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/leftypol/ - Leftist Politically Incorrect

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File: 1761736970179.png (253.73 KB, 413x504, ClipboardImage.png)

 

Interested to see if we have any contrarians here who can explain why the RSF is good and anti-imperialist actually. They're secular and portrayed as the bad guys in western media, so they're probably the good guys?

>>2541188
>here who can explain why the RSF is good and anti-imperialist actually.
They are supported by Russians so they are anti-imperialist.
/thread

Ziggers are larpers. Just report them for pol

Yes communist Wagner backs the RSF but AES Eritrea supports the SAF thoughever which means both sides are anti imperialist. As supported by the fact that socialist countries like Iran, Turkey and China are arming both camps!

>>2541195
>Iran, Turkey and China are arming both camps!
Is this true? Especially interested in Chyna's role

Neither side is anti-imperialist though, it looks like a bourgeoisie-nationalist civil conflict. I guess you could say the various Darfuri militia groups are the good guys since they are trying to stop from being genocided by both groups.

It's an inter-anti-imperialist conflict. Duh

I think it's just the further tearing up of a nation. Another failed state is being created just like South Sudan but probably worse. Regular Sudan will remain terrible but with a little less mass murder.

The actually good people are the civilian movement that actually overthrew Omar al Bashir that both SAF and RSF are trying to destroy

>>2541205
>inter-anti-imperialist conflict.
Makes sense.

>>2541603
If you can have inter-imperialist conflict then you can have inter-anti-imperialist conflict, duh.

Both sides are proxies for imperialists, it's Turkey vs UAE. The real winner here is Israel as they don't care which side wins, just that the country is destroyed and democracy and stability can't prevail.

>>2541636
As of the SCP and everyone involved in the overthroe of Bashir aren’t also imperialist

File: 1761773170539.png (755.96 KB, 1242x1202, 1761772707974521.png)


>>2542205
I wonder where is the line? If Trump showed up at his door and demanded him to kill his own mother because Trump said she hates burgerville and is a libshit would he do it?

>>2542205
FUCK. I meant to post this in another thread I just noticed it

>>2542205
>bribing trump with a gold crown
had to give them credit they know what theyre doing

>>2542205
the burger king…

>>2542277
Except Trump clearly has contempt for asskissers. He surrounds himself with them, but he doesnt respect them.

>>2541190
>They are supported by Russians so they are anti-imperialist.
retard

>>2541190
They're supported by China too.


>>2541661
I guess they're not either of the "sides", they're the innocents trapped in the middle.

Wagner is liberating Africa.

>>2542596
They did a color revolution and are suffering the consequences

>>2541190
>>2542591
>supported by Russia and China
this is all I need to know

>>2542591
proof?

You can see the blood in the streets of El
Fasher in north Darfur from space, that’s how bad the RSF are, they’re muslim israelis

>>2543194
where are you seeing it?

File: 1761853022999.jpeg (260.71 KB, 1600x900, IMG_1577.jpeg)

>>2543268
It’s from Yale’s Humanitarian Research Lab

File: 1761878253507.jpg (545.78 KB, 1179x1956, 1761877890628898.jpg)

does anyone know who this is?

>>2541190
Russia opposes them though. No mention anywhere for China's support.

>>2544550
After supporting them for the first part of the conflict. They changed side only because the SAF gave them a port (which is why they initially supported them)

I thought this was a good but nihilistic article that contextualizes what happened in Sudan as the collapse of the (bankrupt) Axis of Resistance and its substitution by the "Axis of Rape and Pillage" led by the UAE, which is using proxy warfare to grab as much loot as it can. The article is from the American Conservative which is a paleocon, right-wing magazine but they are sometimes good.

>El Fasher has fallen. On Monday, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) rebels drove the Sudanese army and allied militias out of the city, which had been under siege since April 2024, cementing RSF control over Darfur. The victorious rebels filmed themselves gleefully committing atrocities against the local population, including the executions of 460 hospital patients. Fighters shot at fleeing civilians while shouting “kill the Nubians,” both a name of a Sudanese ethnic group and a general slur for non-Arab minorities. The bloodstained streets are visible from space.


>The war crimes will likely not be limited to killing. The RSF has a reputation for sexual sadism against conquered populations, including a raping a woman after tearing her from her breastfeeding baby and beating to death an 11-year-old boy who tried to save his mother from sexual assault. Along with rape comes rapine. The RSF sustains itself by preying on Sudan’s resources, from gum arabic to gold, through extortion and outright looting.


>Most of Sudan’s gold has ended up in the United Arab Emirates, the main military and diplomatic backer of the RSF. And Emirati investments in Sudanese militias have paid off in more than one way. The RSF and its predecessor, the Janjaweed, have also served as a manpower reserve for Emirati proxy wars in other countries. The Emirati government paid the Janjaweed to send fighters, including child soldiers, into its doomed war in Yemen. RSF troops later turned up fighting for Khalifa Haftar, an Emirati-backed warlord in Libya.


>As El Fasher was under siege, Syria was busy dealing with the fallout of a rival foreign intervention in Libya. This week, the new Syrian government announced the opening of consular services for Syrians marooned in Libya, along with efforts to recover POW/MIAs, brought there by Turkish intervention. During Syria’s own civil war, Turkey had cultivated the Syrian National Army, a militia that one U.S. official characterized as “thugs, bandits, and pirates.” They acquired a reputation for extortion, torture, and kidnapping women in Syria, particularly Kurdish areas. When Turkey intervened in the Libyan civil war against Haftar, it brought along these mercenaries, some of whom later made their way to Europe.


>The Axis of Resistance, the Iranian-backed bloc in the Middle East, fell apart almost a year ago. The victors have been a loose coalition of Israel, Turkey, and the oil-rich Arab monarchies, all of whom enjoy American backing. And the wars in Sudan and Libya demonstrate what kind of regional order is in the cards. Rather than embracing the vision of peaceful trade and non-interference that U.S. President Donald Trump laid out in Saudi Arabia earlier this year, the victors have been using proxy warfare to grab as much as they can from the burning wreckage of the Middle East and North Africa. The Axis of Resistance has been replaced with an Axis of Rape and Pillage.


