The Washington Accords Trap
Mistakes and Failures
How the USA and DRC Got It Wrong
Calculated Errors and Missed Opportunities: The Strategic Failures of the United States and the DRC in the Washington Accords
Introduction
The Washington Accords, signed on 4 December 2025, were presented to the world as a diplomatic breakthrough — a framework for ending the long-running war and humanitarian suffering in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. For many observers, the signature ceremony at the United States Department of State carried the weight of expectation: perhaps this time, an internationally brokered agreement would halt the Rwanda Defence Force and its M23 proxy from further military advances into Congolese sovereign territory.
That expectation has not been borne out. Within months of the signing, Rwandan-backed M23 forces had captured Uvira, triggering a belated round of United States Treasury sanctions in March 2026 — designations that should have been imposed before negotiations began, not after they failed. The accords are, in structural terms, a document that rewards aggression, legitimises occupation, and enshrines a false narrative about the Forces Démocratiques de Libération du Rwanda as the root cause of the conflict in eastern DRC.
This analysis examines, with forensic precision, the strategic mistakes made by both the United States and the DRC in the design, negotiation, and execution of the Washington Accords. These are not minor tactical errors. They are substantive failures of political judgement, diplomatic strategy, and negotiating competence that have materially worsened the position of the Congolese state and people. Understanding them is essential to any serious effort to correct the current trajectory.
Part I: The Strategic Failures of the United States
1. The Double Standard: Sanctions Without Substance
The United States Treasury designation of the Rwanda Defence Force on 2 March 2026, and the prior individual designation of General James Kabarebe on 20 February 2025, were presented publicly as decisive responses to Rwanda's conduct in eastern DRC. In practice, they are the clearest evidence of the American double standard that has defined Washington's approach to Kigali for three decades.
Sanctions imposed in isolation — while all economic, military, and humanitarian cooperation with Rwanda continues undisturbed — are not a deterrent. They are theatre. For Kagame, targeted designations against a handful of named officers represent an inconvenience to be managed, not a threat to be taken seriously. The decision to preserve the full architecture of the US-Rwanda relationship while sanctioning individual officials sends a clear signal: the United States is not prepared to impose the costs that would actually change Rwandan behaviour.
The structural reason for this restraint is not a mystery. Washington is unwilling to jeopardise its existing economic interests in Rwanda, and is actively seeking to expand its commercial footprint in the DRC through the mineral partnership framework embedded in the accords themselves. A state that simultaneously profits from trade with an aggressor and brokers a peace agreement between that aggressor and its victim cannot function as a credible mediator. The conflict of interest is not incidental — it is the architecture. It is precisely this commercial entanglement that renders any American strategic initiative on eastern DRC structurally compromised before it begins.
Credible deterrence requires the credible threat of costs that decision-makers cannot absorb. Kigali's calculus in eastern DRC is strategic, long-term, and driven by interests — territorial, economic, and geopolitical — that a few Treasury designations do nothing to alter.
2. Forcing the DRC to Abandon Its Own Pre-Conditions
Before the Washington Accords were signed, the DRC had publicly and repeatedly stated a non-negotiable pre-condition: Rwanda must withdraw its forces from occupied Congolese territory before any formal agreement could be reached. This position was legally sound, politically coherent, and consistent with the DRC's rights under international law, including the UN Charter's prohibition on the acquisition of territory by force.
The United States applied pressure in precisely the opposite direction — pushing the DRC to drop its withdrawal pre-condition in order to reach a deal. This was not mediation. It was coercion directed at the weaker party in service of an outcome that suited Washington's broader geopolitical and commercial interests in the region. The result was a document signed while Rwandan forces remained on Congolese soil, treating the aggressor and the victim as equivalent parties to a symmetrical dispute.
3. Rewarding Rwanda with an Economic Partnership Framework
Among the most damaging elements of the Washington Accords process was the establishment of an economic partnership framework between the DRC and Rwanda — structured and championed by the United States. At the moment this framework was being designed, Rwandan forces and M23 proxies occupied significant portions of eastern DRC, including Goma, Bukavu, and Uvira, and were engaged in systematic resource extraction from the territories they controlled.
Offering Rwanda an economic partnership under these circumstances signals to Kigali that military occupation generates economic dividends rather than costs, and establishes a bilateral architecture that deepens Rwanda's material interest in maintaining its presence rather than withdrawing. Absent conditionality tied to verified withdrawal milestones, the partnership framework is structurally incompatible with restoring Congolese sovereignty.
4. No Sanctions on Rwandan Mineral and Commercial Activities
One of the most consequential omissions is the complete absence of sanctions targeting Rwanda's mineral and commercial activities derived from occupied Congolese territories. The UN Group of Experts has documented, across multiple annual reports, the systematic extraction and trans-shipment of Congolese coltan, gold, cassiterite, and wolframite through Rwandan export channels. This trade is not incidental to Rwanda's military presence — it is one of its primary objectives.
Sanctioning individual generals while leaving this commercial architecture intact is the equivalent of prosecuting foot soldiers while leaving the business model undisturbed. A credible American policy would target the financial flows: the trans-shipment companies, the export licences, the downstream buyers, and the Rwandan state institutions that process and profit from stolen Congolese resources. The failure to do so reflects Washington's own commercial interest in accessing these critical minerals — an interest that the mineral partnership framework makes explicit.
5. Treating Kagame as an Ordinary Head of State
Paul Kagame is not a conventional head of state navigating a bilateral dispute. He is the architect of a decades-long strategy of cross-border military intervention, proxy warfare, and resource extraction in eastern DRC, backed by an institutional apparatus — the RDF, the RPF, and the Crystal Ventures commercial network — that operates as a seamlessly integrated military-economic complex. American diplomacy has consistently failed to engage with this reality.
