The Army in the past… Al Baraa today!

Ali Ahmed

It was rather clear, except for the blind and deaf, that the so-called “Al-Baraa Ibn Malik” militia, composed of individuals affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood (National Congress Party) and the terrorist (ISIS) groups, whose officers participated with the Sudanese Army leadership in igniting the (April 15th, 2023) war and brought the country to the brink of complete collapse and paralysis; is seeking to replace the Army after destroying it from within. This particular feat is to be accomplished by seizing control of the helm of command by rendering the Army’s senior officers to mere subordinates or dismissing them from service!

The Sudanese people witnessed firsthand how one of the leaders of this terrorist militia (Al-Naji Mustafa) stormed the office of an Army Colonel, accused him of treason, interrogated him, filmed the investigation, and posted the video on social media, while the latter remained broken-hearted, his head bowed, his military insignia (his pins) trembling on his shoulders.

It was clear that the situation was rapidly moving toward replacing the National Army with this terrorist militia and declaring its destruction once and for all. This particular maneuver was instigated by involving it in this arbitrary war, tempting its leader, who dreamed of power and rule, and then eliminating him at a later stage.

On Tuesday, April 8th, the leader of Al-Baraa militia, the terrorist Almusbah Abuzaid Talha, announced the promotion of his militia from a “Brigade” to a “Corps,” after having been a battalion at the outbreak of the war on (April 15th, 2023). As is well known, a corps is a military unit comprising of two to five divisions, with a minimum of (20,000) soldiers and a maximum of (45,000) soldiers, commanded by a senior officer with the rank of “Major General.”

Even if we assume, for the sake of argument, that the number of ISIS-Brotherhood terrorist militia members has now reached approximately (32,000) soldiers, it could easily reach more than double that number in just one year, especially after the pace of military operations has slowed, and after it has seized control of the entirety of the Sudanese Armed Forces’ strategic weapons, claiming their headquarters and assets as well. This means that the country could fall under its control in the near future.

Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan is once again placing our country on the brink of an unquenchable volcano. This man, who has become a prisoner of his father’s dream and his unquenchable desire to assume the title of “President,” even if only over a small part of the country, as is his current situation. He has lost touch with his surroundings and sees only the aftermath and ghosts of his dream -that will never be fulfilled. Therefore, when the man sends a message to his Islamist brothers, he is urging them to step back from the “President’s chair” and feel free to act on any other desire.

Moreover, when they seek to win his favor, they reassure him that they have no desire to sit on that chair; it belongs to him alone. He keeps them in the picture until they reach the level of a Corps, i.e., a Parallel Army. As a corps necessarily and by technical definition, possesses artillery, tanks, anti-aircraft weapons, and drones. Furthermore, Al-Baraa militia has complete control over the Air Force, and thus —if the words of its commander are true— it has become the country’s true army, completely replacing the current Army.

However, it will continue to retain the Gang of Four: Al-Burhan, Al-Kabbashi, Al-Atta, and Jaber —the latter of whom is one of them and for them— in an effort to promote its political agenda domestically and abroad, and to mitigate the intensity of the rejection it faces on both fronts. Then it will turn on them and slaughter them in broad daylight, without mercy or compassion. They deserve such a fate as its a fitting retribution, for they have inflicted enormous damage on Sudan and its people, leaving a failed State and displaced people in the wake of their conduct.

The true war in our country has yet to begin; the road is still long. There are dozens of conflicting militias, ranging from this terrorist Bara’a group to the mercenary militias, the emerging militias of eastern Sudan, Al-Butana and Al-Jazeera (Keikal) militias, in addition to Malik Agar, Tambour and Tartour militias, and others. All of the aforementioned will clash and fight against each other in the coming days, and the Army will be rendered to a small militia in this greater maelstrom.

What Al-Burhan has done to the country in just a few years is beyond the reach of even an accursed devil.

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