>The old Iranian axis was a network of would-be revolutionaries. Primarily drawn from Shi’a Muslims, Palestinians, and a few Levantine minority communities, these forces cannibalized their host nations in the name of a regional uprising against U.S. imperialism. Many of them descended into pure self-enrichment and petty sectarian feuds, which ultimately exposed the Axis to penetration and destruction. The new Axis of Rape and Pillage is a more efficient upgrade of that model. The same combination of local hatred and international greed drives it, without a pretense of a positive vision or popular legitimacy. Corruption is not a bug; it is a feature. There is no Revolution left to betray.


>After the U.S. attack on Iran in June 2025, journalist Arash Azizi and Bashar Halabi beamed about “the Middle East’s end of ideology” in Foreign Policy. Thanks to the destruction of the Axis of Resistance, they wrote, the region was seeing “the decline of transnational militias and revolutionary ideologies as central to Middle Eastern politics,” to be replaced by sovereign state-driven development. If only. The “post-ideological” order means less national sovereignty and less accountable power..


>The essayist Ali Terrenoire explains much better both the cause and effect of post-ideological politics: “While the lumbering masses try to organize; smaller hierarchies comprised of the incumbent rich and powerful can move quickly to establish their dominance and re-wire the political domain to their advantage, permanently.” The opposite of resistance is submission; the opposite of ideology is nihilism.


>Azizi and Halabi cite post-revolutionary Syria as an example of state development in the new order. And while there is indeed much to be optimistic about, the new Syria is threatened by sectarian violence, egged on by sparring U.S. partners. Turkish-backed warlords, only partially integrated into the new government, have committed atrocities against non-Sunni minorities. In response to a July 2025 massacre against the Druze minority, Israel began backing Druze separatism through arms shipments and air raids. Two pillars of the post-ideological order are working out their spheres of influence at the expense of Syrian sovereignty and Syrian blood.


>The same pattern has played out across the region for years, especially in places like Libya and Sudan, where Iran had negligible or no influence to begin with. Turkey went into Libya to fight against an Egyptian- and Emirati-backed warlord; the Emirati-backed RSF is fighting against an Egyptian- and Ukrainian-backed military government in Sudan. While the incumbent Middle Eastern powers have been willing to kill tens of thousands of foreigners to adjust their share of the pie, they fundamentally agree that they (and no one else) should be sitting at the same table. No matter how the pie gets divided, the U.S. becomes more entrenched in its role as maître d’hôtel.


>The Abraham Accords of 2020, sold as a peace agreement, were key in setting this table. For all the interfaith kumbaya messaging, the real basis of the accords is defense cooperation. Even that euphemism does not quite capture what Israel and its Arab partners have to offer each other. Both are interested in ruling over unwilling subject populations. Israel has the technology to spy on people at scale and insulate the powerful from resistance. Arab petrostates have the money and networks to project subversive soft power at a distance.


>Real estate men like Jared Kushner have gotten much of the credit for brokering the new regional order. Yet the wheels of Arab-Israeli cooperation leading up to 2020 were greased by shadier characters, such as arms dealers. A leaked email from the Handala files shows that Israel’s former Prime Minister Ehud Barak turned to none other than sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein to make “contact” with “the right hand of [M]aktoum,” the ruling family of Dubai, in 2013. (Neither Barak nor the figure described as Maktoum’s right hand responded to email requests for comment.)


>The pinnacle of the post–Abraham Accords order is the “New Gaza” plan. Israel and unnamed Arab countries have been working together to establish several Palestinian militias to rule the ruins of Gaza, building on preexisting clans and organized crime networks. To the disappointment of regional powers, Hamas quickly routed those militias in October 2025 and instituted a brutal crackdown against opposition. Although Trump had initially praised the crackdown against “very bad gangs” in Gaza, he soon made it clear that the U.S. considers Hamas consolidation to be a violation of the ceasefire.


>“Very bad gangs” indeed. The Israeli- and Arab-backed militiamen include confessed aid looters and former Islamist State fighters. Hawkish Israeli opposition politician Avigdor Lieberman called them “the equivalent of ISIS in Gaza.” But these militants are not dangerous because they are secretly true-believing jihadists. They are dangerous because they do not believe in anything. Like the warlords who cycled through every single faction of the Syrian civil war, they are willing to fight for anyone who can offer protection and opportunities to exert power. Those are the footsoldiers of the anti-ideological world.


>This order is not stable, and it cannot be. Nor is it good for U.S. power on a global scale. The inherent instability means a neverending demand for outside involvement. Washington’s hyperfixation with managing small wars in the Middle East and North Africa has only increased at a time when the U.S. has thrown in the towel against China and faces a prolonged struggle with Russia over Europe’s frontiers. The Axis of Rape and Pillage is, however, good at satisfying specific people’s lust for power and money. The most shameless actors at every level of society, from Epstein’s orbiters to street gangs, can all build little fiefdoms of their own.

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/the-middle-easts-axis-of-rape-and-pillage/

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>>2541190
This changed, both Russia and Ukraine are supporting the government

Saw it in newsanon's thread

Exclusive: Egypt and Turkey boost support for Sudan's army following RSF capture of el-Fasher

When the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) seized el-Fasher in Darfur, Egypt did not just see another battle in Sudan’s war, it saw a potential breach in its own defences.

As RSF fighters subject the people of el-Fasher to a litany of abuses, Cairo is reimagining its southern borders as a first line of defence.

The fall of North Darfur’s capital is a turning point. Egypt has always played a part in this war. The Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), which has been fighting the RSF since April 2023, enjoys a longstanding relationship with Egypt’s military, and Cairo has helped its ally throughout the war.

But the RSF's capture of the Sudanese section of the arid triangle border region that includes parts of Egypt and Libya in June, followed by the horrors of el-Fasher, represents a turning point.

Fearing that, unchecked, the war could spill over its frontiers, the government of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi is redrawing its security map, combining military coordination with diplomacy to contain the fallout.

Meanwhile, the SAF and its Joint Forces allies, which were outgunned in el-Fasher by superior weaponry and technology provided by Egypt's ally the United Arab Emirates, is in search of more help, according to Sudanese diplomats who briefed MEE.

