"If you go to Europe, politicians don't matter. The people making the decisions in Europe are bankers. The technicians of finance are making the decisions there. It has very little to do with democracy or the will of the people. And we are hostage to that because we like our iPhones."--Jonathan Franzen
A site tracking political and military developments in the Democratic Republic of Congo, with a focus on resource exploitation.
Monday, January 30, 2012
Quote of the Day
One more thing Apple is responsible for:
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Quote of the Day
On Wednesday night, Gaithersburg, Maryland became the epicenter of the grassroots movement to end the conflict in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.--The Enough Project
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Rosenblum's Cant and Stearns' Guild
A few weeks ago, a friend sent me a link to Peter Rosenblum’s
latest broadside, a letter he addressed to the SEC excoriating my New York Times’
op-ed. The note she attached to the link said, “What did you do, run over his dog?!”
[1] It's a little hard to divine, but at one or two points Rosenblum appears to suggest that my informants can't be speaking accurately or truthfully about the law's impacts because he has heard Congolese voice similar complaints about their lives in other contexts. It's true that Congolese have complained, for a very long time, about their inability to pay school fees, afford health care, and even buy food. But does the fact that Congolese are desperately poor--and have been for ages--mean that the miners haven't been impacted by the mining embargo? Would Rosenblum have been more convinced if they'd come up with different, and more original sounding complaints? It's a silly question, I know, but I'm grasping at straws: I really don't understand what Rosenblum is getting at, otherwise.
Now that I’ve read the letter, I can understand the impetus behind her question. It’s an odd piece of writing for a law professor to dispatch
to a body like the SEC, and not just because it contains a startling number
of grammatical errors (see over the fold for the [sic]s). In it, Rosenblum argues that the evidence I
provide of the harm caused by the law is impressionistic and selective. He has heard “similar claims over the course
of more than 20 years,” he tells the SEC, and he assures them that my comments provide
no basis on which to judge even the short-term impacts of the law.
I wasn't surprised that Rosenblum would take issue with my op-ed. He thought highly enough of the conflict minerals campaign to have issued a press release commending it back in March. But I am a little surprised at how he's gone about it. In fact, this letter to the SEC is the third time Rosenblum has taken to keyboard in opposition to the editorial. After it appeared, he published a letter in the New York Times stating that while DF-1502 wouldn’t solve the
problem, it did constitute a small but vital step in the right direction. My
claim that it was hurting the very people it was meant to help was "impressionistic," he wrote--there's that word again--and and my assertion that the Chinese would eventually step
in to pick up the slack in the mineral trade was “vague.”
He next left a comment on Stearns’ blog suggesting that I
had become mentally incapacitated during my trip to the Congo. I wish I were speaking hyperbolically, but here--judge for yourself: “Many of us have
struggled during field research, when the most recent grievance overwhelms all
others. It makes sense for the people we encounter, but long-time Congo
watchers presumably have a sense of context. David Aronson seems to have lost
all perspective.”
After he published those notes, but before I’d seen his
letter to the SEC, I sent Rosenblum an email pointing out that we had met on
several occasions, including in Kinshasa in 1997, and I told him that I hoped we’d have
the chance to debate the issue more thoughtfully. As I wrote on my blog, “I
know Peter. I respect Peter. He seems to have responded more to the
editor-chosen title of my op-ed than to anything I wrote. I hope he'll provide
a more thoughtful critique in the future.” A couple of weeks later, I was delighted when the New York Bar Association invited us, quite out of the blue, to have that very debate at their headquarters in Manhattan. Unfortunately,
Rosenblum backed out at the last moment, citing prior commitments, and the debate went ahead without him. I then invited him to elaborate on his criticism here, in my blog; I even promised to let him have the last word. Rosenblum
failed to respond to that invitation or to several follow-up emails and
telephone calls. (See after the fold for the sequence.) It’s because of his silence
that I am writing now.
