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 East Africa at the Brink:  Hidden Hands behind Sudan's Oil War  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, Monday, May 7, 2012 
 Once again Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir waved his walking 
	stick in the air. Once again he spoke of splendid victories over his enemies 
	as thousands of jubilant supporters danced and cheered. But this time around 
	the stakes are too high.
 
 An all out war against newly independent 
	South Sudan might not be in Sudan’s best interest. South Sudan’s 
	saber-rattling is not an entirely independent initiative; its most recent 
	territorial transgressions - which saw the occupation of Sudan’s largest oil 
	field in Heglig on April 10, followed by a hasty retreat ten days later – 
	might have been a calculated move aimed at drawing Sudan into a larger 
	conflict.
 
 Stunted by the capture of Heglig, which, according to 
	some estimates, provides nearly half of the country’s oil production, Bashir 
	promised victory over Juba. Speaking to large crowd in the capital of North 
	Kordofan, El-Obeid, Bashir affectively declared war. “Heglig isn't the end, 
	it is the beginning,” he said, as quoted in the Wall Street Journal. Bashir 
	also declared a desire to ‘liberate’ the people of South Sudan from a 
	government composed of ‘insects.’ Even when Heglig was declared a liberated 
	region by Sudan’s defence minister, the humiliation of defeat was simply 
	replaced by the fervor of victory. “They started the fighting and we will 
	announce when it will end, and our advance will never stop,” Bashir 
	announced on April 20.
 
 Statements issued by the government of South 
	Sudan are clearly more measured, with an international target audience in 
	mind. Salva Kiir, President of South Sudan, simply said that his forces 
	departed the region following appeals made by the international community. 
	This includes a statement by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, which 
	described the attack on Heglig as “an infringement on the sovereignty of 
	Sudan and a clearly illegal act” (Reuters, April 19). A day before the hasty 
	withdrawal, South Sudan government spokesman Barnaba Marial Benjamin claimed 
	there had been no conflict in the first place. His statement was both 
	bewildering and patronizing. He considered Sudan, which was then rallying 
	for war to recapture its oil-rich area, a neighbor and “friendly nation”, 
	and claimed that “up to now we have not crossed even an inch into Sudan” 
	(Associated Press, April 19).
 
 The fact remains, however, that 
	wherever there is oil political narratives cannot possibly be so simple. 
	Sudan is caught in a multidimensional conflict involving weapons trade, 
	internal instabilities, multiple civil wars and the reality of outside 
	players with their own interests. None of this is enough to excuse the 
	readiness for war on behalf of Khartoum and Juba, but it certainly presents 
	serious obstacles to any attempt aimed at rectifying the situation.
 
 With a single act of aggression, a whole set of conflicts are prone to 
	flaring up. It is the nature of proxy politics, as many armed groups seek 
	opportunities for territorial advances and financial gains. News reports 
	already speak of a possible involvement of Uganda should the fledging war 
	between Khartoum and Juba cross conventional boundaries. “As the possibility 
	of a full-fledged war became unnervingly higher, General Aronda Nyakairima, 
	chief of Uganda’s defense forces, said that his army might be compelled to 
	intervene if Bashir did overthrow South Sudan’s regime,” reported Alexis 
	Okeowo in the New Yorker website (April 20). Both Sudans are fighting their 
	own war against various rebel groups. Despite the lack of basic food in 
	parts of the region, plenty of weapons effortlessly find inroads to wherever 
	there is potential strife.
 
 In a statement published last July, 
	Amnesty International called on UN member states to control arm shipments to 
	both Sudan and South Sudan. It accused the US, Russia and China of fueling 
	violations in the Sudan conflict through the arms trade.
 
 US support 
	of South Sudan is already well known. “The US reportedly provided $100 
	million-a-year in military assistance to the SPLA (Sudan People’s Liberation 
	Army),” according to Russia Today on April 19, citing a December 2009 
	diplomatic cable revealed by WikiLeaks.
 
 According to political 
	author and columnist Reason Wafawarova, US interest in South Sudan is 
	neither accidental nor motivated by humanitarian issues. He told RT, “It 
	would not be surprising if the US is trying to capitalize on the 
	vulnerability of South Sudan in its efforts to establish the AFRICOM base 
	somewhere in sub-Saharan Africa.” RT goes on to reference Sudan’s Al-Intibaha 
	newspaper for its reports on Israeli weapon supplies to Juba.
 
 US 
	and Israeli military support of Juba is not a new phenomenon. Sudan’s civil 
	war (1983-2005), which cost an estimated 2.5 million lives, could not have 
	lasted as long as it did without steady sources of military funding. And 
	while the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement, the January 9-15, 2011 
	referendum, and finally the independence of South Sudan in July were all 
	meant to usher in a new era of peace and cooperation, none actualized. 
	Sudan’s territorial concessions proved most costly, and South Sudan, 
	destroyed and landlocked, was ripe for outside exploitation.
 
 Both 
	countries are now caught in a deadly embrace. They can neither part ways 
	completely, nor cooperate successfully without a risk of war at every turn. 
	Bashir also knows he is running out of options. While Khartoum has already 
	“lost three-quarters of its oil revenue after the secession,” according 
	Egypt’s Al Ahram Weekly, “now it is poised to lose the rest.”
 
 Naturally, a conflict of this magnitude cannot be resolved by empty gestures 
	and reassuring statements. The conflict has been festering for decades, and 
	war has been the only common language. Powerful countries, including the US, 
	Russia, China, but also Israel and regional Arab and Africa players 
	exploited the conflict to their advantage whenever possible. In a recent 
	analysis, the International Crisis Group in Brussels advised that a “new 
	strategy is needed to avert an even bigger crisis.” The crisis group 
	recommends that the “UN Security Council must reassert itself to preserve 
	international peace and security, including the implementation of border 
	monitoring tasks as outlined by UN Interim Security Force in Abyei.”
 
 Expecting the Security Council to act in political tandem seems a bit too 
	optimistic, however. Considering that the US is arming and supporting South 
	Sudan, and that Russia and China continue to support Khartoum, the rivalry 
	in fact exists within the UN itself.
 
 For a sustainable future peace 
	arrangement, Sudan’s territorial integrity must be respected, and South 
	Sudan must not be pushed to the brink of desperation. Rivalries between the 
	US, China and Russia cannot continue at the expense of nations that teeter 
	between starvation and civil wars. And whatever hidden hands that continue 
	to exploit Sudan’s woes now need to be exposed and isolated.
 
 - Ramzy 
	Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an 
	internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
 
 
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