“SAF expects Egypt and Turkey to provide it with weapons after the fall of el-Fasher,” Kholood Khair, a Sudanese analyst and director of the Confluence Advisory think tank, told MEE. “Egypt in particular has a stake in securing its southern border and is apprehensive about the RSF’s deployments towards it.”

With this in mind, Egypt has quietly reinforced its positions along the frontier with Sudan and Libya. Rather than waiting for danger to reach its gates, it is working closely with Sudan’s army to push it back.

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/egypt-and-turkey-move-support-saf-following-fall-el-fasher

>>2545699
what a soul killing thing to read

Newly built runways and ports offer snapshot of Abu Dhabi's regional ambitions and deepening strategic ties with Israel

From the islands of Socotra in the Indian Ocean to the coasts of Somalia and Yemen, satellite imagery analysed by Middle East Eye reveals a greatly expanded network of military and intelligence bases built by the United Arab Emirates.

This ring of control, in and around one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes, has escalated rapidly since the 7 October Hamas-led attacks on Israel and the subsequent war in Gaza.

The UAE’s allies, including Israel and the US, have been party to the creation and expansion of the bases.

Israeli officers have been on the ground in the islands and Israeli radar systems and other military and security apparatus allow the UAE to monitor and thwart attacks launched by the Houthis, the Iran-aligned movement that has fired missiles at Israel in solidarity with the Palestinians and targeted ships going through the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.

The UAE and Israel have an intelligence-sharing platform known as Crystal Ball, whereby they "design, deploy and enable regional intelligence enhancement” in partnership, according to a slide show designed to promote the pact.

“The relationship between the UAE and Israel was very developed even before formal diplomatic relations were established, but it was kept quiet. Not secret, just quiet,” Alon Pinkas, an Israeli diplomat who served as an adviser to four foreign ministers, told MEE.

The bases have not been constructed on territory formally held by the UAE.

Instead, they are to be found in areas nominally controlled by its allies, including Yemen’s Southern Transitional Council (STC), the Yemeni military commander Tareq Saleh, and the regional administrations of Somaliland and Puntland, which are both part of Somalia, whose government is at odds with the UAE.

Military bases, runways and other facilities have been constructed or expanded on Abd al-Kuri and Samhah, two islands that are part of the Socotra archipelago, which is now administered by STC; at the airports of Bosaso and Berbera in Puntland and Somaliland; Mocha in Yemen; and Mayun, a volcanic island in the Bab al-Mandab strait, through which 30 percent of the world’s oil is shipped.

This network of bases facilitates the control of this vital stretch of water by the UAE and its allies, and has been developed in close coordination with Israel, according to Israeli sources.

As the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a pro-Israel US think tank, puts it: “Multilateral air-defence coalitions have become key to the post-October 7 Middle East defence landscape, with countries sharing radar, intelligence and early warning systems."

While this string of bases is vital when it comes to monitoring global shipping traffic and any Houthi or Iranian activity in the area, Bosaso and Berbera have, according to multiple diplomatic and local sources, become increasingly important for the UAE’s support of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Sudan’s war.

The creation of a network of bases surrounding the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden mimics the way in which the UAE has used its unparalleled financial power to establish outposts in many of the countries that surround Sudan, including the southeastern part of Libya controlled by General Khalifa Haftar, Chad, the Central African Republic, Uganda, Ethiopia and Kenya.

The UAE also has two bases inside Sudan, which has been at war since April 2023: Nyala in South Darfur and al-Malha, 200km from el-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, which has been under a brutal RSF siege for over 500 days.

Though it has always denied it, the United Nations has deemed multiple, in-depth reports – including from Middle East Eye – on the UAE’s patronage of the RSF, which the US has said is committing genocide in Sudan, to be credible.

>Wealth and power


For much of this century, the UAE, led from the emirate of Abu Dhabi by Mohammed bin Zayed (MBZ), has sought to project its power out from the Gulf across the Horn of Africa.

A member of the al-Nahyan family, which has ruled Abu Dhabi since the 18th century, MBZ is an implacable enemy of political Islam and a key ally of the US, which leans heavily on the UAE for its regional policy.

While the UAE has a population of 10 million, just one million of those are Emirati, the rest are expats and foreign labourers.

Jalel Harchaoui, an analyst who focuses on North Africa and political economy, told Middle East Eye that “because countries like Ethiopia, Libya, Yemen, Somalia, and Sudan are increasingly fractured and misgoverned, the UAE can exert a level of sway that would be impossible if these nations resembled, say, Algeria’s government, with full territorial control.

“Sudan and Libya exemplify this crisis: spaces where an aggressively revisionist foreign state armed with extraordinary wealth, lobbying power, and transactional diplomacy can wield disproportionate influence,” Harchaoui said, referencing the UAE’s intervention in Libya in 2011 and in Sudan on the side of the RSF.

Added to this, the US, despite maintaining “isolated interventionist projects like Israel and Greenland”, has “abandoned any notion of liberal hegemony and democratic idealism globally”.

“Mohammed bin Zayed understood these dynamics around 2009-2011,” Harchaoui told MEE. “Despite its microscopic size and lack of a noticeable army, the UAE recognised both its strengths and - crucially - its vulnerabilities if it remained passive.

“In this context, a ferocious, violent UAE launched a hegemonic project spanning both sides of the Red Sea,” he said.

Over the last decade, the UAE has become the biggest investor in ports across Africa: it receives 400 tonnes in smuggled gold from the continent every year, intervenes in wars there and has built up a soft power empire that includes the ownership of Manchester City Football Club.

“If you want to understand what the UAE is doing in Africa, read William Dalrymple’s book The Anarchy,” one western diplomat told MEE, referencing the Scottish historian’s 576-page account of how Britain’s East India Company took over India. “It’s exactly the same playbook.”

Yemen has been key to Emirati foreign policy. In 2015, the UAE led, alongside Saudi Arabia, a coalition of states that joined the war in Yemen to prop up the government against the Iran-aligned Houthi movement.

As part of this, Sudanese fighters from the RSF went to Yemen to join the UAE-Saudi coalition.

In November 2015, Cyclone Chapala tore across Yemen and the surrounding region, including Socotra, whose main island – also called Socotra and located about 400 km south of the Yemeni mainland – is home to about 50,000 people. Declaring that they were there to help the victims of the cyclone, the UAE deployed its troops to the archipelago.

