Sudan's president has threatened to topple the government to his
south to “liberate” the South Sudanese. As a bloody battle over a
disputed oil field heads towards full-scale war, it threatens to provoke
conflict between the US and Russia and China.
Wednesday, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir accused the government
in the South Sudanese capital, Juba, of trying to topple his government
and vowed to retaliate.
“This situation makes it imperative
for Sudan to confront the challenge of the State of South Sudan to
topple the government in Khartoum by working to liberate the Southern
nationals,” al-Bashir said.
South Sudan broke away from Sudan
last July after decades of on-off civil war. But the two never agreed
on how to share the oil wealth found in the region between the
countries, and the border was never fully demarcated.
The fighting
is taking place along the shared border around the oil town of Heglig,
which South Sudanese troops captured last week.
Sudan’s parliament was quick to brand its neighbor an “enemy” and called for the swift recapture of the region.
The
Heglig field is vital to Sudan’s economy as it accounted for half the
115,000 barrels per day output that remained in its control when South
Sudan seceded in July and Khartoum lost 75 per cent of the country’s oil
production.
In its turn, the landlocked South lost its 350,000
barrels per day output after failing to agree on how much it should pay
to export via Sudan’s pipelines, a Red Sea port and other facilities.
Fighting
over oil transit payments and disputed territory has already withered
the combined crude output of both countries, which are highly dependent
on oil. Any protracted fighting would severely damage their economies
and may disrupt the surrounding region.
Fueling an arms race
The
international community is calling to stop the bloodshed, but Sudan and
South Sudan seem determined to resolve the issue by force.
Meanwhile,
their “border war” threatens to provoke a conflict among the permanent
members of UN Security Council. South Sudan is an ally of the US, while
Khartoum has close ties with Russia and China.
“If the
conflict escalates, we are likely to see a stalemate at the UNSC with
China and Russia opposing any proposals that may be politically costly
to Sudan,” political author and columnist Reason Wafawarova told RT. “The
US, with its allies France and the UK, is likely to push for proposals
politically favorable to South Sudan, while opposing any proposals they
may see as benefiting Sudan.”
Wafawarova says Sudan is seen
as militarily superior to South Sudan. The US is unlikely to allow
Juba’s capitulation, increasing its military support.
Some reports
allege that the West is already providing arms to South Sudan through
its Middle Eastern partners. For instance, Sudan’s Al-Intibaha newspaper
writes that Israel might be supplying weapons to Juba.
South talking tough too
Another indicator that Juba has some serious allies in the West is the tough stance of South Sudan’s president, Salva Kiir.
When
the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called him and asked to stop the
attack on Heglig, he received a surprisingly defiant answer: “I am not a slave to fulfill your orders!”
Experts
say the behavior of President Kiir may be explained by the fact that he
was confident of the unshakable support of the United States.
Previously the US helped the southerners in their fight against the “dictatorial regime in Khartoum.”
The
reason, Wafawarova says, is that it is no secret the United States
militarily supported South Sudan in its campaign for secession from the
North.
The US reportedly provided $100 million-a-year in military
assistance to the SPLA. The information about the nature of this
assistance has been scarce, but in December 2009 WikiLeaks released a
diplomatic cable that refers to a US “training program for the SPLA, including combat arms soldier training.”
On
the other side are Russia and China, who have traditionally supported
close ties with Khartoum, selling weapons to Sudan right up to the 2005
UN arms embargo on the Sudanese government because of the war in Darfur.
However, in 2008 a BBC news report claimed to have found evidence of China-Sudan trade in violation of the embargo.
Currently, China is Sudan’s largest trading partner, importing oil and exporting low-cost goods.
Wafawarova
believes that the permanent USNC council members’ standoff in the
region may lead to an arms race between the two Sudans. US will be “expanding the military strength of South Sudan, while China and Russia will keep arming Khartoum,” he said.
There are also persistent rumors that the US plans to set up a military base in South Sudan – the largest in Africa.
“The US has failed to set up its AFRICOM base in Ghana, Mozambique, Uganda, Kenya and other proposed countries in the past,” says Wafawarova. “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.”
However, Wafawarova
stressed that any efforts to set up AFRICOM in South Sudan are likely to
face stiff opposition from Russia and China, as well as from the
African Union and most African countries at individual levels.
Shifting the blame
While
all involved in the conflict are pursuing their own interests, there
always has to be someone to blame. It seems that Russia and China might
again become the punching bag of the West for this purpose.
One of
the indicators that that this might be the case is Amnesty
International’s shift of attitude towards the parties involved. In July
2011, the organization accused China, Russia, and the USA of fueling
conflict in the region.
The organization condemned the countries “for
providing weapons or military training to the Sudanese Armed Forces
(SAF) and the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA), the official army
of South Sudan.”
However, in February 2012, only China and
Russia were accused of supplying arms to the volatile region, with no
traces of US involvement whatsoever.
“China, Russia, and
Belarus continue to supply weapons and munitions to Sudan despite
compelling evidence that the arms will be used against civilians in
Darfur,” the new Amnesty International statement reads.
Tuesday, Security Council members promised to discuss the crisis urgently, including the possibility of sanctions.
“Calls
from the UNSC for a ceasefire are hypocritical and of no strength for
as long as China, the US and Russia are pursuing their own political and
economic interests in Sudan,” believes Reason Wafawarova. “And the fact that Heglig is, in reality, a conflict over oil makes the prospect of an amicable solution bleak.”
Elena Ostroumova, RT
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