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Thursday, 21 August 2025

The DRC-Rwanda Peace Agreement: From Diplomatic Promise to Ground Reality

Executive Summary

The 27 June 2025 peace agreement between the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Rwanda, signed in Washington, was heralded as a historic breakthrough. However, two months later, the accord appears to function more as diplomatic theatre than substantive conflict resolution. While the agreement established frameworks for territorial integrity and economic cooperation, military realities on the ground remain unchanged, civilian casualties continue, and the M23 rebel group has consolidated its administrative control over occupied territories.

A "Historic" Agreement on Paper

On  27 June  2025, the DRC and Rwanda signed what was presented as a major breakthrough towards ending hostilities in the eastern DRC. The agreement, made public by the U.S. State Department, outlined commitments to territorial integrity, cessation of support to armed groups, and the establishment of joint mechanisms including supply chain "de-risking" for minerals and cross-border value chain development in partnership with the United States and American investors.

Washington subsequently announced a regional economic framework for the Great Lakes region, designed as a complement to implement the agreement. Diplomatically, the initiative was praised as a "first step" that could open a window for de-escalation.

However, analysts immediately identified significant obstacles: a fragmented war involving over one hundred armed groups (the strongest created and supported by Rwanda), limited inclusion of ground-level actors, and heavy dependence on still-theoretical economic incentives. Congolese observers captured the ambivalence with a telling phrase: "peace on paper, confusion on the ground."

Military Reality Unchanged in the Kivus

While diplomats signed documents in Washington, military maps barely shifted. Successive UN reports (Expert Group reports, Security Council briefings, Secretary-General reports on MONUSCO) document the continued presence and direct support of the Rwanda Defence Forces (RDF): operational planning, provision of sophisticated weapons, command and control, and deployment of several thousand soldiers inside Congolese territory.

In March 2025, MONUSCO reported a "drastic deterioration" due to renewed M23 offensives "supported by the RDF" and "significant reinforcement" of foreign forces in eastern DRC. In June, the Security Council explicitly urged the RDF to cease all support to M23 and "immediately withdraw" from Congolese territory—a clear indication that despite diplomatic progress, occupation and external support persisted.

The agreement alone did not alter the balance of forces. Ground realities—positions held, supply lines, flows of reinforcements and ammunition—remained determinative, far more than the principles negotiated in Washington.

Continued Atrocities and Humanitarian Crisis

Regarding human rights, the weeks following the signature brought no "tangible de-escalation." On the contrary, Human Rights Watch documented civilian massacres in July 2025, with at least 140 people executed near Virunga National Park, attributed to the "Rwanda-backed M23." In early June, HRW had already reported summary executions of at least 21 civilians in Goma. Amnesty International criticised an agreement that fails to credibly address serious crimes committed in eastern DRC, whilst noting that pro-government Congolese militias have also committed atrocities.

This convergent evidence shows that the signing did not suspend the spiral of violence. This is crucial: a peace agreement that does not quickly and verifiably reduce violence against civilians loses legitimacy in the eyes of affected populations. In the east, displacements number in the millions, humanitarian access remains obstructed, and testimonies report intimidation, extortion, and violence. Meanwhile, mineral pillaging towards Rwanda intensifies.

Parallel Administration: M23 Consolidates Control

One reason the situation remains unchanged is that M23 does not behave like a force in retreat, but as a power in place. Since 2024, and with greater scope in 2025, the UN Expert Group has detailed M23's establishment of parallel administration in controlled zones: forced censuses, proprietary "police," road control, goods taxation, and especially control over the local mining economy. Independent analyses confirm this politico-economic structuring, which aims to make the movement self-financed and legitimise its authority.

The emblematic case is Rubaya, the heart of Congolese coltan production. The UN and journalistic investigations describe how capturing this strategic site allowed M23 to impose substantial "taxes" on traders, generating hundreds of thousands of dollars monthly. Reuters revealed in July 2025 a smuggling scheme involving a Rwandan company buying coltan from rebel-controlled zones, fueling the war machine. Even when Kigali denies all support to M23, the volumes of tantalum exports declared by Rwanda and commercial routes identified by UN experts point to massive "contamination" of regional supply chains.