Part of the difficulty of responding to Rosenblum's criticism is that its intensity isn't matched by a corresponding clarity. For example, his main criticism is that the evidence I provide is "impressionistic." But it's not clear precisely what he means by that. I assume that he means that it's sufficiently uninformed and selective as to be unreliable. But I'm left wondering why he would think that to be the case, and what evidence he has that contradicts mine. I reported what I saw and heard over the course of four weeks, visits to seven mining sites, and discussions with dozens of Congolese stakeholders and experts. What, precisely, does Rosenblum think I got wrong? The advocates themselves have stipulated that the law--or more precisely, the resulting embargo--caused a precipitous drop in mineral exports. What does Rosenblum think happened to the million or so people in the region who depended on that trade for their livelihood? What does he think of the increasing number of journalists and human rights groups who have corroborated my reporting, such as the Economist, Reuters, the UN Group of Experts, and tk? And what does he think of the many Congolese who have testified to the law's deleterious consequences? If he has ideas on the subject, he doesn't say.[1]
Unfortunately, labeling my piece "impressionistic" is about as substantive as Rosenblum gets. His letter to the SEC, for example, reiterates the "impressionistic" criticism in half a paragraph; the rest of the letter is concerned with setting forth his own credentials as an expert on the country. Indeed, the letter makes it sound like Rosenblum believes the SEC ought to believe him because of his impressive-sounding credentials--even in the absence of any argument! If I didn't know him, I'd think this the work of a crank, albeit of the tufted, tenured variety. But I do know Rosenblum, and I know that he is capable of writing concise and effective take-downs; see here for an example [link tk]. Blithely asserting that I’ve lost my marbles, or that I’m not as credentialed as he is, doesn’t do much to advance the substance or the tenor of the debate.
Unfortunately, labeling my piece "impressionistic" is about as substantive as Rosenblum gets. His letter to the SEC, for example, reiterates the "impressionistic" criticism in half a paragraph; the rest of the letter is concerned with setting forth his own credentials as an expert on the country. Indeed, the letter makes it sound like Rosenblum believes the SEC ought to believe him because of his impressive-sounding credentials--even in the absence of any argument! If I didn't know him, I'd think this the work of a crank, albeit of the tufted, tenured variety. But I do know Rosenblum, and I know that he is capable of writing concise and effective take-downs; see here for an example [link tk]. Blithely asserting that I’ve lost my marbles, or that I’m not as credentialed as he is, doesn’t do much to advance the substance or the tenor of the debate.
I happened to mention these frustrations to the friend who originally sent me the link to Rosenblum’s SEC letter. She told me I needn’t be too concerned: “You’ve reduced
an Ivy League law professor to several iterations of name calling and rank pulling. Now, apparently, you've forced him to retreat into an embarrassed
silence. It’s not you who has anything to worry about.”
In the meantime, Stearns seems to be pulling back on his
initial criticism of my piece. In a Wall Street Journal book review, he admits that
the law has put tens of thousands of people out of work. He has also refused opportunities to defend his own account of how the law might work. You’ll remember that he suggested that the main mineral
exporters, the comptoir owners, threatened by the loss of income, would pressure the central government to provide better security throughout the region. I doubted from the outset that comptoir owners had that kind of pull and wondered, if they did, why they hadn't used that power to put an end to the conflicts a long time earlier. I haven't seen Stearns make any subsequent defense of his argument, but I haven't heard him repudiate it either.
Stearns is a generally reliable guy, thorough and accurate.
But I’ve reluctantly called him out once or twice in the past for fence sitting. Back in
2003, he wrote a piece for the International Crisis Group in which he
alternately called the continued presence of the FDLR/ex-genocidaires in the
Kivus a “pretext” and the “explanation” for Rwanda’s incursions into the Congo. "Well, which is it?" I wrote to him. If it’s the former, we need to pressure Rwanda
to back off. If the latter, we need to work harder on repatriating the FDLR.
Surely an analysis of how Rwanda has behaved inside the Congo will go far
toward telling us where the truth lies. My own reading is that the FDLR’s presence
is largely pretextual, and that Rwanda’s main business in Congo since 1999 has
been plunder on the one hand and territorial control on the other. Or so
memory serves me of that conversation: I no longer have access to the email
account in which it transpired.
And if memory serves, I wasn’t able to elicit much of a
response from Stearns then, either, except for a retreat into vagueness. Look,
I respect Stearns enough to believe he isn’t fence sitting to retain his viability
on the issues, but there are times, too, that I want to remind him of what Dante thought
of neutrality.
[1] It's a little hard to divine, but at one or two points Rosenblum appears to suggest that my informants can't be speaking accurately or truthfully about the law's impacts because he has heard Congolese voice similar complaints about their lives in other contexts. It's true that Congolese have complained, for a very long time, about their inability to pay school fees, afford health care, and even buy food. But does the fact that Congolese are desperately poor--and have been for ages--mean that the miners haven't been impacted by the mining embargo? Would Rosenblum have been more convinced if they'd come up with different, and more original sounding complaints? It's a silly question, I know, but I'm grasping at straws: I really don't understand what Rosenblum is getting at, otherwise.
Monday, January 9, 2012
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