But the Emirati presence became entrenched and in June 2020 the STC, an ally of the UAE, seized control of the archipelago from Yemen’s Saudi-backed government. Since then, satellite imagery shows that the UAE has built up its military and intelligence activity on the islands, with the work escalating since Israel’s genocide in Gaza began.

Located to the west of Socotra, Abd al-Kuri is one of the archipelago’s islands. A stretch of rocky land rising out of the Indian Ocean near the mouth of the Gulf of Aden, it has a population of around 500 people.

Lying on the shipping lane from the Indian Ocean to the Bab al-Mandab strait, Abd al-Kuri is an early observation point for ships coming from the southeast and has been transformed, in the last few years, into a strategic military facility.

At the end of August 2020, just before Israel and the UAE normalised relations as part of the US-sponsored Abraham Accords, intelligence officers from both countries arrived on the island.

In February 2021, dozens of Israeli officers and soldiers arrived in Socotra on Emirati planes, according to local sources and two regional diplomats.

In November that year, US Naval Forces Central Command conducted a maritime exercise in the Red Sea alongside Bahrain, the UAE and Israel – the first publicly acknowledged military exercise between signatories of the Abraham Accords.

In a briefing at the time, an Israeli naval officer said that the drill "will increase the cooperation and the safety of the Red Sea, but not just the Red Sea, because we are dealing with Iranian terror" in the wider region.

According to satellite imagery, construction of an airbase on Abd al-Kuri’s northern coast began in late 2022.

As this construction was beginning, collaboration between the UAE and Israel was flourishing.

The UAE subsidiary of Israeli arms company Elbit Systems announced that it would supply defence systems to the Emirati air force. Israel deployed early warning radar systems to the UAE and then, in February 2023, the two countries unveiled a jointly created unmanned naval vessel capable of surveillance, reconnaissance and mine detection.

From October 2023, a new airstrip approximately 2.41km long and a three-km dirt extension was constructed on Abd al-Kuri. In March 2024, satellite images published by AP showed “I LOVE UAE” spelt out in piles of sand next to the runway.

By March 2025, MEE’s satellite images show that the runway, which at its northern end was built to accommodate large transport and reconnaissance aircraft, was complete.

The runway is now capable of receiving medium to heavy military cargo aircraft, including the American C-130 Hercules, Russian Il-76 heavy transport planes and drones like the Israeli Hermes 900 unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV).

At present, the UAE’s state-owned military contractor Edge Group is in talks with Elbit Systems regarding the procurement of the Israeli drones.

>>2553594
>Runways and rocks

While work was being carried out on Abd al-Kuri, it was also proceeding apace at Samhah, the smallest of Socotra’s three inhabited islands, located deep in the Arabian Sea.

Satellite imagery shows that the UAE began constructing an airstrip on the island in 2024, with the runway completed in April 2025, alongside the paving of roads and establishment of essential support facilities.

Samhah’s rocky, mountainous terrain does not allow for the easy construction of longer runways, so it is most likely used for rapid, periodic surveillance operations rather than heavy transport. It can receive and operate the Hermes 900 and is able to support electronic reconnaissance and maritime surveillance operations.

The island’s location is ideal for monitoring the maritime passage between the Gulf of Aden and Arabian Sea, through which about 12 percent of worldwide trade passes.

Between 25 March and 4 April 2025, satellite imagery revealed the appearance of a temporary sandbar on the western side of Samhah, which was not visible in previous images seen by MEE. This small sandbar appears to have been formed for temporary marine drainage, a common pattern in isolated military construction projects.

While this was taking place, the Young Star, a Comoros-flagged landing craft with IMO number 1095973, which was most likely being used to unload equipment used to prepare the runway, could be seen anchored off the island’s west coast.

Ship tracking data shows that the vessel continues to move periodically between Samhah, Abd al-Kuri and Socotra, and that it docks at nearby Yemeni ports before returning to Abu Dhabi.

Other ships, including the Takreem and al-Mabroukah 2, have been tracked by MEE moving between the main island of Socotra, the coast of Yemen, Abd al-Kuri and Bosaso, connecting the UAE’s ring of control.

While Abd al-Kuri, Samhah and Socotra are integral to this network of bases, it is Mayun (also known as Perim), a volcanic island in the Bab al-Mandab strait, that occupies the most strategically vital position.

Known as the “gate of tears” because of its large protruding rocks and wild seas, the Bab al-Mandab is situated between the Horn of Africa and the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula, with Yemen on one side and Eritrea and Djibouti, which hosts a significant US military base and troops from western countries including the UK, on the other.

It is one of the world’s crucial maritime chokepoints for energy shipments and commercial cargo and was seriously impacted after the Houthis began attacks there in November 2023.

While the US and the Houthis signed a deal in May this year that stopped the attacks – as well as US-led bombing campaigns in Yemen – marine traffic in the Bab al-Mandab is still short of the average of 72-75 ships a day seen before November 2023.

As early as 2021, reports emerged of a “mysterious airbase” being built on Mayun, with no country taking claim of the construction.

The reports noted that the runway “allows whoever controls it to project power into the strait and easily launch air strikes into mainland Yemen… It also provides a base for any operations into the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden and nearby east Africa.”

Satellite imagery from 2023 to the present day shows that the airstrip at Mayun Air Base now extends to approximately 1.85km in length, sloping from northwest to southeast along the island’s west coast. The runway is made up of a dark-coloured paved surface suitable for medium-sized aircraft or large drones and manned reconnaissance aircraft.

While in 2023 and 2024 no changes were observed on the runway, in 2025 images showed a clear change, indicating that surface levelling and resurfacing work had been carried out.

There are a series of hangars around the base large enough – the longest and widest is 660 metres x 100 metres – to house drones and possibly reconnaissance aircraft. Satellite imagery also shows residential facilities on the base, allowing for the deployment of dozens of military and technical personnel.

>Surveillance and supply lines


The island bases are connected by maritime routes, infrastructure patterns and intelligence facilities to the UAE’s military presence in Bosaso and Berbera, two ports in Somalia’s Puntland and Somaliland regions.

The use of these two regions, which both have separatist movements seeking a break from Somalia, has placed the UAE in opposition to Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s government in Mogadishu.

