Old Dog, Old Trick: US, Saudis, Qatar Attempt “Arab Spring” Retread in Sudan
Protests are smokescreen for unfolding US-Saudi-Qatari backed violence seeking regime change in Sudan.
By Tony Cartalucci
The Associated Press reveals that recent and ongoing “Arab
Spring-style” unrest in Sudan’s capital of Khartoum is led by Sudan’s
Western-backed opposition, the National Umma Party, and the various
faux-NGO’s and “independent media” organizations created by the West to
prop it up. This reveals yet another Western-engineered uprising
designed for regime change in favor of a new, Western friendly client
regime.
The AP article, “Sudanese protesters demand the regime’s ouster,” first claims:
Activists acknowledge they have no unified leadership or support from political parties but express hope the spontaneous nature of the current round of protests means they’re gaining momentum.
However, AP then admits [emphasis added]:
One of Sudan’s most prominent opposition leaders, Sadiq al-Mahdi of the National Umma Party, told worshippers at a mosque in the district of Omdurman that al-Bashir has been spending the state’s budget on “consolidating power” and failed “to lift the agony off the citizens’ shoulders.”
After the sermon, protesters marched through the district, a longtime opposition stronghold, chanting “the people want the downfall of the regime,” the slogan heard in Arab Spring uprisings that began in late 2010 and have led to the ouster of the leaders in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen.
Clearly, the “activists” indeed have a leader – Sadiq al-Mahdi of the
National Umma Party who was literally leading the protesters out into
the streets. And while comparisons to the “Arab Spring” invokes images
of peaceful “pro-democracy” protests – AP admits that the protesters are
already turning to violence:
Angry protesters torched police and dozens of gas stations and government buildings, and students marched chanting for al-Bashir’s ouster.
AP, perhaps hoping readers would not bother researching the matter
further, also quotes “local blogger and journalist Reem Shawka” to
bolster their narrative. Shawka is a columnist at Sudan’s 500 Words Magazine.
While 500 Words maintains that it is “a Sudanese independent online
magazine,” it proudly advertises in the right column of its website an
upcoming US Institute of Peace “Sudanese and South Sudanese Youth Leaders Program.” Like Thailand’s deceitful US-funded propaganda front Prachatai,
500 Words is most likely directly funded by the US government, and is
most certainly in tune with the US State Department’s agenda and talking
points regarding Sudan.
Image: Sudan’s “independent online magazine,”
500 Words proudly advertises for the US Institute of Peace on its
website (right-hand side), exposing the predictable ties between its
support for Western-backed opposition inside of Sudan and the US State
Department through the National Endowment for Democracy and others, who
most likely funds the online propaganda front.
….
Indeed 500 Words’ editor-in-chief, Moez Ali, has his own page on “Open Democracy” – funded by Open Society Institute, the Oak Foundation, the Sigrid Rausing Trust, TIDES, and many others.
It should be mentioned that the US Institute of Peace – advertised for on 500 Words - has played an instrumental role in the Western-engineered “Arab Spring,”
where it literally crafts the constitutions and structure of proxy
regimes the West plans to create once targeted nations have been
overthrown.
Sadiq al-Mahdi, leader of Sudan’s National Umma Party, is a member of the EU-US-Saudi-Qatari run Arab Democracy Foundation and the Club de Madrid which features former US President Bill Clinton as a “full member”
amongst many others, and is backed by Wall Street and London’s myriad
of “international institutions” and foundations including the World
Bank, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation, Walmart, North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), Microsoft, and many others.
Al-Mahdi himself was Oxford educated, according to his official Club de Madrid biography, which also states [emphasis added]:
Al-Mahdi was elected president of the Umma party in November 1964, and led a campaign to promote political activity, develop political Islam, and reform the party by expanding its base and promoting democracy behavior. Despite his efforts towards a democratic government, there was another coup d´état in 1969 that led to a dictatorship referred to as the May Regime.
He was soon arrested by the military government, exiled to Egypt, and detained in Sudanese prisons repeatedly until 1974. Later that year, he traveled abroad and toured Arab and African Capitals where he delivered a number of lectures. While in exile, he formed the National Democratic Front (NDF), comprised of Umma, the Democratic Unionist Party, and the Muslim Brotherhood. Through his efforts, the NDF was able to make an accord of national reconciliation in 1977 with the May Regime that mandated democratic reform.
His direct association with the Muslim Brotherhood is important, as
this is the organization that as far back as 2007, under then US
President George Bush, began receiving US-Saudi-Israeli support to
prepare the violent overthrow of several nations, including in
particular, Syria. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Seymour Hersh in
his 2007 New Yorker article, “The Redireciton: Is the Administration’s new policy benefiting our enemies in the war on terrorism?” would reveal US-Saudi-Israeli support behind funding and arming the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria:
“the Saudi government, with Washington’s approval, would provide funds and logistical aid to weaken the government of President Bashir Assad, of Syria. The Israelis believe that putting such pressure on the Assad government will make it more conciliatory and open to negotiations.”
