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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
With the world focused on the latest Iraqi War and its consequences, it takes little time to focus on a smaller conflict with potentially greater consequences. Discussed are the issues of deterrence, global hatred toward the U.S., U.S. policy, Canadian aid and other real and potential consequences. 7 works cited. jvDarfur.rtf
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is in Darfur, of which The Economist has said: "Darfur is probably the worlds worst humanitarian crisis" (16). Though the Sudan has been torn by strife over the last few
decades and many officials feel they have good control over the conflicts at the end of 2004, the Sudan is now the home of Osama bin Laden, and it is
this connection that many feel is responsible for the ongoing chaos in the Sudan. It is also this conflict that many feel necessitates international intervention, an interesting turn in events
considering that the international community had reduced its presence in Africa in an effort to empower African self-government. This has been successful. If the U.S. and the international community step
in, the ongoing government of Africa is truly at risk. On November 17, 2004, President Thabo Mokgola addressed the European Parliament in Strasbourg.
In that statement, he notes all of the advances the African government has achieved in the last decade. He notes the formation of the African Government of National Unity that
now governs the country began with the efforts by the Rwandans in response to the 1994 genocide that killed a million Rwandans. That effort ended wars in Burundi, Angola, Ethiopia
and Eritrea, the Democratic Republic of Congo. This ended the war between the Northern and Southern parts of Sudan that began in 1956 and resulted in the formation of the
new continental government (Mokgola; The Economist). Mokgola assures the world that the terrorist wars in Algeria and Uganda are coming to a conclusion, and that peace talks in Darfur will
have the same result. He mentions the establishment of multiple national agencies to promote this peace, and provides evidence that these agencies are working. He says, "Africa is using enforceable
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