Is a lawyer and 2000 graduate of Princeton whose undergraduate thesis, “Building Peace and Establishing the Rule of Law: The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda,” qualified to give brutal testimony against the government of Rwanda in a congressional hearing this week?
Is a lawyer and 2000 graduate of Princeton whose undergraduate thesis, "Building Peace and Establishing the Rule of Law: The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda,” qualified to give brutal testimony against the government of Rwanda in a congressional hearing this week? Does 11 months spent in Rwanda from July 2000 to June 2001 with the International Rescue Committee as a type of community organizer give this individual the moral authority to pass judgment on a country still recovering from the slaughter of up to 1 million of its people in 1994?
Steven Feldstein’s State Department bio is classic boilerplate. The only thing that is clear is his title and job description: Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor (DRL). According to DOS, he is "responsible for DRL’s work in Africa, international labor affairs, and international religious freedom.
His accomplishments are listed on his résumé, but read with a critical eye. Feldstein taught photography to street children, wrote reports, and managed projects for USAID while in Rwanda.
Look deeper in to his background and find an article in the Princeton News that says Feldstein "spent a year in Rwanda assessing orphanages and documenting the lives of street children as part of his work for a humanitarian relief organization.” Does this qualify Feldstein to give expert testimony that damns Rwanda?
There is more. An organization called DC 40 under 40 names Feldstein as one of its wunderkinds. The organization says, "Feldstein played an active role in Rwanda’s post-conflict reconstruction through the International Rescue Committee.”
How can less than a year of organizing street children and writing reams of reports qualify as "an active role in Rwanda’s post conflict resolution”?
Someone has to ask questions about the inexperience that is running rampant in the State Department, shaping a disastrous foreign policy there and reducing Africa to serfdom. Political and economic realities are extremely complicated in this part of the world. My feeling is that Obama’s DOS, for no discernible reason, is persecuting the only stable government in Central Africa and coddling a brutal dictator in Congo. Obama is doing so by sending the equivalent of schoolchildren to do the work of policy experts. Ask yourself how Feldstein can be an "expert” on both Sudan and Rwanda and responsible for international religious freedom on top of it all.
You can read Feldstein’s passive-aggressive testimony about Rwanda here, but do so with a critical eye towards his age, experience and background.
Like a jilted lover, Feldstein begins with a statement about his love for the country and then proceeds to slam the government of Rwanda with innuendo, rumor, and completely unproven accusations of human rights abuses and heinous crimes. I won’t delineate his comments here. To do so would elevate them.
In my opinion, Feldstein must have been promoting a hidden agenda for DOS. There is no other explanation, and his comments are in lockstep with what I consider the Obama administration’s systematic persecution of Rwanda over the last seven years.
Rwanda is the safest country in central Africa, perhaps on the continent. I was there for two weeks in March and have visited many times over the last 11 years. Progress and reconstruction have been steady and visible. I can think of no other country in Africa I have visited, including South Africa, where I can roam the streets at midnight with my camera and feel as safe as I do on the beaches of Sanibel Island, Florida.
Contrary to Feldstein’s claims of persecution of the press and free speech, I have been able to return many times with absolutely no harassment, even when I had written criticism of the government there. This was especially true after articles written in 2007 and 2008 -- articles I now consider period pieces. Some of them deserve a rewrite, given the current turmoil in Congo. As a writer, I have experienced the same feeling politicians have when they say, "Given what I know now, I would vote or act differently.” I would certainly write differently.
Which brings up Congo.
Why the Obama administration is giving a free pass to Joseph Kabila’s reign of terror in Congo is beyond me. I have seen it firsthand; I have experienced psychological torture at the hands of Kabila’s secret police, witnessed the despair of Congolese refugees in neighboring countries, and empathized with the agony of displaced persons in the IDP camps near Goma. I have met with rebel leaders and understand their frustration with Congo’s lack of political will to eliminate the FDLR harbingers of genocide against the Tutsi.
But back to Rwanda.
Reality is in complete contrast to Feldstein’s list of Rwandan horrors.
Consider that Rwanda is only 21 years removed from the genocide of 1994. Research demonstrates it can take over six decades to recover from armed conflict.
Rwanda is a remarkable mecca of tourism, 98 percent of the population is fully medically insured, and according to former British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s Africa Governance Initiative, the last five years in Rwanda have resulted in 1 million people lifted out of poverty. The region’s largest solar array will provide power to over 15,000 Rwandan households and add almost 6 percent to the country’s total energy supply. Streetlights line the main road from Kigali to Musenze, and villagers can walk the roads unmolested at any hour.
I am not alone in wondering about the agenda of the State Department and its elevation of Steven Feldstein as policy expert.
Sudan expert, Huffington Post blogger and Smith College professor Eric Reeves writes in "Democratization and Sudan: An Obama policy of disingenuousness” that "Feldstein’s testimony on Sudan warrants serious scrutiny”.
Who knows what is really going on in the labyrinthine maze connecting the DOS and the CIA in Africa?
What I do know is what I have witnessed in Rwanda.
Wanting to conduct a reality check on myself, I called Professor Reeves. Let’s just say we had a good and productive conversation.
I think I will appropriate and modify Reeves’ descriptor and title this opinion piece "An Obama Policy of Disingenuousness in Rwanda.
This article was first published in Huffington Post on May 28.