would threaten deployments in Mozambique, CAR, and Sudan that those same governments support. Rwanda has deliberately integrated these functions to raise the cost of accountability.
What is M23 and who leads it?
The Mouvement du 23 Mars (M23) is a Tutsi-led armed group that first emerged in 2012 following the mutiny of Congolese army officers, many of whom had previously been integrated from the CNDP — itself a Rwandan-backed group. M23 re-emerged in late 2021 after a period of dormancy, rapidly expanding its territorial control across North Kivu with documented Rwandan military support. Its leadership includes figures with long-standing ties to Kigali.
What is the FDLR and does it justify Rwanda's presence in the DRC?
The FDLR (Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda) is a Rwandan Hutu armed group formed in large part from elements involved in the 1994 genocide. Rwanda cites its presence in eastern DRC as justification for military engagement. However, the FDLR has been a degraded force for over a decade, operates primarily in South Kivu rather than North Kivu where RDF operations are concentrated, and no independent verification has confirmed it as the operational target of M23 or RDF activities.
How are Congolese minerals connected to the conflict?
Eastern DRC holds major deposits of coltan, cassiterite, wolframite, and gold. Under M23 control, these minerals are taxed and exported through Rwandan-linked networks, generating revenue that finances armed operations and benefits connected Rwandan commercial interests. The UN Group of Experts has documented this extraction economy in detail. The Rubaya coltan hub is the most extensively documented example.
What are the Washington Accords and have they changed anything?
The Washington Accords refer to a framework of diplomatic engagements brokered with US involvement aimed at de-escalating the DRC-Rwanda conflict. Rwanda has engaged with the process rhetorically while continuing military operations on the ground. Analysts have compared this approach to the Arusha Accords of the early 1990s, in which diplomatic engagement served to buy time rather than deliver genuine commitment. The test of any accord is not its signature but its implementation.
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Author: The African Rights Campaign, London
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