Treating Kagame through standard diplomatic channels provides Kigali with the reputational legitimacy that is itself one of the strategic objectives of Rwanda's peacekeeping deployments. Every handshake, every joint statement, every economic framework concluded with Kagame while Congolese territory remains under Rwandan military occupation is a reputational dividend extracted at zero cost. A genuinely strategic approach would condition all high-level engagement on concrete, verified, and time-bound compliance with international law.
Central to this failure is Washington's consistent refusal to confront, at the level of formal diplomatic record, what the evidence unambiguously establishes: Rwanda creates, finances, equips, commands, and politically protects armed groups — principally M23 — that have committed systematic atrocities against Congolese civilians, including mass killings, sexual violence, forced displacement, and the deliberate destruction of civilian infrastructure. These are not the collateral consequences of a legitimate security operation. They are documented violations of the Geneva Conventions, the Rome Statute, and customary international humanitarian law. By engaging with Kagame as though these facts did not exist, the United States has granted Rwanda the impunity that makes the continuation of these violations rational.
6. Absence of Military Support for the DRC
The Washington Accords were negotiated between parties of radically unequal military capability. The DRC's armed forces have been chronically under-resourced and structurally disadvantaged in confronting a professional, well-armed, and externally supported adversary. The United States provided no meaningful military assistance to the DRC in the period leading up to or following the accords.
This asymmetry is decisive. Diplomacy without military equilibrium is not negotiation between sovereign equals — it is the dictation of terms by the stronger party to the weaker. By declining to strengthen the DRC's military posture, the United States ensured that the DRC entered negotiations in a position of structural desperation, maximally susceptible to pressure to accept terms that fell well short of its stated pre-conditions.
7. Failure to Coordinate with the UN and EU Architecture
The Washington Accords were negotiated bilaterally, outside the existing multilateral frameworks of the UN Security Council, MONUSCO, and the European Union's targeted measures. By bypassing the UN framework, the United States forfeited the ability to embed compliance mechanisms and graduated consequence frameworks that only a multilateral structure can sustain. The EU's parallel sanctions track should have been coordinated to create a unified package of incentives and disincentives. Instead, the two tracks operated in isolation, allowing Rwanda to play one against the other.
8. Sidelining UN Security Council Resolution 2773
UN Security Council Resolution 2773, adopted in December 2023, constituted the international community's formal legal response to the crisis in eastern DRC. It demanded, inter alia, the immediate withdrawal of foreign forces from Congolese territory, full compliance with international humanitarian law, and the cessation of support to armed groups operating in the DRC. As a Security Council resolution adopted under Chapter VII authority, it carries binding legal force on all UN member states, including Rwanda and the United States.
The Washington Accords did not reinforce Resolution 2773. They sidelined it. By constructing a bilateral diplomatic framework that operated outside and parallel to the Security Council's existing legal architecture, the United States effectively subordinated a binding UN resolution to a negotiated arrangement that contained none of Resolution 2773's enforcement provisions and that treated the parties' compliance as a matter of political will rather than legal obligation. The practical consequence was to release Rwanda from the accountability framework that the Security Council had formally established, replacing binding multilateral obligation with a voluntary bilateral commitment that Kigali had neither the incentive nor the intention to honour.
For the United States, a permanent Security Council member and a co-sponsor of the multilateral architecture it now bypassed, this was not a procedural misstep. It was a deliberate choice to prioritise a diplomatic product it could control over a legal framework it could not. The cost was borne by the credibility of the UN system itself — and, most immediately, by the Congolese people whose protection that system exists to guarantee.
9. Legitimising M23 as a Negotiating Actor
The Washington Accords process, by including M23 as a party to the negotiations, conferred political legitimacy on an organisation that the United States itself has designated a terrorist group and whose leaders face UN sanctions. This is internally contradictory and strategically damaging. It separates M23, in the diplomatic imagination, from the RDF command structure that created, funds, and directs it — precisely the fiction that Rwanda has invested enormous effort in sustaining. No credible peace process can simultaneously designate an armed group as a terrorist organisation and treat it as a legitimate interlocutor.
10. Allowing Rwanda to Frame the Conflict as a Security Issue
Throughout the accords process, the United States never formally challenged Rwanda's central narrative: that its military presence in eastern DRC is a defensive, security-driven response to the FDLR threat. Washington accepted this framing as the operative description of the conflict and designed its mediation accordingly. This was a categorical error. The evidence — documented across successive UN Group of Experts reports, the Mapping Report, and the testimony of independent researchers — establishes unambiguously that Rwanda's engagement in eastern DRC is an act of armed aggression and incremental annexation, not a security response. By never formally naming it as such, the United States legitimised a pretext and prevented its own mediation from addressing the actual conflict.
11. No Use of AGOA and IFI Leverage
The United States has decisive leverage over Rwanda through two channels that were never activated: the African Growth and Opportunity Act, which provides Rwanda with preferential trade access to American markets, and the International Financial Institutions — principally the IMF and World Bank — where Washington holds decisive influence over programme design and disbursement. Neither was conditioned on Rwanda's compliance with the accords or with international law.
Conditioning AGOA access on verified RDF withdrawal would have imposed a concrete commercial cost that Rwanda's export-dependent economy could not easily absorb. Similarly, signalling to the IMF and World Bank that programme continuation was contingent on Rwanda's conduct in eastern DRC would have created a financial constraint of a different order of magnitude than individual Treasury sanctions. The decision not to activate these levers reflects the same double standard that defines the broader American approach: nominal condemnation, structural protection.
12. No Asset Freeze on the Crystal Ventures and RPF Commercial Network
The Crystal Ventures network — the RPF's investment vehicle with holdings across telecommunications, construction, agriculture, and services — operates across multiple jurisdictions, including through entities registered in Western financial systems. A comprehensive asset freeze targeting Crystal Ventures and its subsidiaries, including Macefield Ventures and associated entities, would have struck at the financial architecture that funds Rwanda's military and political apparatus in ways that individual officer designations cannot.
