---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Eric Reeves <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Aug 10, 2011 at 11:22 PM
Subject: "A Creeping Military Coup in Khartoum," Dissent Magazine,
August 10, 2011
To: [email protected]


"A Creeping Military Coup in Khartoum"

Dissent Magazine (on-line), August 10, 2011

http://www.dissentmagazine.org/atw.php?keyword=Sudan



By Eric Reeves



On August 2, the National Islamic Front/National Congress Party regime
in Khartoum decided to delay the medical evacuation of ten Ethiopian
peacekeepers who were injured by a powerful landmine explosion in
Abyei, a highly contested region in Sudan. The convoy of peacekeepers,
operating under UN authority, hit the mine near Mabok, southeast of
Abyei town and very close to 1956 North-South border. One man died
instantly and ten were badly injured---three critically. And yet for
more than three hours, Khartoum's Sudan Armed Forces, including their
military intelligence, refused a UN helicopter permission to leave
Kadugli in South Kordofan (some 200 kilometers away). Indeed,
according to the head of the UN's Department of Peacekeeping
Operations Alain Le Roy, the SAF commander threatened to "shoot down
the helicopter" if it attempted its medical evacuation mission. The
three critically wounded soldiers all died before they could be
brought to medical facilities in Kadugli.



Details of the events have been confirmed by Le Roy and other UN
diplomatic sources. One "expressed shock at the incident," and another
was reported by Agence France-Presse as saying (anonymously) that at
least one of these peacekeepers could have survived his wounds if
transported promptly.



Even in their outrage, UN officials showed a perverse unwillingness to
offend Khartoum---the most likely reason for their anonymity. This
determination runs deep in the UN, as it responds to crisis after
crisis in Sudan, on both the political and humanitarian sides of the
organization. This muting of criticism has been justified in a number
of ways: to preserve aid access, to facilitate "negotiations," to
seem---especially in the Arab and Islamic worlds---"evenhanded" in all
criticisms of parties to the conflicts in Sudan. But in the end, it is
precisely this diffidence and fecklessness that allow Khartoum to
threaten humanitarian and peacekeeping efforts in the first place. And
in the end, the UN is all too accurate a reflection of its member
nations.



An Ethiopian peacekeeping force---the third UN-authorized peacekeeping
force in Sudan---was required only because the SAF unilaterally seized
Abyei on May 20, in violation of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace
Agreement (CPA) between North and South and a "final and binding"
determination of Abyei's borders by the Permanent Court of Arbitration
in 2009. (Not coincidentally, shortly after the regime seized Abyei it
launched a genocidal assault on the Nuba people in South Kordofan,
North Sudan, an assault that continues unabated.)

The Ethiopian force was deployed in order to create secure conditions
for the more than 120,000 displaced Dinka Ngok to return to their
native Abyei. But Khartoum declared that its military forces will
withdraw from Abyei, as they have nominally agreed, only when all
4,200 troops of the Ethiopian armored brigade have deployed; and there
is no provision for the future threat posed by Arab Misseriya militia
proxies that were so active in the looting of Abyei. Since it is now
the height of the rainy season, and transport is difficult if not
impossible, deployment could take many months. During this time,
Khartoum's seizure of Abyei will increasingly become a fait accompli.



SO WHAT does it say about the regime that it would issue orders to
shoot down a UN medevac helicopter trying to save badly injured UN
peacekeepers? To be sure, in one sense it is nothing new: such acts of
barbarism have defined the regime since it seized power by military
coup in 1989---in South Sudan and Darfur, and in Abyei and in South
Kordofan. In the 1990s in the Nuba Mountains, home to the African Nuba
people of South Kordofan, Khartoum launched a genocidal jihad, which
killed or displaced hundreds of thousands of the indigenous Nuba.
There are no firm figures for these terrible human losses, but Julie
Flint---an expert on the Nuba---estimates that 60,000 to 70,000 were
killed by Khartoum's militia forces early in the campaign. And in
Darfur and the Nuba Mountains today, the deliberate aerial bombardment
of civilian and humanitarian targets continues unabated. (I have
recently chronicled these particular atrocity crimes in detail from
1999 to the present.)



The list of such crimes is long and various. Human rights groups
reported, while they still had access in Darfur, countless brutal
raids against the villages of African tribal groups perceived as the
civilian base of support for the insurgency that began in 2003. By
Darfuri estimates, some 4,000 to 5,000 African villages have been
completely or partially destroyed and depopulated.  Antonov bombers,
helicopter gunships, ground troops, and Arab militia allies (known
collectively as the "Janjaweed") ravaged the agricultural livelihood
of African farmers, by poisoning wells, destroying food and seed
stocks, burning dwellings and markets, and looting and killing
livestock. Radio Dabanga continuously reports on the epidemic of rape
that Khartoum loosed upon the girls and women of Darfur, as well as on
deadly attacks on camps for displaced persons. The regime has
engineered or permitted widespread insecurity in order to attenuate
humanitarian access to the region.