In September, Africa Confidential reported on the “chronic enmity” between MBZ and the Somali president, which it said was partly the result of the UAE’s “hegemonic ambitions” in the Horn of Africa.

Satellite imagery shows that at Bosaso Air Base, located next to Bosaso International Airport, Emirati management has established a radar facility, fortified ammunition depots, a dedicated cargo area for IL-76 heavy transport aircraft, a field hospital, a vehicle storage yard that houses dozens of pickup trucks, aircraft hangars and the original hangar of the Puntland Maritime Police Force (PMPF).

The PMPF was initially run by a UAE-based company, in violation of a UN arms embargo, and reported directly to the Puntland president, bypassing the sovereignty of the Somali federal government.

Imagery from Google Earth indicates rapid and intense building work carried out on the eastern edge of Bosaso Air Base between January 2024 and January 2025. In that time, three helipads; a group of large, enclosed hangars able to accommodate drones; and a fully paved operating area connected to those hangers were constructed.

Satellite imagery from the northern end of the base at Bosaso shows what appears to be an Emirati-operated French-made GM-403 radar, though there have been reports that an Israeli-made EL/M-2084 system - the same used by Israel's Iron Dome - is in use.

Both the French and Israeli radar systems are capable of tracking more than a thousand drones, aircraft, missiles or artillery at a range of more than 400km. In Bosaso, this means covering the Gulf of Aden and the entrance to the Red Sea.

According to multiple Sudanese, diplomatic and local sources, the UAE is also using Bosaso to transfer weapons and ammunitions to the RSF in Sudan.

The IL-76 transport aircraft has been seen in satellite imagery parked on a civilian airport landing strip to the southeast of the Bosaso airfield. Also seen in satellite imagery was a Hercules C-130, a military transport aircraft for heavy equipment.

In early 2024, two or three of these transport flights were arriving every day. By mid-2025 these were operating at about 15 per month.

On Monday, according to flight tracking data, a Boeing 737-436 arrived at Bosaso 8.50am UTC and then departed on its return flight to Abu Dhabi.

>Complicated alliance


The UAE’s engagement with Somaliland, perhaps the autonomous region with the strongest independence movement within Somalia, goes back to 2017.

To strengthen its claim to autonomy, the Somaliland government accepted an Emirati bid to establish a military base in Berbera, which has become part of the network connecting the Yemeni islands and Bosaso.

Satellite imagery shows that in Berbera, the naval base had been quietly transformed from a stalled project to a nearly completed facility, with advanced infrastructure including a modern military port, a deep-water dock, an airstrip with hangars and support facilities, all constructed.

The runway at Berbera is 4km long, meaning it can receive heavy transport aircraft and fighter jets. The creation of all these facilities has turned Berbera into a regionally important strategic hub.

In June, Abu Dhabi finalised an agreement to build a railway linking the Somaliland port to Ethiopia, another sign of its pre-eminence in the Horn of Africa.

“The present reality combines several elements,” Harchaoui told MEE. “The UAE’s extraordinary propaganda and lobbying machinery, its willingness to intervene militarily across multiple theatres, its financial resources, and its complete disregard for international norms and UN Security Council arms embargoes.”

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/uae-yemen-somalia-circle-bases-control-gulf-of-aden

>>2543719
His account:
https://www.tiktok.com/@z1971rr

Related video. UAE Arabs call for Sudan to be nuked like Hiroshima, sing the name of a guy who's bragged about killing 2k people and tell the Sudanese people they're not worth a hair on MBZ's head.

From newsanon's thread:

Mohammed bin Salman expected to lobby Trump over UAE role in Sudan, sources say

Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman is expected to lobby US President Donald Trump over the UAE’s support for the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Sudan when the two leaders meet at the White House next week, multiple Arab and western officials have told Middle East Eye.

The move, which follows a phone call last week between Mohammed bin Salman and Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) commander Abdul Fattah al-Burhan, would mark a rare direct engagement between the Saudi ruler and Trump on Sudan.

The UAE has backed the RSF throughout the war using supply lines that run through southeastern Libya, Chad and, increasingly, the port of Bosaso, on Somalia's Puntland coast. Abu Dhabi continues to deny the allegations.

Multiple sources monitoring the war told MEE that their internal traffic showed an information war was already under way between UAE and Saudi-backed social media accounts. Accounts linked to the UAE are looking to discredit journalists and organisations that report on RSF atrocities, while Saudi-linked accounts are boosting the same content.

A Sudanese source briefed on the call between Mohammed bin Salman and Burhan said that the general told the crown prince there was no way the war in Sudan would end without US pressure on the UAE. The source told MEE that Mohammed bin Salman promised Burhan he would raise the issue with Trump.

An Arab diplomat in the region told MEE that Abu Dhabi is anticipating Mohammed bin Salman's visit to Washington to result in such pressure.

"He [the Saudi crown prince] sees an opportunity to drive a wedge between Trump and MBZ," a western official familiar with plans to discuss Sudan told MEE, referring to Emirati President Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

>Saudi Arabia and the UAE: Falling out over Sudan?


The 64-year-old ruler of the UAE and the Saudi crown prince, 40, were once very close. Both men run monarchies that are key US security and economic partners. Their Al Saud and Al Nahyan families have also courted Trump directly with investments and are especially close to his son-in-law Jared Kushner, who also has business dealings with Qatar.

Almost a decade ago, the UAE and Saudi Arabia engineered a blockade of Qatar and intervened in Yemen's civil war together. Sudanese fighters, mostly from the RSF, fought for the Saudi and UAE-led coalition in Yemen, and Sudanese sources told MEE that a small number of those fighters are still present in Saudi Arabia, close to the border with Yemen.

Diplomats in the region said the Saudis and Emiratis are now more like rivals in Yemen, where the UAE backs a separatist government in the south that is at odds with the internationally recognised Saudi-backed government.

After failing to unseat the Houthis, whose attacks on vessels in the Red Sea boosted their popularity in the region, Riyadh has sought a compromise with the group.

>UAE out of step over Sudan


Egypt, an otherwise close partner of the UAE, is stepping up military support for the Sudanese army, alongside Turkey, as MEE recently reported.

"When Egypt and Saudi Arabia align on an issue, you basically have an Arab consensus," Hussein Ibish, a scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, told MEE. "On Sudan, and other files, the UAE is going against that consensus."

