Try GOLD - Free
Why Trump's DRC peace deal raises questions about African agency
The Mercury
|December 05, 2025
WHY should it take the likes of Donald Trump to conclude a deal between Kigali and Kinshasa? The spectacle of a US president showing off a peace agreement in Washington while bombs continue to fall in Eastern Congo is not merely an awkward irony, it is a symptom of seriously deep fractures in African agency, global political economy and the architecture of peace itself.
The Washington peace performance amid ongoing war
At the beginning of December of 2025, President Trump hosted Paul Kagame and Félix Tshisekedi for what the White House labelled as a historic accord, regardless of the fighting continuing in towns held by the M23 rebel group, and civilians reported bombed homes and rising death tolls. The signing, staged at a White House-branded peace institute, happened to be accompanied by an explicit economic hook: closer access of the US to DRC’s strategic minerals, more especially cobalt and copper, essential ingredients for batteries and the green transition. The timing of it, the optics and the substance of the deal deserve close scrutiny.
Institutional vacuums and the failure of regional mechanisms
First, there is what we can perceive as the institutional vacuum. For decades, African regional bodies and multilateral missions have been carrying the heavy burden of responding to crises on the continent. Yet the DRC experience has shown how poorly resourced, politicised or undermined these mechanisms can sometimes be.
MONUSCO, the UN mission in the DRC, was repeatedly under scrutiny for failing to protect civilians and for exhibiting the limits of conventional peacekeeping against fragmented, locally embedded armed groups; its failures have fed public disillusionment and a dire hunger for outside patrons who claim swift solutions.
External actors step in not necessarily because Africans have lack of talent or courage, but because regional and international institutions are structurally weakened, underfunded, or suffer from paralysis when geopolitics intrudes.
This story is from the December 05, 2025 edition of The Mercury.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Mercury
The Mercury
Proteas overpower Uganda to defend African crown in Lilongwe
THE Spar Proteas successfully defended their Africa Netball Cup title with a resounding 56-34 victory over Uganda in the final in Lilongwe, Malawi, in a repeat of last year's decider yesterday evening.
2 mins
December 15, 2025
The Mercury
Understanding grief: Navigating the complexities of loss
A FEW things I've seen, known, experienced about significant loss, grief and mourning:
1 min
December 15, 2025
The Mercury
Families mourn as Verulam temple construction site collapse claims five lives
A FAMILY of one of the workers who was among five people who died when a building under construction collapsed at River Range Ranch in Redcliffe, Verulam on Friday are demanding answers on what went wrong and accountability from those leading the project.
2 mins
December 15, 2025
The Mercury
Do babies need sunscreen? Discover the hidden dangers of overuse and underuse
SUMMER brings sunshine, beach days and outdoor adventures, but for new parents, it also raises an important question: how do you protect your baby's delicate skin from the sun's harmful rays?
2 mins
December 15, 2025
The Mercury
A deflection so epic it made Azharuddin slit his wrists
SANU Singh's \"let's be mindful of selective truth and vctimhood\" (Mercury, last week) refers.
1 min
December 15, 2025
The Mercury
GNU partners clash over Malatsi's Starlink directive
Instruction seen as move to clear path for Musk
2 mins
December 15, 2025
The Mercury
Time for a rugby revival in KZN
THE Boks showed in their last few seconds comeback against Argentina last weekend that they're certainly one of the world's top sides.
2 mins
December 15, 2025
The Mercury
Chef Makamo's surprising secrets for making the perfect potato salad and chakalaka
WHEN we think of \"South African flavour\" we picture skopo, noise, plastic chairs, aunties inspecting the potato salad, kids chasing each other, and the stories we share over a steaming plate of seven colours or a sizzling braai.
2 mins
December 15, 2025
The Mercury
Court rules in favour of publishing matric results
THE Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, ruled on Friday, that matric results may once again be published on public platforms.
2 mins
December 15, 2025
The Mercury
Universal Declaration of Human Rights rings hollow
IN THE aftermath of genocides in which state-sponsored mass murder of civilians in the First and Second World Wars in the twentieth century to Gaza today the world vowed never again.
1 min
December 15, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
