A Major AFRICOM & US State Department Campaign to Undermine Chinese Influence in Central Africa
According
to their website, the American NGO, Invisible Children, claims now to
have had over 80 million viewers to their YouTube video, “Kony2012,”
since its release on YouTube a few weeks ago. For anyone with the
patience to sit through the entire YouTube of Kony2012, it is
questionable how truthful the figure of 80 million viewers is. Eighty
million is unprecedented in YouTube history by all accounts.
The video features such prominent
Hollywood personalities as Angelina Jolie, George Clooney, Lady GaGa,
Bill Gates, Bill Clinton, Sean “Puff Daddy” Combs and other notables.
It’s a slick, sentimental story directed by Jason Russell, a 33-year-old
now-hospitalized American filmmaker who apparently just underwent a
bizarre mental disconnect on the streets of San Diego.[1]
The YouTube video depicts a young Ugandan, Jacob Acaye, whom Russell
claims he befriended some ten years earlier after Acaye escaped
conscription into Joseph Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) as an
11-year-old killer. The film portrays Kony as the world’s worst beast
and terrorist, in effect, Africa’s Osama bin Laden. [2]
The Invisible Children NGO is itself
opaque. It reportedly rakes in millions from sales of such things as
buttons, Invisible Children T-shirts, bracelets and posters priced from
$30-$250, but it ranks low on transparency regarding other donors. The
group, which employs around 100 people, is expected to raise millions of
dollars from their “Kony2012” video, but so far it refuses to say how
much has been donated or how it will spend the money. The founders of
the group, who advocate direct US military intervention in response to
the LRA, had been previously criticized for posing with guns alongside
members of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) in 2008, an
organization widely accused of rape and looting. The group issued a
statement in response: “We thought it would be funny to bring back to
our friends and family a joke photo. You know, ‘Haha – they have
bazookas in their hands but they’re actually fighting for peace’.” [3] HaHa…
Source: Black Star News Invisible
Children's goals initially may have been to publicize the plight of
children caught in Uganda's decades-long conflicts; lately, IC has been
acting as apologists for General Yoweri K. Museveni's dictatorship and
the U.S. goal to impose AFRICOM (the U.S. Africa Military Command) on
Africa.
IC has produced a brilliant film that's making the global rounds on Facebook
It's
a classic as propaganda pieces come. The short but overwhelmingly
powerful film uses all the best tear-jerk techniques. In the end, the
film denounces Joseph Kony, the leader of the brutal Lord's Resistance
Army, while giving the impression that Museveni's dictatorship and his
brutal military, which was found liable for war crimes in Democratic
Republic of Congo by the International Court of Justice, has nothing to
do with the atrocities committed against children in Uganda. It also
doesn't inform viewers that Museveni abducted thousands of child
soldiers to win his insurgency in Uganda in 1986, launching the pattern
of child soldier recruitment all over Africa.
In fact, Kony's insurgency against Museveni was launched later, meaning he too learnedchild soldier-abductions from Museveni.
Look
at the way Invisible Children exploits American children in the
beginning of their documentary; they then transplant the audience to
Uganda, where again they take advantage of Ugandan children, who are the
victims of both the LRA and the Ugandan government's army.
The
imagery are powerful. Dr. Joseph Goebbels' and Leni Riefenstahl would
have been proud of this cinematic coup by Invisible Children.
If
Invisible Children was in fact a serious organization that has not been
co-opted by the Museveni regime and the U.S. foreign policy agenda, the
organization would inform the world that General Museveni, who has now
stolen three elections in a row in Uganda is the first person who
deserves to be arrested.
This Ugandan and East African nightmare
gets a blank check from Washington simply because he has deployed
Ugandan soldiers to Somalia at the behest of the United States. So
democracy, human rights abuses, and genocide, become minor nuisances as
far as U.S. foreign policy goes and as far as Invisible Children cares.
This is beyond hypocrisy. Those members of Invisible Children who may
have supported this misguided project to send more U.S. troops to Africa
because they were unwittingly deceived, should do some serious soul
searching.