So in a moral sense, there is ample and recent precedent for the
decision to deny medical evacuation of the wounded UN peacekeepers.
Even so, this act suggests something new about how the cabal in
Khartoum sees itself in its engagement along the border regions with
South Sudan. Indeed, there is considerable evidence that the regime is
undergoing a "creeping coup," orchestrated by elements in the military
leadership. Several observers have noted this possibility, including
Julie Flint in a recent dispatch based on a document from an official
in Khartoum. No doubt this official is rightly fearful that if a
military coup from within is successful, there will be very little
room for civilians in the new configuration of power:



"[A] well-informed source close to the National Congress Party reports
that Sudan's two most powerful generals went to [Sudanese President
Omar al-] Bashir on May 5, five days after 11 soldiers were killed in
an SPLA ambush in Abyei, on South Kordofan's southwestern border, and
demanded powers to act as they sought fit, without reference to the
political leadership."



"'They got it,' the source says. 'It is the hour of the soldiers---a
vengeful, bitter attitude of defending one's interests no matter what;
a punitive and emotional approach that goes beyond calculation of
self-interest. The army was the first to accept that Sudan would be
partitioned. But they also felt it as a humiliation, primarily because
they were withdrawing from territory in which they had not been
defeated. They were ready to go along with the politicians as long as
the politicians were delivering---but they had come to the conclusion
they weren't. Ambushes in Abyei...interminable talks in Doha keeping
Darfur as an open wound....  Lack of agreement on oil revenue....'
'It has gone beyond politics,' says one of Bashir's closest aides. 'It
is about dignity.'"



We, in turn, might ask about the "dignity" of the millions of victims
Khartoum has sacrificed for its own survival.



I think it is extremely likely that what Flint's sources tell her is
accurate, and immensely consequential. The decision to threaten to
shoot down a UN medical helicopter---a gratuitously self-destructive
action---is but one example of the regime having come 'round to the
"hour of the soldiers." Al-Bashir himself came from the army, and now
goes under the title of "Field Marshal." And he has depended on the
military as his strongest constituency in asserting his presidential
powers. So it's possible that al-Bashir himself is leading the coup as
a way to prevent political rivals from seizing power in the turmoil
that now prevails in Khartoum---or that he is on the way to becoming a
puppet of the military. But one way or another, the military is
ascendant.



Flint's document makes sense of a good deal of what we have seen
recently in Sudan. Take, for example, the decision by notorious regime
hardliner Nafi'e Ali Nafi'e to sign an agreement on June 28 with
political representatives of the Sudan People's Liberation
Movement-North (SPLM-N), an agreement that would address some of the
issues that precipitated the crisis in South Kordofan and commit both
parties to seek a cessation of hostilities. On returning from his
visit to China in early July, al-Bashir promptly overturned Nafi'e's
decision and declared that the SAF would "continue their military
operations in South Kordofan until a cleansing of the region is over."



Nafi'e would never have made the decision to sign such a consequential
agreement without confirmation from al-Bashir. Something changed in
the political environment. Either the SAF leadership demanded that the
agreement be renounced, or al-Bashir sought this opportunity to
undermine his closest---and thus most dangerous---hard-line ally.
Since then, the military campaign in South Kordofan has gone on
undiminished, although a number of Nuba sources have indicated to me
that the SAF is enduring a terrible beating at the hands of the Sudan
People's Liberation Army/North (SPLA-N). Photographs of captured
equipment, detailed ground reports, and assessments from other
regional sources and U.S. government officials all paint the same
picture of a Northern military force outmaneuvered and out-fought by
the highly motivated SPLA-N. Indeed, morale is a fundamental problem
in the SAF, especially among its African conscripts. Two full
battalions are reported to have deserted rather than fight the SPLA-N;
if true, this might explain why Khartoum appears to be utilizing proxy
Arab militia forces more heavily.



Military defeats and desertions can only add to the humiliation that
the SAF leadership undoubtedly feels, and may make an expanded war
more likely. Indeed, Blue Nile State---like South Kordofan, part of
North Sudan but traditionally allied with the SPLA/M---may be the next
front. Malik Agar, governor of Blue Nile, is a political leader of the
northern wing of the SPLM and a fearsome military leader, as he proved
during the years of civil war. He has repeatedly warned that the
longer the conflict continues in South Kordofan (now over two months),
the more likely it is that Blue Nile will become involved in the
fighting. Confidential UN reports from the weeks prior to South
Sudan's July 9 independence make clear that there have been large
military deployments in the region, by both the SAF and SPLA.



