In the aftermath of the
First Congo War, Rwanda, Uganda and Eastern Congolese allied groups had installed
Laurent-Désiré Kabila in May 1997 as leader of the newly renamed
Democratic Republic of the Congo. In turn, Kabila appointed many Rwandans as key officials in his new government and armed forces; including
James Kabarebe who served as the
Congolese army Chief of Staff. For over a year Rwandan soldiers and officials supported the Kabila Government, using the influence to export raw materials to Rwanda. By late 1997 the Congolese population was growing weary of the
Rwandan Patriotic Army, which fought anti-Rwandan insurgencies in the eastern Congo with considerable brutality, smuggled natural resources out of the country, confiscated land and dwellings, and disrespected civilians. By mid-1998, internal ethnic tensions convinced Kabila that Rwandan influence was a threat to his power. On July 13, he removed all Rwandans from government positions and on July 27 ordered all remaining
RPA and
UPDF soldiers to leave the country. Kabila replaced these losses with friends, local militias, and surviving
Hutu Génocidaires.
Banyamulenge (Congolese Tutsis) were also removed from power as they were thought to be Rwandan sympathizers. These actions angered many in the Rwandan government, as it posed a threat to their influence in the Congo as well as the safety of Tutsis in both the DRC and Rwanda.
Paul Kagame, Rwandan Minister of Defence, concerned of these outcomes for months, had begun drawing up plans for a second military intervention in the Congo in April 1998.
Rwandan plans Kabarebe proposed flying Rwandan troops over 1,900 km (1,200 miles) to
Kitona Air Base in western Congo, only 320 km (200 miles) from
Kinshasa. Here they would be able to take control of the economically important
Bas-Congo province, home to Congo's only seaports, as well as the
Inga Dams, the main source of electricity for western Congo. In the ensuing chaos, they would then march to Kinshasa, depose Kabila, and install another pro-Rwandan regime. Kabarebe's experience in the Congo convinced him that various local dissidents, from interned Banyamulenge to ex-FAZ soldiers, would join the Rwandans and help swiftly depose the Kabila government.
Opening moves in Goma On the evening of August 2 in
Goma, FAC General
Sylvain Mbuki and his deputy went to the local Rwandan-controlled Radio-Télévision Nationale Congolaise station. Once there, he announced a mutiny in the FAC and declared his intention to overthrow Kabila. While this message was broadcast, commandos from the Rwandan High Command Unit (HCU) moved into the city seized
Goma International Airport as well as four civilian airliners and a number of lighter transports. The following day, Rwandan HCU commandos took control of
Goma International Airport, hijacking four civilian aircraft, 2
Boeing 727s and 2
Boeing 707s, sitting on the runway. On August 4, the commandos were joined by more Rwandan and Ugandan soldiers, including a Ugandan light artillery unit, numbering over 500 soldiers in total. The pilots were then ordered at gunpoint to fly west to Kitona Air Base. == Initial successes ==