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The US and its Western allies must not legitimize the Sudanese military's November 21 deal, which has no popular backing. Rather, the West should either rally behind the popular protest movement or simply stay out of its way, writes Mat Nashed.
A most glaring aspect of the counterrevolution in Sudan is the absence of the US, suggesting that it is content with handing over Sudan and the wider MENA region to its UAE-Saudi allies regardless of the bloodshed, writes Sam Hamad.
The Sudanese military has placed high hopes in growing relations with Israel as a means to cement their recent grab for power, writes Jihad Mashamoun.
Opinion: The partnership between civilian forces and the Sudanese military was a mistake, argues Sudanese activist Wini Omer. After two years of sleeping with the enemy that led to the military coup, it's time for returning to the barricades.
General Abdel Fatah al-Burhan’s takeover is more about protecting himself than helping the Sudanese people, writes Alex de Waal.
Comment: Renegade General Haftar's attempted coup in Tripoli is being backed by international and regional authoritarians, writes Imad K. Harb.
Misguided mediation efforts to secure truce in Sudan, such as the recent US-Saudi initiative, serve only to legitimise the warring parties and prolong the conflict while civilians pay the price, writes Amgad Fareid Eltayeb.
For years, Cairo has intervened in Khartoum's affairs to undermine the democratic transition and secure a military dictatorship, but the shortsighted strategy has failed as chaos and civil war now loom over its southern border, writes Sam Hamad.
Comment: The recent unprecedented protests against dictator Omar al-Bashir have rekindled the hope for radical change, writes Tarek Cheikh.
Comment: Preventing a military takeover in Sudan is paramount. Egypt's recent past serves as a case in point, writes Sam Fouad.