If conflict spreads to Blue Nile, the war will become truly national
in scope, and rebel alliances---already evidently in the making---will
become inevitable, as different peripheral regions make common cause
against Khartoum. This civil war will likely involve Abyei, South
Kordofan, Blue Nile, and Darfur---but also Nubia in the far North, the
Beja people in the east (victims of yet another fraudulent peace
agreement with Khartoum), and other marginalized populations. At some
point, it's likely that even the military of South Sudan will no
longer remain on the sidelines, despite the restraint it has so far
shown in the face of Khartoum’s military provocations, including the
seizure of Abyei.



In short, a catastrophe of unimaginable proportions is in the making.
And this will occur sooner rather than later without an effective
international response, which so far is nowhere in sight.



INTERNATIONAL POLICY responses, as John Prendergast has recently
argued, have "stove-piped" Sudan's various conflicts, attempting to
treat them separately rather than as part of a pattern of action by
the NIF/NCP regime. The root cause of conflict in Sudan is Khartoum's
decades of brutal misrule and marginalization (often violent) of the
various populations on the periphery of Sudan. The purpose has always
been conspicuous: self-preservation, self-enrichment, and the
furthering of a radical agenda of Islamism and Arabism. A military
coup of any sort will only strengthen these ambitions. We should
expect no restraint: Many in the SAF leadership will eventually be
indicted for atrocity crimes by the International Criminal Court
(al-Bashir has already been indicted for genocide and crimes against
humanity). These brutal men know there is no future for them except
The Hague if there is genuine regime change.



Many Sudanese believe that the coup is proceeding. As Flint notes,
"the Northern SPLA leadership has warned of the domination ... of the
military junta over the leadership of Bashir's National Congress
Party." Such a coup would make things a great deal more difficult on
any diplomatic front and may quickly lead to the expulsion of all
humanitarian organizations from Darfur, completing the elimination of
international witnesses to the ongoing genocide by attrition.
Similarly, a military regime---with or without a figurehead---will do
everything it can to forestall humanitarian access to South Kordofan.



The UN Secretariat gives no sign of appreciating the implications or
connections of recent events in Sudan. Calls for "an end to the
fighting" and for a "UN investigation of allegations of human rights
violations" in South Kordofan will go unmet. Matters are hardly helped
by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, who persists in
her skepticism about events in the region, despite a report by UN
human rights investigators on the ground in June detailing massive
atrocity crimes by Khartoum and its Arab militia allies. But the
United States, the Europeans, and the African Union are no better.
There is nothing approaching a consensus in assessing recent events,
let alone in fashioning demands of Khartoum that will entail real
consequences if unmet.



If Khartoum continues to deny humanitarian access in South Kordofan
and to bomb the Nuba Mountains in the coming weeks and months, the
consequences are clear. In the absence of a fall harvest that now
seems impossible, the real dying, by famine, will begin.



Is the world prepared to watch as this unfolds? All evidence suggests
that the answer is yes. By refusing to acknowledge the implications of
current developments, UN and Western officials will be able to indulge
expressions of outrage after the fact. In early March in this space I
argued that "if war resumes in Abyei, it is likely to spread quickly
to the Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan and Southern Blue Nile. The
entire North/South border could become one long military front." This
prediction is perilously close to being fully realized. And yet at the
time of my warning, the Obama administration was encouraging both
Khartoum and the leadership in the South to "compromise" on Abyei---to
ignore the terms of the Abyei Protocol in the CPA and the ruling of
the Permanent Court of Arbitration. This was all the encouragement
Khartoum needed. By late March it had become clear, I argued, that the
regime had taken effective military control of Abyei, making the May
20 invasion inevitable. Protests from the Obama administration at that
point were meaningless.



In their current form, demands for a human rights investigation and
humanitarian access in South Kordofan simply carry no weight with
Khartoum, particularly as the military continues its ascent. Such
demands by international actors of consequence---with no entailments
or credible threats---are a form of moral dishonesty. This is nothing
new when it comes to Sudan; but given the changed political dynamic in
Khartoum, such convenient self-deception is likely to result in
unfathomable destruction.



[Eric Reeves has published extensively on Sudan, nationally and
internationally, for more than a decade. He is author of A Long Day's
Dying: Critical Moments in the Darfur Genocide.]

_____________________________
Eric Reeves
Smith College
Northampton, MA 01063

[email protected]
413-585-3326
www.sudanreeves.org

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