But, never ignore propaganda, it is
another frontline.
It was strategically important for South Sudan
to withdraw from Panthou. The new country has made its point amidst
international fear that it might be crashed if Khartoum unleashes its military
wrath on it. No one knew South Sudan would hold Khartoum by the throat, given
Khartoum's bellicose rhetorics of war and continuous aggression on the new republic. The international community and Khartoum sympathisers failed to realise that it was the South Sudan that kept Khartoum in check for half a century and eventually
liberating themselves from their hegemony. A few were surprised by the
developments in Heglig and how SPLA forces handled the situation. No one
knew they would be so remarkable. A disbelieving UK official said it
beats logic to see the South Sudanese army performing the way it did. The comment
came when South Sudan armed forces (SSAF) drove out Sudanese forces from
Panthou and maintained their control by repeatedly repelling Sudan armed
forces. The question now is, who will win the day if war becomes the only
solution to the outstanding issues of disagreement?
The decision made by President Kiir to withdraw
South Sudanese forces from Panthou, though painful to the South Sudanese community
at home and in the diaspora, was significant and nationally strategical.
In the event of the skirmishes in Panthou, South Sudan nearly lost the
confidence of good allies and friends, a state that has been corrected and restored by the decision of the president to pull the troops out of
Panthou. South Sudan cannot ignore the international community in which it had
become a member. The crux of the world's social economic and even military
power rests in having good relations with allies and friends and more
importantly, winning their trust.
The world now knows South Sudanese ability.
Regardless of being a young nation, it can be aggressive if her national
security is threatened. Khartoum too had learnt something from its aggressive
cross-border incursions and ariel bombardment of South Sudanese civilians. The infantry that came had known what it means to engage another country's military. In the words of Gaduel, South
Sudanese top commander that steered operations in Panthou, 'those enemy
soldiers who escaped from Heglig will never think of joining the military again.
They will be good civilians thereafter. They have learnt a hard lesson.'
The most critical aspect of this Ten-Day War
was its ensnaring implications on the continent and in particular, the East
African region. The Sudanese war had always involved the region in various
ways: small arms proliferation and refugee influx into neighbouring countries.
This new war was on the verge of drawing other countries again. The decision by South Sudan to ease tensions by pulling out its troops from
the contested area was crucial in averting the regional aspect of
it. Regionally, the sound of war was not played down. As the rhetoric and
bellicosity become the advent to actual engagements, Uganda said it would
join in if South Sudan was attacked. The southernmost South Sudan neighbour
hinted at the sanctuary provided and the link that Sudan maintains with Lord
Resistant Army (LRA). South Sudan is also economically important to Uganda. It
imports relatively highly from Uganda than it reciprocally exports. This gives
Uganda an economic advantage.
No one knows what Kenya was mulling since
it has a multimillion/billion project involving the South Sudanese pipeline, railway
and roads posing to prosper her citizens. One Kenyan newspaper commentator
wrote that 'the war between the Sudans will burn us all this time.' This
summarised the feeling of other Kenyan business magnets operating in South
Sudan. Kenya would want to be praised for successfully steering to completion
the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in Sudan, not manufacturing
conflict, or allowing another to come up. If anything, its relative status of
development will always be overwhelmed by refugees in the events of the war in the
region.
The region is tired of the continuous Sudanese
wars. Just as the escalations were heightening up, the top military brass of
the Great Lakes Region met and decided to take a side in this third war, citing
incidences where Sudanese Arabs always draw in support from the Arab world to
kill Africans in South Sudan. Rwanda was among them. The Arab League had also
called an emergency meeting to discuss the situation in the Sudans. The meeting
was to be convened at the request of Sudan. If the Arab world takes a side - beware they will never oppose Sudan - expect someone else to match it up. See
how complicated the situation nearly became and how South Sudan nearly dragged
Africa and the world onto the verge of an all-out war? Even if it means that
not everyone would join in to fight, those who would shoulder the responsibly
of the displaced, the refugees and political asylum seekers resulting from the
war would have been tormented further. The two nations themselves can become
proxies in the war of natural resources.
