Welcome to Balance of Power, bringing you the latest in global politics. If you haven’t yet, sign up here. Donald Trump has long scorned Africa. Now he sees it as another potential route to a Nobel Prize. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio will today host the signing of a peace accord between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, which have been fighting over a particularly valuable patch of the continent for three decades. Rebel group in Goma, eastern Congo, in January. Photographer: Getty Images Congo accuses Rwanda of backing a rebel group that’s taken over huge swaths of its mineral-rich east. Rwanda says Congo’s government can’t secure its own territory and is harboring rebels linked to the Hutu perpetrators of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, in which more than 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus died. The conflict’s current iteration has contributed to one of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters, with around 6 million Congolese displaced from their homes. A peace deal would be “a Great Day for Africa and, quite frankly, a Great Day for the World!” Trump posted last week. His administration is promising investment if Rwanda backs off. Eastern Congo has gold, tin and tantalum, which is used in portable electronics. South of the conflict zone are some of the planet’s richest copper, cobalt and lithium deposits, and Congo wants to diversify away from the Chinese miners who dominate the industry. That’s music to the ears of a US president who demanded a minerals deal with Ukraine and openly covets Greenland’s resources. Yet the fighting persists for a reason, with knotty questions over land and ethnicity that will take years of attention to address. Trump seems to think the Nobel committee should take notice regardless. “I won’t get a Nobel Peace Prize for this,” he posted ruefully, putting the Rwanda-Congo war alongside a list of others he has dabbled in, from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to India-Pakistan and the Iran-Israel clash that’s witnessing a fragile ceasefire. So many conflicts, all unresolved. — Michael J. Kavanagh M23 rebel-group members stand guard at the Goma crossing into Congo in March. Photographer: Jospin Mwisha/AFP/Getty Images |