This measure was available, legally grounded in existing executive order authority, and directly targeted at the economic infrastructure that makes Rwanda's sustained military campaign in eastern DRC financially viable. Its absence from the accords framework is not an oversight — it reflects a deliberate choice to protect an economic relationship that American commercial interests have found useful.
13. Allowing Rwanda to Exploit Its Peacekeeping Deployments as a Shield
Rwanda has deployed troops to UN peacekeeping missions across the continent — most notably in the Central African Republic, South Sudan, and Darfur. These deployments serve a dual function: they generate UN reimbursements that partly fund the RDF's operational capacity, and they provide Rwanda with a reputational shield that has historically made Western governments reluctant to impose comprehensive costs on Kigali. The United States never challenged this dynamic.
A state that simultaneously occupies a neighbour's territory in violation of international law and deploys peacekeepers under the UN flag is engaged in conduct that should trigger immediate suspension from peacekeeping operations under the UN's Human Rights Due Diligence Policy. The United States, as a permanent member of the Security Council, had both the authority and the obligation to raise this contradiction. Its failure to do so allowed Rwanda to extract reputational and financial benefits from the UN system while violating the foundational principles that system exists to uphold.
14. No Verification or Enforcement Architecture in the Accords
A peace agreement without a verification and enforcement mechanism is a declaration of intent, not a framework for compliance. The Washington Accords, as structured, contain no credible compliance architecture — no independent monitoring body with a mandate, resources, and authority to document violations; no graduated consequence framework pre-agreed by all parties; no automatic escalation trigger that removes the political discretion from the response to non-compliance.
This omission was not forced upon the United States by the other parties. It was a design choice, and it reflects a mediation approach that prioritised the appearance of agreement over the substance of enforcement. Kagame, who operates with a precise understanding of what diplomatic frameworks can and cannot compel, drew the obvious conclusion. The capture of Uvira within months of the signing was entirely predictable on the basis of the accords' structural design.
15. Timing the Accords at the Moment of Maximum DRC Weakness
A genuine mediator works to create conditions of rough equivalence between parties before convening formal negotiations, or at minimum ensures that no party's position is so fundamentally compromised by the immediate military situation that meaningful negotiation is impossible. The Washington Accords were convened in the immediate aftermath of Goma and Bukavu's fall — at the precise moment of the DRC's maximum military and political vulnerability, when the domestic pressure in Kinshasa to produce any agreement was overwhelming.
This timing served Rwanda's interests and Washington's desire for a rapid diplomatic product. It did not serve the DRC's. A mediator that convenes at the moment of maximum asymmetry, rather than working to correct that asymmetry first, is not a neutral actor. It is a party that benefits from the imbalance.
16. USA's Lack of an Assessment Report on the Level of Threats Posed by the FDLR Before It Became the Centre of Rwanda's Claimed Problems in the DRC
For the past three decades, the United States provided Rwanda with military training, equipment, intelligence, and financial support, framed explicitly as assistance to neutralise the FDLR threat that Rwanda has consistently cited as its primary security concern in eastern DRC. This investment was sustained, substantial, and conducted with the full knowledge and active endorsement of successive American administrations.
That history generates an obligation that Washington has never been asked to discharge: if the United States trained, equipped, and supported the Rwanda Defence Force for thirty years specifically to address the FDLR threat, it must now provide a credible, independent, publicly available assessment of whether that threat still exists at a level that justifies Rwanda's current military posture in eastern DRC. If American assistance to the RDF was effective, the FDLR should pose no existential threat to Rwanda. If the threat remains as Kigali claims, then thirty years of American military support represents a failure that Washington has an obligation to explain.
This accountability gap is not peripheral to the Washington Accords process — it is central to it. The FDLR appears more than fifty times in the accords text as the foundational justification for Rwanda's presence in eastern DRC. The United States, as the party that helped build the military capacity Rwanda claims to need against the FDLR, is uniquely positioned — and uniquely obligated — to conduct and publish an independent assessment of the FDLR's actual current threat level. Without that assessment, the FDLR pretext will continue to provide indefinite cover for what is, in reality, a programme of territorial expansion and resource extraction. The United States cannot credibly broker a peace agreement premised on a threat whose current dimensions it has never honestly assessed and publicly disclosed.
17. The Regional Economic Integration Framework: Commerce Before Security
On 7 November 2025 — nearly a month before the formal Washington Accords ceremony — the DRC and Rwanda signed the Regional Economic Integration Framework (REIF), a bilateral economic normalisation instrument brokered and championed by the United States. At the moment of signing, the Rwanda Defence Force had not withdrawn a single soldier from Congolese territory. M23 continued to occupy Goma, Bukavu, and Uvira. The security pre-conditions that the DRC had set as non-negotiable were unmet. The REIF was signed regardless.
The REIF is a substantive document, not a statement of aspirations. It establishes joint coordination mechanisms across energy, mineral supply chains, infrastructure, national park management and tourism, and public health. Its mineral supply chain provisions are particularly revealing: they commit the DRC and Rwanda to formalising mineral supply chains across the Great Lakes region — a formulation that normalises Rwanda's existing role in processing and exporting Congolese minerals extracted from occupied territory, without ever acknowledging the illegality of the occupation under which those extraction activities occur. The REIF further commits both parties to identifying cross-border infrastructure, shared industrial zones, cross-border tourism, and transboundary markets — precisely the integration architecture that blurs the legal and administrative distinction between Congolese sovereign territory and Rwandan de facto control.