Reinforcements and Logistics: The War Dynamic Persists

The continued sending of reinforcements by Rwanda to the DRC demonstrates that communication lines and logistical corridors remain open and active. UN and MONUSCO reports covering periods before and after the signing repeatedly mention reinforcements, equipment influx, and maintenance of RDF units operating alongside M23. Leaked confidential reports even mention Rwandan command levels over tactical operations, provision of weapons capable of neutralizing aerial assets, and RDF personnel numbering several thousand on Congolese soil.

As long as these military-logistical parameters are not dismantled, a peace text—however detailed—cannot produce concrete effects. The Security Council had to reiterate in late June the requirement for "unconditional" RDF withdrawal. Again, this post-agreement injunction is an implicit admission: the normalization promised in Washington did not translate into verifiable disengagement.

The Fundamental Flaw: M23 as Rwanda's Proxy Force

The most critical structural limitation of the Washington agreement lies in its treatment of M23 as an independent actor when, in reality, the group is entirely dependent on Rwandan support. Without Rwanda, there would simply be no M23 as an effective fighting force. This dependency relationship makes the agreement's approach fundamentally flawed.

The evidence is overwhelming: M23 exists and operates solely because of sustained Rwandan backing. From military equipment and training to strategic planning and direct troop support, Rwanda provides the essential infrastructure that keeps M23 operational. Under these circumstances, negotiating with Rwanda while treating M23 as a separate entity creates a dangerous fiction that allows Kigali to maintain plausible deniability while continuing its proxy war.

This omission compounds a sequencing flaw: the agreement suggests "simultaneous" approaches (Rwandan withdrawal / FDLR neutralization by the Congolese army). However, as observers noted, many FDLR strongholds are precisely under M23 control, beyond immediate operational reach of the FARDC, making simultaneity very difficult to apply without coercive mechanisms and robust security guarantees.

"Peace" and Minerals: The Ambiguities of an Economic Gamble

The agreement centers on economic integration logic, particularly around strategic minerals (3T and cobalt). The idea: align commercial interests to "secure" eastern DRC and make peace more profitable than war. In theory, this gamble can create positive incentives. In practice, as long as M23 manages a political economy of war—taxes at control points, mining site levies, smuggling circuits via neighboring countries—capital injection and "de-risking" may inadvertently legitimize supply chains captured by armed actors. Analyses highlight the eagerness of certain companies to position themselves on Congolese assets before security materialization, fueling perceptions of peace "serving" mineral access.

The paradox is clear: if the agreement relies primarily on economics, it must simultaneously break the war economy. However, without effective disarmament, corridor control, and credible traceability of 3T and gold flows, the legal economy risks being siphoned by parallel structures that do not lay down arms.

Why Call This a "Cosmetic Act"?

Characterizing Rwanda's Washington signature as a "cosmetic act" points to five blind spots:

1. Absence of Immediate Security Effect

After June 27, no measurable improvement in civilian protection was observed; conversely, massacres were documented in July. A peace agreement that does not interrupt the atrocity cycle—summary executions, sexual violence, mass displacement—remains declaratory.

2. Maintaining Occupation and External Support

RDF presence and operational support to M23 remain a repeated UN finding, necessitating a resolution reiterating withdrawal requirements. As long as these parameters persist, speaking of "de-escalation" is illusory.

3. The Fiction of M23 Independence

The agreement treats M23 as an autonomous actor when it is fundamentally Rwanda's proxy force. This fiction allows Rwanda to sign peace agreements while maintaining its proxy war through M23. Since M23 cannot exist without Rwandan support, any meaningful peace process must directly address Rwanda's control over the group rather than pretending M23 operates independently.

4. Intact War Economy

Control of sites (like Rubaya), flow taxation, structured smuggling toward Rwanda—as long as these rents persist, they finance the war effort and make peace "unprofitable" for armed actors.

5. Inapplicable Sequencing

The simultaneity of "RDF withdrawal / FDLR neutralization" is impractical if FDLR are implanted in M23 territories, inaccessible to FARDC without robust and verifiable security agreements.

