@NolDragon

"Mister President, are your troops currently in Eastern Congo?"
"No, they're in Western Rwanda"

@teehee4096

"Mr President, is your country invading this other country?"
"I'm not sure tbh"

@cetsy2023

Interviewer: 'Why are you in DRC?'
President: 'Who says I'm in DRC?'
Interviewer: 'You are in DRC.'

@conner76jackson

That “I don’t know” was the most unintentionally funny thing I’ve heard in awhile! 😭 LIKE WHAT????

@billy_bvck

Ahh, 1 minute into the foreign conflict video and there’s the Toyota truck.

@samnater

11% of total population in 100 days is insane.

@janrolka557

"If you are not confused you don't really understand the situation" would be a good summary of this episode

@peterpockets7462

Uh oh, someone's playing hoi on the reality machine.

@orange3623

Hard to not be mildly impressed by rwanda geopolitical plays

@miasweatman7340

This video is already outdated - they've captured Bukavu

@DavidLimofLimReport

2024: Rwanda is the new Singapore. 
2025: Rwanda is the new Russia.

@gasalpha879

Proof playing tall is better than wide

@axmajpayne

The conflict is moving quick enough that in the time it took to produce this video, M23 captured Bukavu. There are also reports that Burundi have started pulling troops out of the DRC.

@Kodjo_Eweka

So in other words, Rwanda knows the game and is playing it very well.

@WorldHistoryUniverse

The History is tragic. The success of Rwanda is because the leader of Rwanda is a Tutsi Military General who remembers the past conflicts and holds strong feelings about it as he was involved. He had to flee his country as a youth and grow up Uganda so to him the conflict is personal.

@tomkelly8827

Sitting here in Canada, I had no idea that this was happening. Thanks for getting the word out more.

May peace and prosperity come to everyone involved in this conflict soon

@SajiabbasEG

"There is no war in Ba Sing Se" ahh president

@check-inmedia3891

As a Congolese refugee who fled the M23 war back in 2012.Thank you for covering this story

@StevenEveral

The Rwandans learned to speak the language of the West: Money. The perception of Rwanda being "safe for investment" has led to unimaginable Western cash flows into the country. As long as Rwanda and the West are scratching each other's backs, the West will turn a blind eye to how all that mineral wealth just suddenly "appears" in Rwanda.

@opossumbandit4960

I have a friend in North Western Burundi on a Christian mission trip and he's told me first hand about the significant amount of refugees fleeing into Burundi which is wildly unequip to take care of their own people let alone thousands of refugees.