The national park management clause deserves particular attention. Virunga National Park — one of the most biologically significant protected areas on earth — lies within territory occupied by RDF and M23 forces. By including national park management within the REIF's scope, the United States incorporated Rwanda's de facto control over Virunga into a formal bilateral framework, treating an act of occupation as a basis for cooperative governance. This is not a technical drafting error. It is a political choice that legitimises territorial control acquired through armed aggression.
The REIF's own activation clause contains a revealing self-contradiction. It states that its provisions take effect upon satisfactory execution of the Concept of Operations set out in Appendix A of the Peace Agreement — a security condition. But satisfactory execution is to be determined by the Joint Oversight Committee, a body in which Rwanda participates and which operates without an objective independent standard. There is no independent verification mechanism and no automatic enforcement trigger. The security condition is, in practice, whatever Rwanda agrees it is. The economic framework proceeds; the condition remains perpetually deferred.
The United States' own State Department acknowledged, in communications surrounding the REIF signing on 7 November 2025, that the rollout of security measures had been slower than expected and that the framework's success would depend largely on the implementation of security commitments. Washington knew the security pre-conditions had not been met. It signed the economic framework regardless — because the REIF was not designed primarily to advance Congolese security. It was designed, in the State Department's own language, to create the environment for American and local innovators, entrepreneurs, and investors to seize a historic opportunity. The opportunity in question is Congolese mineral wealth. The historic moment is one in which Rwanda occupies the territory where that wealth is located.
The sequencing is not incidental. It is the architecture. By constructing and signing the REIF before any verified security progress, the United States created economic interdependencies — in mining, energy, infrastructure, and tourism — that give all parties, including American commercial interests, a stake in the continuation of the current situation rather than its reversal. Once those interdependencies are operational, imposing the costs on Rwanda that genuine withdrawal would require means disrupting arrangements that now serve multiple parties' financial interests. The REIF was not a confidence-building measure between equals. It was the institutionalisation, through commercial architecture, of facts on the ground that international law requires to be reversed.
The FDLR Trap: A Strategic Failure Shared by Washington and Kinshasa
Among all the analytical failures documented in this briefing, one stands apart in its consequences: neither the United States nor the DRC identified, named, or countered the systematic deployment of the FDLR as a political trap embedded by Rwanda across the entire Washington Accords framework. This was not an oversight on Rwanda's part. It was a deliberate, architecturally precise strategy executed with patience and consistency across every stage of the process, from the Declaration of Principles of April 2025 through to the final signing ceremony of 4 December 2025. The trap has now been sprung. Its consequences will outlast the accords themselves.
The mechanics of the trap are straightforward. Rwanda secured the inclusion of the FDLR — reportedly more than fifty times — in the Washington Accords text as the named cause of the conflict and the named condition for Rwanda's withdrawal. The FDLR is not mentioned incidentally. It is embedded as the organising premise of the security architecture: Rwanda's defensive measures remain until the FDLR is neutralised; the Joint Oversight Committee assesses whether neutralisation is satisfactory; Rwanda participates in the JOC. Rwanda, in effect, holds the key to its own withdrawal condition. It defines the threat, assesses the response, and determines whether the threshold has been met. No independent verification mechanism exists. No objective standard was agreed. No sunset clause was included. The FDLR pretext has been given permanent, internationally endorsed legal housing in a document signed by both the DRC and the United States.
The trap operates on multiple levels simultaneously. For Rwanda, it provides an indefinite alibi: as long as any FDLR element can be identified anywhere in eastern DRC — and Rwanda controls both the intelligence assessment and the definition of what constitutes a meaningful FDLR presence — the withdrawal condition is technically unmet. The occupation continues. The mineral extraction continues. The demographic transformation continues. All of it now takes place under a framework that both the DRC and the United States have formally endorsed.
For the DRC, the trap is existential in its diplomatic consequences. Having signed a document that names the FDLR as a central security problem requiring resolution, Kinshasa cannot now challenge the FDLR framing without appearing to contradict its own signature or, worse, appearing to protect a militia with documented links to the 1994 genocide. The political cost of saying, after signing, that the FDLR was never the real problem, is enormous. It would require the DRC to publicly repudiate a framework it agreed to, acknowledge that it signed under false premises, and risk being accused of sheltering a genocidal organisation. Rwanda understood this dynamic before the ink was dry.
For the United States, the trap is equally binding. Washington brokered a document in which the FDLR is named, repeatedly and explicitly, as the security problem that the framework exists to resolve. American officials signed off on a legal architecture premised on the FDLR threat. To now concede that the FDLR was a pretext — that Rwanda's fifty-plus references were strategic rather than genuine — would require Washington to acknowledge that its own mediation was built on a false foundation. The reputational cost of that acknowledgement, for a process personally associated with President Trump's diplomatic profile, is prohibitive. The FDLR trap holds Washington as firmly as it holds Kinshasa.
The deeper consequence is structural and long-term. The Washington Accords have now established, in a formally signed and internationally witnessed document, the principle that Rwanda's military presence in eastern DRC is legally connected to the status of the FDLR. That principle will be cited in every future negotiation, every Security Council debate, every mediation attempt, for as long as the accords remain in force. Rwanda did not need to win the argument about the FDLR. It only needed to get the argument written into the document. It has succeeded. The burden of proof has been inverted: it is now the DRC, not Rwanda, that must demonstrate that the FDLR no longer constitutes a threat before Rwanda can be required to withdraw. In a situation where Rwanda controls the intelligence, the JOC participation, and the definition of satisfactory compliance, that burden may never be discharged.
Both Washington and Kinshasa failed to spot this trap as it was being constructed. The failure is most acute in the DRC, which had the most to lose and the clearest incentive to scrutinise every FDLR reference in the text. But it is also a fundamental American failure: a mediating power that allowed one party to embed its own alibi into the legal architecture of the agreement it was brokering is not a neutral mediator. It is either complicit in the trap or blind to it. In either case, it failed in its primary obligation. The trap is now set. Dismantling it will require, at minimum, a formal, independent, UN-mandated assessment of the FDLR's actual current threat level — an assessment that neither party to the accords currently has the political incentive to request.
