By David Himbara
In his 1951 farewell address to the U.S. Congress, General Douglas MacArthur famously uttered the phrase ”old soldiers never die, they simply fade away.” Rwanda’s General James Kabarebe is likely thinking the same thing. On October 18, 2018, General Paul Kagame dumped Kabarebe as defense minister. Now Kabarebe is under house arrest. Before Kabarebe fades away, we should recall his horrendous record of nearly 30 years he served Rwanda’s dictator.
The relationship between the two generals evolved as follows:
In 1990, Kabarebe became aide-de-camp to Kagame — later becoming Commander of the High Command Unit at Mulindi, and head the Republican Guard.
In 1996, Kabarebe was in command of Rwanda’s invasion of DR Congo.
In 1997, Kabarebe became Congo’s army chief of staff after the defeat of Mobutu Sese Seko.
In 1998, Kabarebe led the second invasion of DR Congo after he was dismissed as chief of staff.
In 2002, Kagame appointed Kabarebe Chief of Defence Staff of the Rwandan Defence Forces.
In 2010, Kagame appointed Kabarebe Minister of Defence.
In 2010, Kabarebe cited in the United Nations’s Mapping Report on Congo for the genocide of Congolese and Rwandans during the First & Second Congo War, alongside Kagame.
In 2012, Kabarebe cited by the UN as de facto commander of M23 militia that overrun Goma, DR Congo.
On October 18, 2018, Kagame dumped Kabarebe to ”senior advisor.”
Mid-August 2019, Kagame places Kabarebe under house arrest.