Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos ’11

“Sudan Oil Crisis: Extortion and misappropriation are not ‘negotiations’”

Posted by: ereeves on Monday, January 30, 2012 - 05:39 AM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

“Sudan Oil Crisis: Extortion and misappropriation are not ‘negotiations,’” Sudan Tribune, January 30, 2012

Eric Reeves
January 29, 2012

“Sudan, South Sudan, and the Oil Revenues Controversy: Khartoum’s Obstructionism Threatens War”

Posted by: ereeves on Wednesday, January 25, 2012 - 02:48 AM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

“Sudan, South Sudan, and the Oil Revenues Controversy: Khartoum’s Obstructionism Threatens War”

Eric Reeves
January 24, 2012

“‘They Bombed Everything that Moved’: Aerial military attacks on civilians and humanitarians in Sudan, 1999 – 2012″ (Update, January 12, 2012)

Posted by: ereeves on Friday, January 13, 2012 - 08:59 PM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

A Timeline for Catastrophe: Sudan’s Continuing Slide Toward War

Posted by: ereeves on Friday, December 30, 2011 - 08:43 PM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

A Timeline for Catastrophe: Sudan’s Continuing Slide Toward War

Historical memory is often short when Sudan is the subject, and the events of even the past year often become blurred or inadequately related to one another. This is especially dangerous because of the likely form that renewed war in Sudan will take. As Baptiste Gallopin argued at the end of August—and thus prior to Khartoum’s military offensive in Blue Nile (“Sudan: Slippery Slope”)—war will not come in the form of “an abrupt descent into full-fledged violence, but rather through a graduated series of unilateral measures that set the stage for a de facto international conflict.” The timeline offered here represents an attempt to provide a sequential account of the events, developments, and statements that have brought greater Sudan relentlessly closer to renewed war over the past year. It necessarily focuses on the “unilateralism” that has emanated from Khartoum, and taken the form of brutal aggression against the people of Abyei, South Kordofan, Blue Nile, and increasingly South Sudan itself.

Eric Reeves
December 30, 2011

A Timeline for Catastrophe: Sudan’s Continuing Slide Toward War (cont’d)

Posted by: ereeves on Friday, December 30, 2011 - 08:30 PM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

“The History of Sudan’s Third Civil War”

Posted by: ereeves on Saturday, December 10, 2011 - 05:00 PM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

“The History of Sudan’s Third Civil War”
The Sudan Tribune, December 10, 2011
http://goo.gl/sKR6s

Accelerating violence by Khartoum’s regular and militia forces threatens many hundreds of thousands of civilians in Blue Nile and South Kordofan; the regime’s military seizure of Abyei is now a fait accompli; the international community seems unable even to speak about the urgent need for cross-border humanitarian corridors to reach highly distressed populations. War has begun again in Sudan, and it is a war whose historical trajectory is tragically clear.

Eric Reeves

“Darfur: The Genocide the World Got Tired Of”

Posted by: ereeves on Thursday, November 24, 2011 - 05:11 PM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

“Darfur: The Genocide the World Got Tired Of”

Amidst precarious humanitarian conditions, human security is increasingly threatened in Darfur—by Khartoum’s military as well as by variously re-cycled militia forces, and in particular by the increasingly savage Abu Tira (Central Reserve Police). The UN/African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) is a conspicuous failure, and yet continues to represent the entirety of international efforts in confronting the “responsibility to protect” acutely endangered civilians

Eric Reeves
November 24, 2011

“Full-scale War Looms as Khartoum Bombs Civilians in South Sudan”

Posted by: ereeves on Friday, November 11, 2011 - 11:25 PM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

“Full-scale War Looms as Khartoum Bombs Civilians in South Sudan”

Eric Reeves
November 11, 2011

“Is U.S. Without Leverage in Confronting Khartoum Over Atrocity Crimes?”

Posted by: ereeves on Monday, November 07, 2011 - 10:46 PM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

“Is U.S. Without Leverage in Confronting Khartoum Over Atrocity Crimes?”

The Obama administration would have us believe, in the words of special presidential envoy Princeton Lyman, that we can do nothing but “encourage talks” between the increasingly militarized Khartoum regime and its countrywide adversaries. Privately, Lyman says the U.S. has no leverage, “no cards to play,” no effective way of pressuring Khartoum. Is this true?

Eric Reeves
November 7, 2011

“Acquiescence Before Mass Human Destruction in Sudan’s Border Regions”

Posted by: ereeves on Monday, October 24, 2011 - 02:28 PM
Briefs & Advocacy: Post-Machakos '11

“Acquiescence Before Mass Human Destruction in Sudan’s Border Regions”
Blue Nile and South Kordofan face catastrophic humanitarian crises
http://www.sudanreeves.org/2011/10/24/acquiescence-before-mass-human-destruction-in-sudans-border-regions/

Following Khartoum’s military assaults on South Kordofan (June 5) and Blue Nile (September 1), hundreds of thousands of civilians now face relentless aerial attacks, violent displacement, and starvation as the harvests are poised for failure. For Khartoum is denying all humanitarian access to these acutely vulnerable populations. There are no indications the international community is prepared to change the regime’s ruthless military calculations, which are rapidly leading to catastrophe.

Eric Reeves
October 24, 2011