Part II: The Strategic Failures of the Democratic Republic of Congo
1. Negotiating from a Position of Military Desperation
The DRC entered the Washington Accords process in a condition of acute military vulnerability. FARDC's inability to prevent successive advances by M23 — culminating in the fall of Goma in January 2025 and Bukavu shortly thereafter — created a political environment in Kinshasa in which pressure to produce a diplomatic result became overwhelming. This desperation was visible to all parties, including Rwanda, and it fundamentally compromised the DRC's negotiating posture.
A state that negotiates under the immediate pressure of military defeat cannot negotiate freely. The terms it accepts will reflect the military facts on the ground rather than the legal and political rights it possesses. Investment in FARDC's capabilities was not a substitute for diplomacy but its precondition. The failure to build that capacity over the preceding years left the DRC with no credible alternative to accepting terms it would not otherwise have considered.
2. Signing Before RDF Withdrawal: Abandoning the Core Pre-Condition
The DRC had established, publicly and unambiguously, that Rwanda's withdrawal from occupied territories was a non-negotiable pre-condition for any formal agreement. This was legally and morally correct, grounded in the UN Charter, the African Union's border inviolability principle, and the basic logic of state sovereignty. Abandoning it under American pressure was the single most consequential error in the entire process.
By signing while RDF forces remained on Congolese soil, Kinshasa renounced the leverage that the pre-condition provided. Once the document was signed, the DRC's ability to withhold recognition and legitimacy from the process was spent. Rwanda had obtained what it needed from the diplomatic process without fulfilling the condition that had been set for it.
3. Excessive and Uncritical Reliance on American Good Faith
The DRC appears to have entered the Washington process with confidence in American good faith that the historical record does not support. The United States has maintained a consistent pattern of engagement with Rwanda — covering development assistance, security cooperation, intelligence sharing, and diplomatic support — that has survived every episode of Rwandan aggression in the DRC since the late 1990s. There is no moment in that history in which Washington imposed costs on Kigali proportionate to the documented harm caused by its conduct.
Kinshasa's failure to map American interests with rigour — to identify the points at which those interests diverged from its own — left it poorly positioned to manage the pressure it subsequently faced. Washington's commercial interest in accessing Congolese critical minerals was not identical to, and in some respects directly in tension with, the DRC's interest in unconditional RDF withdrawal.
4. Signing Mineral Deals Before Receiving Substantive Support
The mineral partnership framework associated with the Washington Accords represents a damaging sequencing error: the DRC agreed to give the United States preferential access to its critical mineral resources before receiving any concrete, verified, or sustained American support for its core objective. This inverted the correct logic of conditioned engagement. Resources should have been the leverage, not the concession.
The mineral resources of eastern DRC are the DRC's most powerful diplomatic instrument in its engagement with Western powers. Using them as a preliminary concession rather than a conditioned reward transferred the DRC's primary economic bargaining chip to Washington without securing the reciprocal commitment that would have justified doing so.
5. Failure to Neutralise the FDLR Narrative
The FDLR narrative has never been independently validated by any credible international authority. The UN Group of Experts has repeatedly noted the instrumentalisation of the FDLR threat by Rwanda and the absence of evidence that it represents the kind of existential security threat that could justify cross-border military occupation under international law. Despite this, the FDLR reportedly appears more than fifty times in the Washington Accords text.
This reflects a systematic Rwandan diplomatic strategy, pursued consistently from Luanda through Nairobi to Washington, to embed the FDLR justification into every peace framework as a permanent alibi. That the DRC's negotiating team did not identify and counter this strategy — did not insist on removing or conditioning every FDLR reference on independent verified assessment — represents a profound failure of analytical preparation and diplomatic vigilance. A counter-strategy was available: demand, as a pre-condition for any FDLR-related clause, the deployment of an independent UN-mandated verification mechanism with a clear mandate to assess the FDLR's actual operational capacity.
The DRC's failure in this regard has a thirty-year history. For three decades, Rwanda has invoked the FDLR as justification for successive military interventions in Congolese territory, and for three decades the DRC failed to formally request that MONUSCO — which operated in eastern DRC for years with the mandate, personnel, and field access to conduct such an assessment — establish and publish a definitive, independently verified account of the FDLR's actual threat level to Rwanda. That request was never formally made, leaving Rwanda's pretext unchallenged by the one institution with both the mandate and the presence to credibly contest it. The FDLR narrative was allowed to mature from justification into axiom without ever being subjected to independent scrutiny.
6. Naivety About American Deliverables
The DRC leadership appears to have operated under the assumption that American diplomatic engagement translated into a commitment to deliver concrete outcomes — specifically, the recovery of occupied territories. This assumption was not grounded in a clear-eyed reading of how American diplomacy works in practice in regions where it has existing relationships with all parties and where its own commercial interests are at stake.
A more realistic assessment of American capabilities and intentions would have led the DRC to invest simultaneously in other tracks: strengthening SADC engagement, building a continental coalition, reinforcing bilateral defence partnerships with states willing to provide material military support, and pursuing accountability mechanisms at the ICC and the UN Human Rights Council. The over-concentration on the American channel crowded out these alternatives.