Ibish added that Saudi Arabia and the UAE are more comfortable airing their differences because of a reduced concern over Iran in their capitals. "If they don't feel under threat from Iran, they don't feel the need to cohere on every issue. Therefore, they feel free to compete."

MEE reported in January 2024 that the UAE was supplying the RSF with weapons through a complex network of supply lines and alliances stretching across Libya, Chad and Uganda.

More recently, MEE reported on the existence of two Emirati bases inside Sudan, as well as the use of Bosaso on Somalia's coast as part of the UAE's supply routes to the RSF.

Sudan's war began in April 2023, when long-simmering tensions between the SAF, led by Burhan, and the RSF, led by former Janjaweed commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, a close ally of the UAE's better known as Hemedti, spiralled into open conflict.

Saudi Arabia positioned itself as a mediator when the war broke out. Western and Arab diplomats say Riyadh saw an opportunity to put a new face on its diplomacy following its bloody intervention in Yemen.

Indeed, Saudi Arabia was so angry at the UAE's intervention in Sudan that at first it baulked at allowing Abu Dhabi into the so-called Quad, a group that includes the US and Egypt and is designed to mediate an end to the war, a former US official told MEE.

The Saudis conceded to the UAE's entry after high-level pressure from Washington, the former official said.

During his call with Mohammed bin Salman, Burhan said that the RSF had turned into a "killing machine", and that it could not have done this without the UAE. The Sudanese general, whose armed forces have been accused of war crimes, argued in the call that the war is not between "two generals", and detailed RSF atrocities across the country.

While Saudi Arabia has positioned itself as a mediator to the conflict, multiple Sudanese and western sources have told MEE that Riyadh's preference throughout the war has been the perceived stability offered by the SAF.

Few US or Arab diplomats expect Sudan to be the main topic of discussion on the crown prince's visit; with arms deals, artificial intelligence and nuclear energy in focus.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed by the war and at least 13 million displaced. RSF fighters have been accused of widespread massacres and abuses, including a genocide in Darfur. The SAF has also been accused of war crimes.

<Why do you guys think Saudi and Egypt back the SAF over the RSF? Doubt they particularly kill about the mass killings so why are they reticent about the UAE installing an Israeli friendly secular puppet there? Too much influence for the UAE?


https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/saudi-arabia-crown-prince-expected-lobby-trump-against-uae-arming-sudan-rsf

Emirati journalist films with female RSF commander calling for mass rape of Sudanese women

If arabs and hitler had a kid it would look like RSF.

Courtesy of newsanon's thread

Emirati, Israeli and far-right influencers 'invented Christian killings in Sudan': Report

Beam Reports, a Sudanese investigative platform that combats disinformation, said in its latest report on Wednesday that after the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary group seized control of el-Fasher in Darfur nearly a month ago, misleading content about the nature of events began to surface online in a "synchronised manner".

The objectives of the coordinated campaign, Beam Reports stated, included shifting blame of atrocities away from the RSF, recasting Sudan's war as a religious conflict to "evoke foreign sympathy", and flooding the online space with fabricated content to confuse media coverage.

Beam identified Amjad Taha, an Emirati analyst, as the architect of the campaign. He posted several claims about alleged Islamists in Sudan, which were then amplified by other accounts.

One claim alleged that Britain was about to grant citizenship to a "Sudanese jihadist" whilst "Christians are being slaughtered in Sudan and Nigeria by Islamist extremists".

Taha added that Sudan's army had "killed 2 million Christians, displaced 8 million, and raped 15,000 women, while leftists stay busy attacking the UAE… a nation where church bells ring freely".

Taha also claimed that a Sudanese army officer had "eaten a man's heart after killing him and his children". Again, no evidence was provided, but such claims were amplified by Emirati, Israeli and far-right accounts.

For several months, Taha has led the charge on social media to link Sudan’s armed forces with the Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas in Gaza.

Earlier this year, in a column for British publication Jewish News, Taha described the SAF as "the Hamas of Africa".

>False 'Islamist violence' claims


Beam found that several accounts took to social media to re-use images of RSF abuses against civilians in el-Fasher and frame them as "Islamist violence against Christians".

One such example was American influencer Nima Yamini, who shared images from el-Fasher and claimed they showed "Christians slaughtered in Sudan - and no one talks about it because Israel isn’t involved to be blamed".

Yamini said that massacres against Christians were so severe that you can "see blood from space".

In reality, blood splatters seen from space were from areas of el-Fasher where the RSF were reported to have shot residents.

In a different post, far-right Polish politician Dominik Tarczynski shared a purported image of a mother and child in el-Fasher with the false caption: "Sudan: genocide of Christians by the Islamists."

The vast majority of people in Sudan are Muslim (over 90 percent), and the war is not being fought along religious lines.

A United Nations fact-finding mission in September said it had received credible allegations of attacks on places of worship committed by both warring parties. That included RSF shelling churches in el-Fasher, and SAF shelling mosques and a church in Wad Madani and Khartoum.

MEE reported in January 2024 that the UAE was supplying the RSF with weapons through a complex network of supply lines and alliances stretching across Libya, Chad, Uganda, and Somalia.

US intelligence agencies reported as recently as October that the UAE has increased its supply of Chinese drones and other weapon systems to the RSF, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.

Since Sudan's war began in April 2023, RSF fighters have been accused of widespread massacres and abuses, including a genocide elsewhere in Darfur. The SAF have also been accused of war crimes.

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/uae-israel-far-right-influencers-invented-christian-killings-sudan-says-report

The Sheikh Who Conquered Soccer and Coddles Warlords

The Emirati vice president is best known as the owner of Manchester City, a top English soccer team. Behind the scenes, he has been described as the “handler” guiding his country’s secret foreign wars.

https://archive.is/2dwMV

>Charities controlled by Sheikh Mansour set up a hospital, saying they were treating civilians. But that humanitarian effort was also a cover for the secret Emirati effort to smuggle drones and other powerful weapons to General Hamdan’s group, the Rapid Support Forces, or R.S.F., according to American and U.N. officials.


