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  A Narrow Escape, a Massacre, an Invite to Washington
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ContributorIndyGeorgia 
Last EditedIndyGeorgia  Dec 23, 2022 07:57pm
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CategoryNews
AuthorRobbie Gramer
News DateFriday, December 16, 2022 06:50:00 PM UTC0:0
DescriptionU.S. diplomats organized a plan to help smuggle Chad’s pro-democracy opposition leader out of the country as security forces from Chad’s transitional president hunted him down in a wave of deadly crackdowns against protesters in October.

The plan, dubbed “Operation Moses” by some officials, entailed ferrying Succès Masra to the border of neighboring Cameroon using the U.S. ambassador to Chad’s own embassy vehicles, according to accounts from Masra and other current and former U.S. officials familiar with the matter. But after staying in hiding for over a week—avoiding the security forces of transitional President Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno—Masra successfully escaped the country before “Operation Moses” could be implemented.

The account of the proposed escape plan reveals a sharp split-screen in U.S.-Africa policy. As U.S. officials in Chad were scrambling to find a way to help Masra escape and witnessing some pro-democracy protesters be slaughtered at the gates of the U.S. Embassy, other officials in Washington were preparing an invitation to fete the very man who orchestrated this bloody crackdown at a major summit in Washington.

The Biden administration’s decision to invite Déby to the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit in Washington, which occurred over three days this past week, drew immediate criticism and backlash from regional experts and human rights advocates. “Everybody saw that this man killed more than 200 people. They arrested over 2,000 people. Despite all this, he is invited here,” Masra told Foreign Policy in an interview in Washington.
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