Part of this naivety was analytical. The DRC appears to have proceeded on the premise that the FDLR was the central problem Rwanda needed resolved in eastern DRC, and that once the FDLR threat was addressed, Rwanda would have no further justification for its military presence and would withdraw. This premise is refuted by the geographic facts on the ground. The vast areas of North Kivu under RDF and M23 control are the very territories where FDLR elements are believed to operate — yet Rwanda's forces have not neutralised those elements; they have secured mineral sites. South Kivu, including Uvira, has no meaningful FDLR presence — yet Rwanda captured it. If the FDLR were Rwanda's genuine and primary concern, the pattern of occupation would be different. The DRC should have used this geographic disparity — the systematic mismatch between Rwanda's stated justification and the actual pattern of its military advances — as a formal argument before the Security Council and as a condition within the accords themselves: if Rwanda's presence is driven by the FDLR, it has no legal basis for occupation in territories where the FDLR does not operate, and the DRC should have demanded, as a minimum condition of any agreement, RDF withdrawal from precisely those areas.
7. No Direct Negotiating Strategy with Rwanda and M23
The DRC's refusal to negotiate directly with M23 — understandable as a matter of principle — was not accompanied by a coherent alternative strategy for creating negotiating conditions more favourable to Kinshasa. Principled positions require strategic backing to be effective. Refusing direct talks with M23 while simultaneously lacking the military capacity to change facts on the ground and the American leverage to compel Rwanda left the DRC in a position with no viable path to a favourable outcome through any available channel.
8. Continuing to Negotiate After Kagame's Explicit Rejection of Withdrawal
After Paul Kagame publicly stated that Rwanda would not remove its defensive military measures from eastern DRC, the DRC plans to continue participating in the negotiating framework without any evident recalibration of strategy, escalation of pressure through alternative channels, or public communication that made clear to the international community that Rwanda's refusal had fundamentally altered the basis of the negotiations.
Continuing to negotiate after an explicit statement of non-compliance, without either escalating costs or withdrawing from the process, signals that there are no red lines — that declarations of pre-conditions are not actually pre-conditions. Kagame drew the correct conclusion. The DRC must now act with the clarity that the situation demands: the ratification of the Washington Accords by the Congolese parliament should be formally suspended until Rwanda withdraws from occupied Congolese territory. Parliamentary ratification is the last available point of institutional leverage within the accords process, and its exercise — or its conditional withholding — is a sovereign right that Kinshasa should deploy with deliberate strategic purpose rather than allow to proceed as an administrative formality.
9. Misreading Kagame's Primary Strategic Objective
The most fundamental analytical failure in the DRC's approach was the persistent misreading of what Kagame actually wants. The dominant framing treats Kagame's primary interest in eastern DRC as economic: mineral extraction, resource pillage, commercial dominance. This is partially correct but strategically incomplete, and the incompleteness matters enormously for policy design.
Rwanda's strategic objective in eastern DRC is territorial. The minerals are not the end point — they are the dividend of the end point. What Kagame is pursuing, with methodical patience across decades, is the progressive absorption of eastern DRC: the creation of facts on the ground — demographic, administrative, military, and economic — that make the border between Rwanda and eastern DRC progressively less meaningful. Annexation, in the full sense, solves the mineral question automatically. It also solves the false FDLR question, the demographic question, and the strategic depth question that Rwanda has used to justify its interventions since 1996.
A negotiating strategy calibrated to mineral extraction does not address this deeper objective and may, in fact, serve it by creating economic integration that advances the territorial logic without triggering the international response that explicit annexation would provoke. Understanding Kagame's actual objectives is the precondition for designing a response adequate to them.
10. Absence of a Coherent Coalition-Building Strategy
The DRC entered the Washington negotiations without having first constructed a durable coalition of African and international partners prepared to provide concrete, coordinated support. A coordinated bloc of African Union member states, supported by the EU, insisting on a common set of conditions for any peace framework — including verified RDF withdrawal as an absolute pre-condition — would have created a fundamentally different negotiating environment. The failure to build that coalition before entering the Washington process left Kinshasa isolated and maximally susceptible to bilateral American pressure.
11. No ICC Strategy
The DRC never systematically pushed for arrest warrants against named RDF commanders whose command responsibility for atrocities in eastern DRC is documented in successive UN Group of Experts reports. The ICC lever was legally available, analytically grounded, and strategically powerful — not because arrest warrants would have been immediately enforced, but because their pursuit would have built the international legal record, increased the personal risk to decision-makers in Kigali, and complicated Rwanda's diplomatic positioning in Western capitals where ICC legitimacy is taken seriously.
Running an active ICC strategy in parallel with the Washington negotiations would have created an independent legal track that Rwanda could not ignore, that would have produced consequences regardless of the diplomatic outcome, and that would have fundamentally altered the risk calculus for senior RDF officers. The absence of this strategy was a forfeiture of legal leverage of the first order.
12. Failure to Document and Present the Demographic Transformation
Rwanda's progressive settlement of Kinyarwanda-speaking populations in occupied territories is not merely an observation about conflict dynamics — it is material evidence of annexation rather than occupation. The distinction is legally and politically decisive. Occupation is temporary; annexation is permanent. The demographic transformation of eastern DRC, documented in UNHCR field reports, NGO investigations, and journalistic accounts, provides the evidentiary basis for a formal annexation claim that would transform the DRC's legal and diplomatic position.
This evidence was never assembled into a formal dossier and presented systematically to the UN Security Council, the African Union, or the International Court of Justice. Its absence from the DRC's official communications allowed Rwanda to maintain the fiction of a temporary, security-driven, reversible military presence when the demographic facts on the ground tell a different story.
13. Total Failure of the International Communications Strategy
Rwanda's narrative dominated Western media coverage of the eastern DRC crisis throughout the accords period. The FDLR pretext, the security-driven framing, the presentation of M23 as a Congolese political movement rather than an RDF front — all of these were consistently advanced by Kigali's communications infrastructure and largely accepted, or at minimum not systematically challenged, by international media.
