PURSUITS

Murder in the Congo

NOVEMBER | DECEMBER 2023 Sean Plottner
PURSUITS
Murder in the Congo
NOVEMBER | DECEMBER 2023 Sean Plottner

Murder in the Congo

PURSUITS

STUART REID '08

The Lumumba Plot: The Secret History of the CIA and a Cold War Assassination 624 PP. $35

The author, an executive editor at Foreign Affairs magazine, talks about his first book.

Why write about Lumumba?

I realized there was this amazing, not very wellknown story about Congo’s traumatic birth after 75 years of Belgian rule. It was front-page news in the summer of 1960, the Cold War crisis of the moment. I focus on this amazing human story of Patrice Lumumba, a charismatic nationalist leader of the Congo, and his dramatic rise and tragic fall. When his army mutinied, he turned to the United Nations for help. It declined.

Why did the United States care?

Lumumba made the fatal mistake of asking the Soviets for help. The CIA decided it needed to get rid of Lumumba and sent poison to be put in his food and toothpaste. That failed, but he was toppled in a coup with CIA help and murdered in January 1961.

Did the CIA eventually regret its actions?

They actually viewed Congo as a success.

How different would the country be if Lumumba had survived?

I grapple with that a bit at the end of my book. It’s a fascinating question. It’s possible he would’ve been a sort of standard leader as part of the standard post-colonial African state that was relatively poor, somewhat politically chaotic. But we would not have had the corrupt Mobutu dictatorship for three decades, which utterly collapsed in the 1990s in the Congo, which was then known as Zaire, and led to a civil war that killed millions of people.

What new aspects of this story did you uncover?

The CIA declassified abunch of cables in 2013, and every two years they release a new trove that is less redacted than the previous ones.

You had to spend a lot of time sifting through research?

Yes, when I sold the book I was unmarried and childless. Now I’m married and have two kids.

And many of the documents were in French?

I was a French minor and studied under the late great professor John Rassias. I could not have written this book had I not learned French at Dartmouth.

Sean Plottner

EDITOR’S PICKS

alumni books

NELSON LICHTENSTEIN ’66

A Fabulous Failure: The Clinton Presidency and the Transformation of American Capitalism

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A research professor at University of California, Santa Barbara, offers a detailed assessment of the Bill Clinton administration. He concludes that the Democratic president’s lofty progressive goals gave way to policies that wound up exacerbating and entrenching economic and social inequalities.

SARA HOAGLAND HUNTER ’76

Stories From Home:

Married Days

Self-published

A self-deprecating tale about the challenges and triumphs of courtship and marriage—from a bad blind date through various domestic calamities—shines light on one couple’s loving partnership.

PETER STARK ’76

Gallop Toward the Sun

Random House

Shawnee chief Tecumseh forged a confederacy of tribes and joined with the British to resist U.S. rule in the Ohio River Valley of the early 1800s. Stark’s brisk narrative of the struggle focuses on the native leader’s rivalry with future U.S. President William Henry Harrison.

PETER HELLER ’82

The Last Ranger

A Yellowstone enforcement ranger’s mundane work is jolted by a series of unusual incidents in the park. As he investigates, tensions rise over endangered wolves, land rights, tourism—and, possibly, murder. In his 10th book and sixth novel, Heller delivers yet another slow-burn Western mystery marked by lyrical writing that renders the wilderness as an essential character.

JULIET AIRES GIGLIO ’84

The Trouble with Tinsel

Sourcebooks Casablanca

The lives of a former screenwriting team turn upside down when they’re forced to work together again. When a movie star turns to them for romantic advice, the uneasy pairing turns even more awkward as they pretend to be engaged.

Additional titles and excerpts can be found on the DAW website.