From Cosmetic to Concrete: What Would It Take?

For the agreement to cease being perceived as window dressing, five minimum conditions are essential:

Robust and Public Verification Mechanism

Independent geolocation of RDF units and M23 columns, weekly publication of position maps, and automatic sanctions for breaches (asset freezes, travel restrictions, targeted embargoes). Security Council resolutions and Expert Group mandates provide a foundation, but execution and transparency remain key.

Effective Neutralization of War Rents

Customs blockade of corridors, reinforced border post controls, strict "mine-to-metal" certification for tantalum, tin, and tungsten, and prosecution of companies involved in purchasing "captured" minerals. Recent revelations about Rwandan exporters highlight the need to act on commercial, not just military, links.

Supervised M23 Inclusion in DDR Sequence

Disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration conditioned on security guarantees, without which parallel administration will persist. Parallel mediations (Qatar, regional) should be articulated to the Washington framework with verifiable public milestones.

Immediate Civilian Protection

Security zones, robust patrols, and humanitarian actor support. An agreement's credibility is measured first by the reduction of serious violations, not by announcements of new economic councils.

Withdrawal and State Authority Restitution Schedule

Return of Congolese administration, reopening of public services, local taxation cleanup, and territorial police refoundation under national control. Without this, the "double state" will remain the norm in the east.

Conclusion and Recommendations

Rwanda's signature of the Washington agreement avoided a political diplomatic vacuum and offered a working framework. However, it currently resembles primarily a "cosmetic act": RDF forces are still accused of operating in Congolese territory alongside M23, atrocities continue, parallel administration takes root, and mineral rents finance the war effort.

The agreement has become an "umbrella" providing Rwanda protection against bilateral criticism and sanctions, creating the false impression that Rwanda cooperates for conflict resolution while it continues its proxy war through M23. This is the essence of why the agreement is cosmetic: it allows Rwanda to appear compliant while maintaining complete operational control over M23.

The international community cannot therefore limit itself to applauding an agreement's signature; it must ensure strict application of the latest Security Council resolution demanding immediate, total, and unconditional withdrawal of Rwandan troops from Congolese territory. Failing this, Washington's fine speeches will produce only disappointment and mistrust among Kivu populations.

In this context, a coercive measure becomes unavoidable: establishing an arms embargo against Rwanda. As long as Kigali continues to benefit from weapons flows allowing it to directly or indirectly support M23, resolutions will remain theoretical. The embargo would constitute not only a clear political signal but also a concrete instrument to dry up military interference capacity.

Only a combination of diplomacy, effective sanctions, and intrusive verification mechanisms can transform Washington's cosmetic act into a credible and sustainable peace process for Kivu populations.


References

  • U.S. State Department – "Peace Agreement between DRC and Rwanda" (full text, June 27, 2025) and economic implementation note (August 1, 2025)
  • Reuters – Signing coverage: mineral supply chain "de-risking" component (June 27, 2025)
  • USIP – "What the DRC-Rwanda Peace Deal Means..." (analysis, July 3, 2025)
  • Ebuteli – "Peace on paper, confusion on the ground" (June 27, 2025)
  • Boutros-Ghali Observatory – Analysis of simultaneity constraints (July 15, 2025)
  • United Nations / Security Council – Expert Group reports and official documents: S/2024/969 (Dec. 27, 2024), S/2025/176 (March 20, 2025), S/2025/202 (April 1, 2025), S/2025/324 (June 2, 2025), associated resolutions
  • Reuters – "Rwanda exercises command and control over M23" (July 2, 2025)
  • Human Rights Watch – Reports on executions/massacres (June 3, 2025; August 20, 2025)
  • Amnesty International – "Peace agreement does not address serious crimes" (July 1, 2025)
  • Reuters / Mining investigations – Coltan smuggling, Rwandan company cited (July 3, 2025)
  • Supplementary analyses – ISPI (parallel administration), Security Council Report (humanitarian and political context), Understanding War (ceasefire violations)

 Prepared par :

Sam Nkumi, Chris Thomson & Gilberte  Bienvenue

African Rights Alliance

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