The DRC produced no coordinated, sustained, multilingual international communications strategy capable of contesting this narrative at the level at which it was being advanced. Individual statements by government spokespeople, intermittent press releases, and reactive denials are not a communications strategy. They are the absence of one. The information war was lost not because the DRC's legal and factual position is weak — it is not — but because that position was never communicated with the consistency, professionalism, and reach required to contest Rwanda's narrative in the capitals that matter.
14. Failure to Demand Sunset Clauses and Automatic Escalation Triggers
Any agreement signed under conditions of acute military asymmetry requires strict, verified timelines with pre-agreed, automatic consequences for non-compliance — consequences that do not require a political decision by the mediating party to activate. Without sunset clauses and automatic escalation triggers, the enforcement of any peace framework depends entirely on the political will of the mediating party — in this case, the United States — which has consistently demonstrated that it will not impose costs on Rwanda proportionate to Rwandan non-compliance.
The DRC's failure to insist on these mechanisms was not merely a procedural oversight. It was a structural concession that guaranteed the accords would be unenforceable in practice. A framework without automatic enforcement is a framework that depends on the good faith of the party that has demonstrated no good faith.
15. Failure to Use Angola's Mediation Role Strategically
The Luanda process gave Angola a formal mediation role between the DRC and Rwanda that was more naturally aligned with Congolese interests than the American track. Angola, as a regional power with its own sovereignty concerns and no commercial stake in Rwanda's mineral export architecture, was a more structurally sympathetic mediator. Rather than using this as a multilateral shield — insisting that any American engagement be coordinated with and filtered through the Luanda framework — Kinshasa allowed the bilateral American track to supersede the African diplomatic architecture entirely.
This was a mistake of sequencing and framing. The Luanda process should have remained the primary framework, with Washington's engagement positioned as reinforcing rather than replacing it. By ceding primacy to the American track, the DRC lost the protection of a mediating architecture that was, at minimum, not structurally incentivised to protect Rwanda's interests at Kinshasa's expense.
16. No Formal ICJ Submission
The DRC had — and continues to have — a legally sound case for an International Court of Justice ruling on Rwanda's violation of Article 2(4) of the UN Charter, the prohibition on the use of force against the territorial integrity of another state, as well as Rwanda's violations of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide and the Geneva Conventions. An ICJ submission, running in parallel to the Washington negotiations, would have created an independent legal track with consequences that could not be blocked by any single Security Council veto.
ICJ proceedings do not require immediate enforcement to be strategically valuable. A provisional measures order, a declaration of unlawfulness, or even the formal institution of proceedings would have altered the international legal landscape, complicated Rwanda's diplomatic positioning, and built a permanent legal record that would outlast any particular diplomatic framework. The DRC's failure to pursue this avenue forfeited an instrument of the highest legal authority at precisely the moment it was most needed.
17. Internal Political Divisions Visible to the Adversary
Divisions within Kinshasa between those seeking rapid American engagement and those prioritising sovereignty conditions were sufficiently visible during the accords process to be identified and exploited by Rwanda. Internal disagreement about the red lines — about whether withdrawal was truly non-negotiable, about whether the mineral deal could be sequenced differently, about the extent to which the United States could be trusted — was not managed as a disciplined internal debate. It surfaced in contradictory public statements, inconsistent negotiating positions, and moments of evident political pressure that signalled to Rwanda and to Washington that the DRC's stated positions were negotiable under sufficient pressure.
Kagame's negotiating approach exploits internal division with precision. The DRC's failure to present a unified, disciplined, and internally consistent negotiating front removed one of the basic preconditions of effective diplomacy under adversarial conditions.
Conclusion: A Framework Built on Flawed Foundations
The Washington Accords are not a peace agreement. They are a document produced by the convergence of American commercial interest, Rwandan strategic patience, and Congolese diplomatic desperation. Their terms reward aggression, institutionalise occupation, and embed a false narrative about the causes of the eastern DRC crisis so deeply into the framework that extracting it will require a complete renegotiation.
The errors documented in this analysis are not equally distributed. The United States, as the convening power with by far the greatest material capacity to impose costs on Rwanda, bears primary responsibility for the structural failures of the accords process. Its decision to maintain full strategic cooperation with Kigali while imposing cosmetic sanctions, to pressure the DRC to abandon its own pre-conditions, to reward Rwanda with an economic partnership while it occupied Congolese territory, to omit any targeting of the mineral flows that fund and motivate Rwanda's military presence, to forgo activation of AGOA and IFI leverage, to allow peacekeeping deployments to function as a diplomatic shield, to sideline binding UN Security Council Resolution 2773, and to produce a framework with no enforcement architecture — these are not the errors of a neutral mediator. They are the choices of a state that prioritised its own commercial and strategic interests over the requirements of international law and the rights of the Congolese people.
The DRC's errors are more explicable. A state negotiating from acute military weakness, under intense pressure from the world's largest power, in the absence of a credible alternative, will tend to make the errors Kinshasa made. But explicability is not absolution. The failure to prepare analytically — to map Kagame's real objectives, counter the FDLR narrative, demand MONUSCO verification of the FDLR threat level, sequence mineral concessions correctly, build the coalitions that would have made American pressure less decisive, pursue the ICC and ICJ levers available, document the demographic transformation, contest Rwanda's communications dominance, and maintain internal political discipline — represents a failure of strategic statecraft that Congolese citizens are paying for in territory, lives, and sovereignty.
Correcting course requires honesty about these failures. It requires recognising that the Washington Accords, as currently structured, are not a basis for peace but a framework for managed occupation. It requires the Congolese parliament to exercise its sovereign right to withhold ratification until Rwanda withdraws from occupied territory. It requires rebuilding the DRC's military capacity as the foundation of any credible diplomacy. And it requires that the United States be held publicly and formally accountable for the FDLR threat assessment it has never provided — an accountability that is inseparable from any honest reckoning with the thirty-year history of American military support to the Rwanda Defence Force.