Hersh also reported that a supporter of the Lebanese pro-US-Saudi
Hariri faction had met Dick Cheney in Washington and relayed personally
the importance of using the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria in any move
against the ruling government:
“[Walid] Jumblatt then told me that he had met with Vice-President Cheney in Washington last fall to discuss, among other issues, the possibility of undermining Assad. He and his colleagues advised Cheney that, if the United States does try to move against Syria, members of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood would be “the ones to talk to,” Jumblatt said.”
The article would continue by explaining how already in 2007 US and Saudi backing had begun benefiting the Brotherhood:
“There is evidence that the Administration’s redirection strategy has already benefitted the Brotherhood. The Syrian National Salvation Front is a coalition of opposition groups whose principal members are a faction led by Abdul Halim Khaddam, a former Syrian Vice-President who defected in 2005, and the Brotherhood. A former high-ranking C.I.A. officer told me, “The Americans have provided both political and financial support. The Saudis are taking the lead with financial support, but there is American involvement.” He said that Khaddam, who now lives in Paris, was getting money from Saudi Arabia, with the knowledge of the White House. (In 2005, a delegation of the Front’s members met with officials from the National Security Council, according to press reports.) A former White House official told me that the Saudis had provided members of the Front with travel documents.”
That al-Mahdi, whose coalition included the Muslim Brotherhood that’s
played an instrumental role executing recent Western designs in Syria
and Egypt, and whose uprising and calls for faux-reform is echoed by the
likes of Sudanese extremist leader Hassan al-Turabi (who had in fact invited Osama Bin Laden to Sudan),
is now leading protesters through the streets of Sudan’s capital,
torching infrastructure, government buildings, and police stations (just
as was done across Egypt and Syria), indicates another attempt by the
West to overthrow the Sudanese government via proxy militancy.
That the West has once again “coincidentally” arrayed its vast
resources behind al-Mahdi’s “revolution,” which includes Al Qaeda-linked
leaders like al-Turabi, once again illustrates that so-called “Islamic”
extremism is a geopolitical tool both created and intentionally perpetuated by the West,
both as a pretext for direct military invasion and occupation (Mali,
Afghanistan) and as an inexhaustible proxy mercenary force for
overthrowing targeted nations (Libya, Egypt, Syria).
What to Watch For
Sudan shares borders with NATO-overthrown Libya, destabilized Egypt,
and US military proxy Ethiopia. It is also across the Red Sea from Saudi
Arabia itself. Both Libya and Egypt have sizable
US-Saudi-Israeli-Qatari-backed terrorist organizations and their
affiliated political arms – the Muslim Brotherhood being the most
prominent. Sudan is a potential tinderbox made more volatile in recent
years due to the Muslim Brotherhood’s US-Saudi-Qatari-Israeli enabled
rise, along with the Western-backed terrorist organizations, including
Al Qaeda, that form it’s armed factions.
The West’s interest in Sudan is not causal or spontaneous. It was
listed as one of several nations the US had intended to violently
overthrow and subjugate as a client regime since at least 2001, revealed
in a speech given by US Army General Wesley Clark in 2007.
With a recent terrorist attack by US armed and backed Al Qaeda in Nairobi Kenya threatening
to justify new joint African Union-US AFRICOM incursions into Somalia,
and destabilizations ongoing in both Egypt and to a much greater extent
in Syria, the words of General Wesley Clark are both prophetic and
indicative of the true nature of both the so-called “Arab Spring” and
the attempted violent regime changes being organized behind the
smokescreen of “pro-democracy protesters.”
While Sudan may not seem to have significance to most across the
West, the geopolitical implications of an entire region from Mali to
Pakistan under Western destabilization directly impacts oil, logistics,
and stability across the globe. Nations like China which relies on
African and Middle Eastern trade, are directly impacted by US attempts
to destabilize and overthrow Sudan - and is in fact one of the driving motivations of the West’s so-called “Arab Spring.”
Following the “Arab Spring” playbook,
we should expect attempts to justify the increased militarization of
the so-called “opposition,” who will at first be portrayed as
“pro-democracy” moderates forced to “defend themselves,” but will be
fully revealed as Al Qaeda as full-scale proxy military operations get
underway. The only way to avert a destructive military conflict is for
the Sudanese government to swiftly and severely crush the opposition and
secure the borders where NATO-backed militants and their equipment are
most likely to flow.
Sudan’s government must also make real attempts at reform, while
exposing the foreign-backed nature of opposition leaders trying to
divide and destroy the nation. By breaking the predictable “evil
dictator” mold Sudan’s leadership has been cast in by the Western media,
it, and other nations targeted by Western regime change can even the
odds leveled against them by the still formidable Western press and
their partners in propaganda across Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Israel.
Unprecedented amounts of resources have been committed to the
geopolitical reordering of North Africa, the Middle East, and Central
Asia. It would be a considerable mistake for any nation overtly listed
by the US as “pending regime change” to underestimate any beginnings of
unrest clearly backed by foreign interests. While some operations may be
“testing the waters,” the final push can come at any time with fully
militarized proxies pre-positioned and prepared to sow the same
genocidal destruction US-backed terrorists in Syria are carrying out.
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