>Charities controlled by Sheikh Mansour set up a hospital, saying they were treating civilians. But that humanitarian effort was also a cover for the secret Emirati effort to smuggle drones and other powerful weapons to General Hamdan’s group, the Rapid Support Forces, or R.S.F., according to American and U.N. officials.


>In interviews with more than a dozen American, African and Arab officials, he is described as being at the sharp end of his country’s aggressive push to expand its influence across Africa and the Middle East.


>In places like Libya and Sudan, they say, Sheikh Mansour has coddled warlords and autocrats as part of a sweeping Emirati drive to acquire ports and strategic minerals, counter Islamist movements and establish the Gulf nation as a heavyweight regional power.


>President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, was allied with Iran, a fierce competitor with many Arab states for influence in the region. Sheikh Mansour was tasked with wooing him to the Emirati side, Sudanese and American officials said. A series of back-channel meetings culminated in 2017 with a high-profile visit by Mr. al-Bashir to Abu Dhabi.


>Soon, billions in Emirati aid was flowing into Sudan, according to Emirati state media.


>Many American officials were appalled. Mr. al-Bashir was wanted by the International Criminal Court at The Hague for his role in the genocide in Darfur a decade earlier. For the Emirates, though, it was a fruitful alliance: Mr. al-Bashir deployed troops to Yemen to fight alongside the Emirates and Saudi Arabia in their war against the Iran-backed Houthis.


>That was also the start of a new relationship. Many of the troops sent to Yemen belonged to the R.S.F., which was then a recently formed paramilitary group led by General Hamdan.


>When General Hamdan helped seize power in a coup in Sudan in 2021, American officials were furious. They had been assured that civilians, not the military, would govern the country.


>But the Emirates approved of the takeover, and soon gave General Hamdan a warm official welcome in Abu Dhabi.


>The Emirates was on its way to surpassing even China as the biggest foreign deal maker in Africa. Companies led by the al-Nahyan family have poured billions into African mines, data centers and carbon credits as the Gulf country seeks to wean its economy off oil.


>Yet for a handful of strategically located nations, the Emirates has also acted as an arms-supplying kingmaker.


>In 2021, Sheikh Mohammed rescued the beleaguered prime minister of Ethiopia, Abiy Ahmed, by supplying drones that helped to turn the tide of a brutal civil war in his favor.


>And when Sudan collapsed into civil war in 2023, the Emirates sided firmly with Sheikh Mansour’s ally, General Hamdan.


>First, General Hamdan flew to the Emirates, where he was given sanctuary in a protected residence and recorded videotaped speeches to supporters in Sudan, American officials said. Soon after, the Emirates mounted a covert scheme to arm General Hamdan’s group, the R.S.F., from a desert air base in eastern Chad.


>The general’s appeal to the Emirates was threefold, U.S. officials said. He was loyal because he had fought for the Emiratis in Yemen. He was cooperative because his businesses were based in the Emirates, where he sold gold and bought weapons. And he was a self-proclaimed enemy of Islamist groups.


>Using phone intercepts, American intelligence agencies determined that General Hamdan enjoyed a direct line to two leaders of the Emirates — Sheikh Mohammed and Sheikh Mansour, officials said. They also identified an Emirati official who coordinated a network of shell companies that helped to fund and arm the general’s forces.


>The Emirates sent weapons to the general’s forces via an air base in Chad, where they were ostensibly running a field hospital funded by two charities, both controlled or overseen by Sheikh Mansour. Neither charity responded to questions for this story, but Emirati officials said it was “reckless and harmful” to suggest that the hospital was being used for anything other than humanitarian work.


>At the sweeping, marble presidential palace in Abu Dhabi, Mr. Trump reveled in the extravagant reception as he signed a $200 billion artificial intelligence deal with the country, adding to earlier Emirati pledges to invest $1.4 trillion in the United States.


>“You are a magnificent man, and it’s an honor to be with you,” Mr. Trump said to Sheikh Mohammed.


>Seated next to them was Sheikh Mansour, whose Mubadala wealth fund had said it would use a Trump family crypto venture to make a $2 billion transaction that stands to generate hundreds of millions of dollars for the president’s family.


>Days later, the Trump administration bypassed Congress and approved another $1 billion in weapons for the Emirates.

File: 1764004619409.jpeg (10.03 KB, 275x183, image.jpeg)

UK allowed arms exports to UAE after being told weapons given to RSF
Britain licenced £172m in military equipment exported to the UAE between April and June this year

The British government approved weapons exports to the United Arab Emirates even after being told that the UAE had diverted UK military equipment to paramilitaries accused of committing genocide in Sudan, it has emerged.

It was reported last month that British-manufactured small-arms target systems and engines for armoured personnel carriers were found in Rapid Support Forces (RSF) hands in combat zones in Sudan.

MEE has previously revealed that the UAE provides the RSF militia with extensive logistical and military support.

The UN Security Council, of which Britain is a member, received information in March alleging that the UAE may have supplied British-made arms to the RSF, according to the Guardian.

But it has now emerged that Britain then continued to approve exports to the UAE for military equipment.


https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/uk-allowed-arms-exports-uae-after-being-told-weapons-given-rsf

>>2560491
>sky
Ghoulish

The UAE is buying the West's silence over its 'race war' in Sudan, says top general

Lieutenant General Yasser al-Atta, a member of Sudan’s governing Sovereignty Council and the military’s second in command, told journalists that UAE President Mohammed bin Zayed has launched a race war against the Sudanese people.

“They entered people’s houses in Khartoum and other cities. They loot and destroy everything: hospitals, electricity, water supply, everything that keeps people alive,” he said.

But Atta said the “world has been silent regarding all the RSF has done in Sudan” despite “social media and technological tools” which enabled the paramilitaries’ crimes to be seen and understood.

The reason, stated Atta, is that “this silence was bought by the power of the UAE’s money”.

“As a result of the world not watching, mercenaries were imported to our country and the UAE were allowed to do it,” he said.

MEE has previously detailed how the UAE has transported Colombian mercenaries to the RSF through an air base in Somalia.

Atta said the paramilitaries have hired fighters from as far afield as Ukraine, too, as well as African countries such as Niger, Mali, Chad and South Sudan.

Before the war, there was ample evidence that the RSF had close ties with Russia’s Wagner Group.

