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May 14, 2019 6:40 am
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Arab Power Struggles Are Alive, Well, and Thriving

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avatar by James M. Dorsey

Opinion

Sudanese demonstrators wave national flags as they attend a mass anti-government protest outside the Defence Ministry in Khartoum, Sudan April 21, 2019. Photo: REUTERS/Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/File Photo.

Protesters in Algeria and Sudan are determined to prevent a repeat of Egypt, where a UAE- and Saudi-backed military officer rolled back the achievements of a popular revolt to install a brutal dictatorship. Nor do they want to replicate the experience of Yemen, Libya, and Syria, which have suffered civil wars aggravated by interference from foreign powers.

In Libya, Field Marshal Khalifa Belqasim Haftar, the UAE-, Saudi-, and Egyptian-supported warlord, hopes that his assault on Tripoli, the capital and the seat of the country’s UN-recognized government, will either end the conflict militarily or at the very least significantly increase his leverage in peace talks.

In these countries, Saudi Arabia and the UAE — the two Gulf nations most determined to maintain the Middle East and North Africa’s autocratic structure at whatever cost — have sought to either bolster military resolve to remain a decisive political force, or support the rise of forces that fit their agenda.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE recently pledged a $3 billion aid package to Sudan, including a $500 million cash injection and transfers of cheap food, fuel, and medicine. The aid package contributed to deepening divisions among the opposition, which has vowed to continue street protests until full civilian rule has been achieved. They continue on, despite the ousting of president Omar al-Bashir, the resignation of senior military officers, including the intelligence chief, and the arrest of Bashir’s brothers.

While some Sudanese people demanded that the military council reject the aid, other opposition groups, including several armed factions, traveled to Abu Dhabi to discuss a UAE- and Saudi-backed proposal for a military-led transition council that would include civilians.

The Saudis and Emiratis also hope that Taha Osman al-Hussein, who was widely viewed as one of the most influential people in Bashir’s inner circle, will play a key role in safeguarding the military’s position. Hussein returned to Khartoum last month after two years in exile in the Saudi kingdom, where he served as an African affairs adviser to the Saudi court after having been unceremoniously sacked in 2017 on suspicion that he was a Saudi intelligence asset.

Moreover, the head of Sudan’s military council, Lieut. Gen. Abdel Fattah Abdelrahman Burhan, and his deputy, Lieut. Gen. Muhammad Hamdan Dagalo (a paramilitary commander known as Hemeti), developed close ties to the Gulf states in their former roles as commanders of the Sudan contingent fighting in Yemen in support of the Saudi-UAE alliance.

A commander of feared Arab militias accused of genocide in Darfur, Dagalo is widely viewed as ambitious and power hungry. His Rapid Support Forces (RSF) are deployed across Khartoum. Western officials privately describe Dagalo as “potentially Sudan’s Sisi” — a reference to Egyptian general-turned-president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who came to power in 2013 in a UAE- and Saudi-supported military coup.

Sisi has introduced one of the most repressive systems in recent Egyptian history. Western diplomats said Dagalo’s ambitions virtually guarantee that the military would not fully surrender power in any negotiated transition in Sudan.

The military’s role in deposing Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak as a result of a popular revolt in 2011 and subsequently restoring the military’s grip on power, coupled with concern about Dagalo, inspired one of the Sudanese protesters’ chants: “It’s either victory or Egypt.”

Western and Arab diplomats also see Saudi Arabia and the UAE in the background of General Burhan’s decision not to meet with Qatari Foreign Minister Muhammad bin Abdulrahman al-Thani days after receiving a Saudi-UAE delegation. Sudan has since said it is working out arrangements for a Qatari visit. Saudi Arabia and the UAE, together with Egypt and Bahrain, have diplomatically and economically boycotted Qatar for the past 22 months in a bid to force the Gulf state to tow their geopolitical line.

For now, Haftar’s offensive has waylaid a UN-sponsored peace conference that was expected to achieve an agreement that would have ensured that Islamists continue to be part of the Libyan power structure. Haftar, like his regional backers, accuses the Tripoli government of being dominated by Islamists, the bête noir of the UAE, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia.

On a visit to Saudi Arabia days before launching his attack on Tripoli, Haftar reportedly was promised millions of dollars in support in talks with Saudi King Salman and his powerful son, Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, in defiance of a UN arms embargo. The battle for Libya could prove to be Haftar’s most difficult military offensive. His Libyan National Army (LNA) already controls Libya’s second city of Benghazi, as well as much of the rest of the country, where it met relatively little resistance.

The battle also serves as a warning to protesters in Sudan and Algeria, where demands for fundamental change risk upsetting the UAE, Saudi, and Egyptian apple cart. With no swift victory in sight in the battle for Tripoli, Libya risks another round of protracted war that could be aggravated by the fact that it is as much a domestic fight as it is a multi-layered proxy war.

Unlike Sudan, Libya has turned the corner. Years of civil and proxy wars have devastated the country and laid the groundwork for further violence. Algeria and Sudan still have a chance to avoid Libya’s fate, or for that matter that of Syria and Yemen.

As the battle in Tripoli unfolds, Libya looms large as an example of what is at stake. Protesters are up against forces whose backers have proven that there is little they will shy away from to achieve their objectives. Libya is but the latest example.

The king’s fate is at stake in the fighting in streets of southern Tripoli, and it hangs like a Sword of Damocles over the streets of Algiers and Khartoum.

Dr. James M. Dorsey, a non-resident Senior Associate at the BESA Center, is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University and co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture.

This article was originally published by The BESA Center.

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