One of the attributes that served him well on his rise to the top in the UPDF was his reputation as a fearless soldier, often personally leading his soldiers into battle on the front-lines, as he did during
Operation Kitona in the
Second Congo War. The other attribute was his total commitment to the commander in chief and the UPDF. Museveni is reported to have repeatedly ignored complaints about Kazini's limited formal education. Over the years, he repeatedly promoted him and gave him increasing security and defence responsibilities. Kazini's rise through the ranks of the UPDF has also been credited to his close relationship with Salim Saleh, the brother of President Museveni, for he was otherwise never popular among the top echelons of the
National Resistance Army. Independent journalist Obed Katureebe claimed that Kazini had "stepped on many colleagues' toes" in his rise to power. For instance, it is alleged that, while posted as commander of the Mechanised Brigade in the 1990s, Kazini wrote a secret intelligence report accusing General
David Tinyefuza and Colonel
Kizza Besigye of plotting to overthrow Museveni's government. Tinyefuza would be on the very committee that investigated Kazini for creating ghost soldiers. Katureebe also reported that Kazini, at this point still a favourite of Museveni, had orchestrated the sacking of General
Jeje Odongo by accusing him of leaking sensitive information to the Rwandan Government. The discord between the two men had reached a peak in the late 1990s when Odongo had written a report blaming Kazini for the outbreak of
hostilities between Rwanda and Uganda in
Kisangani that led to the UPDF's expulsion from the city. Katureebe accordingly refers to Kazini's leadership style as 'factional' and 'abrasive'. In 2003, the Porter Commission named James Kazini as one of the senior military officials to have taken part in the 'plunder' of eastern Congo. In April 2009, facing
court-martial for his role in the ghost soldiers scandal, Kazini was also accused of conducting unilateral military deployments and of plotting to overthrow President Museveni in a military coup. Kazini was alleged to have privately recruited and trained 7,000 men at Bihanga Training School in Mbarara for the purpose of creating a semi-autonomous military unit, the 409 Brigade, in the West Nile region towards that end. The committee investigating Kazini's use of ghost soldiers claimed that he had re-routed the funding through units under his control to better manage the recruits without the knowledge of the Ugandan Army leadership. ==Death==