According to Atta, the collapse of the Wagner Group following the death of its founder Yevgeny Prigozhin in an air crash two years ago has opened up new recruitment options for the RSF.

Most recently, he stated, the RSF has brought in recruits from Somaliland.

>Somalia and the UAE


For years, the United Arab Emirates has provided financial assistance to Mogadishu and trained Somali soldiers to combat armed groups such as al-Shabab.

But this relationship has darkened significantly in recent years, as the UAE has aided and abetted regional administrations like Puntland and Somaliland, which have designs on splitting away from Somalia.

Mogadishu maintains control over Somali airspace and authorises all flights into the country, but it has no authority over Bosaso’s port and airport.

Despite the uneasy relationship that exists between Hassan Sheikh, Somalia’s president, and the UAE’s Mohammed bin Zayed, the government in Mogadishu has not openly confronted Abu Dhabi over its military activities in Puntland.

“Mogadishu is unable to object, given that it is unprepared to counter the UAE’s expanding influence,” said Abdirashid Muse, a regional analyst and critic of the UAE’s activities in the Horn of Africa.

Puntland’s state president, Said Abdullahi Deni, is widely regarded as a close ally of the UAE, largely due to the financial support that could strengthen both his administration and his political ambitions.

>A history of violence


In recent weeks, greater global scrutiny has been placed on the RSF and the UAE’s backing of it after the paramilitaries stormed el-Fasher on 26 October and launched a killing spree.

But Atta was keen to stress that the RSF has committed numerous atrocities beyond the slaughter in el-Fasher, drawing attention to rampages in al-Jazira state south of Khartoum.

“There are many small villages in al-Jazira and in those villages hundreds were being killed,” he said.

An attack on al-Seriha village in October 2024 is reported to have killed around 100 people.

Sudanese in al-Tekeina, another village in al-Jazira, told MEE that the RSF killed more than 50 of its residents as they successfully fought off the paramilitaries.

The RSF, Atta said, “are killing more and more people just to make sure they do not exist”.

He told MEE that the number of civilians massacred in el-Fasher has now risen to 32,000, with more killed every day “according to ethnicity and race”.

Last week, Darfur Governor Minnie Minnawi told MEE that the number had reached 27,000.

The Rapid Support Forces grew out of militias known as the Janjaweed that the Sudanese military and government under former president Omar al-Bashir used to fight rebel movements in Darfur 20 years ago.

Those rebels were rising up against the central government in protest at the marginalisation and discrimination of Black Sudanese. The mostly Arab Janjaweed targeted Black communities as they rampaged across Darfur in a conflict that has been described as the 21st century’s first genocide.

Janjaweed fighters, drawn principally from traditionally nomadic Arab tribesmen, also used the conflict as an opportunity to drive Sudanese - most often from Black African ethnicities - from their land.

“If you are from a non-Arab or SAF-supporting tribe they will shoot you and kill you directly,” Atta said.

“Those people who try to escape, the RSF will follow them and kill them on the road.”

An Emirati 'project'

At the start of the dinner, which was facilitated by the Al Arabiya production company, Atta, a veteran of four decades in the Sudanese army with a background in intelligence work, told journalists: “I am going to be very honest and direct. I am a straightforward person.”

Answering through a translator, he accused the Abu Dhabi ruler Mohammed bin Zayed of planning to drive African tribes out of Sudan.

He said that a source in Dubai warned him a year before the war started that Mohammed bin Zayed often referred to the RSF leader Mohammed Hamdan Daglo - popularly known as Hemedti - as the “prince of Sudan”.

Atta claimed that the UAE president had personally approved a strategic plan to rid Sudan of its African tribes.

He told journalists that the “project” entails a massive programme of relocation and ethnic cleansing, with northern Sudanese people and Nubian tribes pushed into Egypt.

The project, according to the general, also envisages the expulsion of southern Nuba tribes and others from South Kordofan and Blue Nile states to South Sudan.

Atta said that, according to Sudanese intelligence, the UAE has established a chain of command in Abu Dhabi to manage logistics, media and the supply of armaments to the RSF in Sudan.

Before the meeting with Atta, the Sudanese army took journalists to a military base that had become a graveyard of destroyed RSF armoured vehicles. Some, officers said, had been supplied by the UAE.

The military equipment, said Sudanese officers, was either flown in from Chad or Somalia or came overland through Libya.

These vehicles, they claimed, were often hidden inside mosques or public buildings to avoid destruction by the Sudanese air force.

Atta told reporters that one explanation for the Emirati intervention might be that “UAE wants gold, or land for agriculture or land for minerals”.

But he said Sudan has always been “open to investment”.

“No, we think what the UAE really wants is a race decision. The Sudan they see is an Arab land without non-Arabs,” he said.

“The RSF is just a tool in the hands of the Emirates,” he added, highlighting the many Emirati interventions in countries across the Middle East and North Africa.

“The United Arab Emirates is an enemy. They have damaged or destroyed the Arab world and the entire region we are living in. The UAE is behind the problems in Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Yemen and other countries.”

Some of those countries, Atta said, were “exchanging information” with the Sudanese military about Emirati activities.

Since the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011, the UAE has sought to project its power across the region by bolstering friendly autocratic governments and combating champions of democracy and political Islam.

Much like in Sudan, it has also backed secessionists and militias in states like Libya, Somalia and Yemen, leading to huge upheaval and instability.

The Sudanese conflict erupted over plans to fold the RSF into the regular military, which would have significantly weakened Hemedti and the influence of the UAE.

In a rare light moment, the general mocked the narrative spread by RSF supporters that “Burhan is Muslim Brotherhood and Atta is a communist”.

“They tell the Turks we are communists and Qataris we are extremists. We don’t know who we are at the moment: communist or Brotherhood,” he joked.

>A new basis for negotiations


Assessing the current military situation, Atta claimed that the number of RSF fighters had been reduced from 100,000 to 23,000 since the war began.

But, he warned, “they have the direct support of the UAE”.

“We believe in peace. We are not warmongers. We want a solution based on justice and fairness,” he said - insisting, however, that “we will not accept any peace that will make room for the Emirates”.

Significantly, he also ruled out any involvement in negotiations of US senior advisor for Arab and African affairs, Massad Boulos.

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/uae-buying-wests-silence-over-its-race-war-sudan-says-top-general


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