The African Rights Campaign calls for a full and honest international review of the Washington Accords, the imposition of comprehensive sanctions on Rwanda's mineral export architecture and its Crystal Ventures commercial network, unconditional military support for the DRC's sovereign defence, the formal activation of ICC and ICJ proceedings against Rwanda's military and political leadership, the suspension of parliamentary ratification of the Washington Accords pending verified RDF withdrawal, and an independent American assessment of the current FDLR threat level — published and subject to international scrutiny — as a pre-condition for any further engagement premised on the FDLR justification.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the Washington Accords and when were they signed?
The Washington Accords are a peace framework brokered by the United States and signed on 4 December 2025. They were intended to establish a ceasefire and diplomatic framework for resolving the conflict between the DRC and Rwanda-backed M23 forces in eastern DRC. The accords were signed while RDF and M23 forces remained on Congolese territory, a fact that fundamentally undermines their credibility as a sovereignty-restoring instrument.
Why did the DRC sign the Washington Accords without RDF withdrawal?
The DRC signed under a combination of military desperation following major territorial losses, intense American diplomatic pressure, and an overestimation of what the United States could and would deliver. Kinshasa abandoned its stated pre-condition of RDF withdrawal — a decision that transferred significant diplomatic leverage to Rwanda without securing the reciprocal commitment that justified doing so.
What is the FDLR and why is it mentioned so many times in the Washington Accords?
The Forces Démocratiques de Libération du Rwanda is a Hutu armed group operating in eastern DRC, remnants of which have been present in the region since 1994. Rwanda uses the FDLR as its primary justification for maintaining a military presence in eastern DRC. Its repeated appearance in the Washington Accords — reportedly over fifty times — reflects Rwanda's systematic strategy of embedding this pretext into every peace framework. The FDLR's actual operational capacity has never been independently validated by any credible international authority as constituting a threat sufficient to justify cross-border military occupation. Critically, the pattern of Rwanda's military advances — into South Kivu and areas with no meaningful FDLR presence — directly contradicts the claim that the FDLR is the driving rationale.
What was UN Security Council Resolution 2773 and how did the Washington Accords undermine it?
UN Security Council Resolution 2773, adopted in December 2023, constituted the international community's binding legal response to the crisis in eastern DRC, demanding the withdrawal of foreign forces and full compliance with international humanitarian law. The Washington Accords sidelined this resolution by constructing a bilateral diplomatic framework outside the Security Council's existing legal architecture, effectively replacing a binding multilateral obligation with a voluntary arrangement that Rwanda had no intention of honouring.
What leverage did the United States fail to use against Rwanda?
The United States failed to activate multiple significant levers: conditioning Rwanda's AGOA preferential trade access on compliance; conditioning IMF and World Bank programme disbursements on verified withdrawal; imposing asset freezes on the Crystal Ventures and RPF commercial network; challenging Rwanda's continued participation in UN peacekeeping missions under the Human Rights Due Diligence Policy; and enforcing the provisions of UN Security Council Resolution 2773.
What is Kagame's actual strategic objective in eastern DRC?
Kagame's primary objective is territorial rather than merely economic. The systematic extraction of mineral resources is a dividend of occupation, not its end purpose. The progressive absorption of eastern DRC — through military, demographic, administrative, and economic integration — is the strategic logic that explains the consistency and patience of Rwanda's engagement in the region since 1996. A policy response calibrated only to mineral extraction cannot address this deeper objective.
What legal instruments did the DRC fail to use?
The DRC failed to pursue two major legal instruments in parallel with the negotiations: an International Criminal Court strategy seeking arrest warrants against named RDF commanders for documented war crimes and crimes against humanity; and a formal International Court of Justice submission on Rwanda's violation of Article 2(4) of the UN Charter. Both were legally available, analytically grounded, and capable of producing consequences independent of the diplomatic outcome.
References
United Nations Group of Experts on the DRC (2024) Final Report of the Group of Experts on the Democratic Republic of the Congo. UN Security Council Document S/2024. New York: United Nations.
United Nations Security Council (2023) Resolution 2773 on the Situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. New York: United Nations.
United States Department of the Treasury (2025) Treasury Designates Individual Contributing to Violence in the DRC: James Kabarebe. Press Release, 20 February 2025. Available at: home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases [Accessed: April 2025].
United States Department of the Treasury (2026) Treasury Designates Rwanda Defence Force and Senior Officers. Press Release SB0411, 2 March 2026. Available at: home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sb0411 [Accessed: April 2025].
United Nations (1945) Charter of the United Nations, Article 2(4). San Francisco: United Nations.
United Nations (2010) Report of the Mapping Exercise Documenting the Most Serious Violations of Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law Committed within the Territory of the DRC between March 1993 and June 2003. Geneva: OHCHR.
Stearns, J. (2012) Dancing in the Glory of Monsters: The Collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa. New York: PublicAffairs.
Reyntjens, F. (2009) The Great African War: Congo and Regional Geopolitics, 1996-2006. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Prunier, G. (2009) Africa's World War: Congo, the Rwandan Genocide, and the Making of a Continental Catastrophe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Human Rights Watch (2024) DRC: M23, Rwandan Forces Commit War Crimes. New York: HRW.
Amnesty International (2024) Eastern DRC: Accountability for Ongoing Atrocities. London: Amnesty International.
International Criminal Court (2011) Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. The Hague: ICC.
UN Human Rights Due Diligence Policy (HRDDP) (2013) on United Nations Support to Non-United Nations Security Forces. New York: United Nations.
African Union (2023) Luanda Process: Documents and Communiques. Addis Ababa: African Union Commission.
Author: The African Rights Campaign. Research and Advocacy Team
Contact: africanrightscampaign@gmail.com | africarealities.blogspot.com
© 2025 The African Rights Campaign. All rights reserved.
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