US Sanctions in Eastern Congo Resource SecuImage from US Sanctions in Eastern Congo Resource Secu

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Zimbabwe News Update

📅 Published: August 13, 2025

📰 Source: zimbabwenow

Curated by AllZimNews.com

The sanctions announcement foregrounds abuses: forced labor, sexual violence, killings, and displacement.

This human rights framing is consistent with the State and Treasury Departments’ pattern of using humanitarian narratives to legitimize interventions in resource-rich zones.

Historically, such narratives have served dual purposes: The U.

S. has a deep and controversial history in the DRC: Present Dynamics: Resource Security in a Multipolar Era By striking Hong Kong–based companies linked to PARECO-FF’s minerals, OFAC is both disrupting militia revenue streams and sending a signal to Chinese intermediaries that conflict-linked minerals are a red line in U.

S. trade policy.

From uranium for the Manhattan Project to cobalt for EV batteries, U.

S. engagement in the Congo has rarely been resource-neutral.

The August 12 sanctions reinforce a pattern: In short, while Washington’s public line is about saving lives and stopping abuses, the deeper current is about securing the minerals that power America’s technological and military edge — a continuity that stretches from Lumumba’s time to the cobalt wars of today.

S. –Congo Minerals & Policy: A Timeline (1940s–2025) 1942–45 — Shinkolobwe & the BombUranium from Shinkolobwe mine (Katanga) supplies the Manhattan Project—cementing Congo’s minerals as a U.

S. strategic interest. 1960 — Independence, Crisis, Cold WarCongo gains independence; copper/cobalt-rich Katanga secedes.

S. views the country through an anti-Soviet, resource-security lens.

Jan 1961 — Lumumba AssassinatedPatrice Lumumba is killed amid superpower intrigue.

S. policy tilts toward any “stable” arrangement that preserves Western access to minerals. 1965–97 — Mobutu EraU.

S. backs Mobutu Sese Seko despite kleptocracy, prioritizing Cold War alignment and steady flows of copper, cobalt, and industrial minerals. 1977–78 — Shaba (Katanga) WarsFighting in mineral heartlands prompts Western (incl.

S. ) support for Mobutu—stability framed as essential for global supply. 1996–2003 — Congo Wars I & IIRegionalized wars over territory and resources (coltan, gold, tin).

S. backs peacekeeping/diplomacy while manufacturers quietly diversify supply chains. 2010 — Dodd–Frank §1502U.

S. law targets “conflict minerals” (3TG: tin, tungsten, tantalum + gold).

Human-rights language meets a push for cleaner, predictable supply chains. 2013–16 — Compliance EraSEC rules, audits, and corporate reporting begin reshaping electronics sourcing; Congo’s artisanal sector is partially squeezed toward traceability. 2018–22 — Cobalt Supercycle & China’s RiseGlobal EV boom spotlights DRC cobalt; Chinese firms expand stakes in copper–cobalt belts.

S. shifts to “critical minerals” strategy and friend-shoring. 🔗 Read Full Article

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Alongside aggregation, our team of nationwide reporters provides real-time, on-the-ground coverage.

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All Zim News is a central hub for all things Zimbabwean, curating news from across the country so no story is missed. Alongside aggregation, our team of nationwide reporters provides real-time, on-the-ground coverage. Stay informed and connected — reach us at admin@allzimnews.com.

By Hope