President Obama of the USA was concerned. His
direct video address to the two nations underscores the severity of the
situation. He urged the two nations to consider the path of peace adding that
those who follow the path of peace will always find a strong friend in the
United State. With the history of past US assistance to the Sudan during
Nimeiri's presidency and South Sudan having tasted the bitter sweets of
American military assistance - there were nasty experiences with Reagan Tanks
at the onset of liberation war - the best ploy was to listen and act wisely. It
should also be noted that Khartoum's Islamic regime is America's worst human
rights partner but a good friend in the war on terror. Nothing will be more
pleasant than cooperating with the stronger nation on matters threatening its
national security. America (USA) could be anyone's friend.
The truth is that the international community
had the confidence in South Sudan listening to them than Khartoum with its
jihadist mentality in this war. At the moment, they are wild and weird and would
not contemplate logical arguments. One Sudanese student from Khartoum
university once said, 'the world, and the West in particular think that we
(Arabs) are mad because we make too much noise in things that should be
discussed quietly.' The problem is that when political issues become a bit
tough, the Sudanese state manipulators switch from the temporal world to the
sacred and subsequently become hysterical and garner supporters in the process.
The behaviour has entombed the public psyche for decades.
In this war, the vagueness of South Sudanese on
the Abyei boundary commission and the ruling of International Court of
Arbitration doesn't register well internationally. Many in South Sudan believe
it is the failure of diplomacy and that of the foreign affairs ministry. But it
is not. It is time to note that the reason why the international community
blames South Sudan for occupation lies in the acceptance, by South Sudan, of
the ABC ruling knowing fully well that borders were not demarcated in the areas
of Abyei and Panthou. If anyone is to blame, South Sudan and the negotiating
delegation that went to The Hague, including the ABC itself, must have a piece.
The international community too has made a mess by relying on imaginary borders
rather than drawing the borders between the two nations. How do you know which
one is Sudan and South Sudan when the issue of borders is under discussion?
This would only mean there is a premeditated solution to the borders, which the
AU and the UN are not communicating to South Sudan! South Sudanese people believe there is an international conspiracy surrounding its borders with the
Sudan.
As for the Ten-Day war over Panthou, South
Sudan has the right to lay it on the cross-border aggression by the SAF military
and its supporting rebels against the Republic of South Sudan. Khartoum all
along wanted South Sudan to say a goodbye of fire. It is now back to the drawing board where reason might
replace rhetoric, fanaticism and dogmatic theocracy.
The element of propaganda had also emerged. One
would argue that propaganda is a subtle way of obscuring the victories of your
opponent while fully aware of them, but doing so to raise the morale of your
people for a course. When applied to South Sudan by Sudan, it will always be
followed by reason and extreme care to avoid lies. In Khartoum and
with Bashir, at least economic pressures will not push down the government any
time soon because propaganda had done its job so well to unite the nation.
South Sudanese have also soildified their unity in this war. Patriotism and nationalism will
be in the air for sometimes. Both South Sudan and Sudan governments have
used propaganda maximally in the war on Panthou. As the US representative
confirmed in Juba the SPLA withdrawal from Heglig and relayed the same message
to Bashir, the ICC indictee in went out on Thursday, April 19 2012 and
announced to the public and his beleaguered and weakened army that they would
then get good news from the frontline in a few hours. South Sudan never made
the announcement on Thursday and so went the lie from Bashir. And on Friday 20,
the Sudanese claimed version of victory in the oilfields came just after South
Sudan announced the withdrawal! A very smart way to drum up support from the public. Propaganda has its merits in situations like
the one currently existing between the Sudans. In the old walls of Nazi Berlin, Germany, and the corridors of Kremlin in Moscow, USSR, propaganda was a
portfolio held by officials on the government payroll. The USA was and is now not
immune from this. Khartoum is just playing an old game properly.
As with Khartoum's rhetoric and the propaganda about the recapture of Panthou, South Sudanese should not be heartbroken. Just like during the
CPA era and Torit incident, there will be some sense in the negotiations this
time. But, never ignore propaganda, it is another frontline. One thing will catch attention if it did happen
again. In the Torit battle during the CPA negotiations, some South Sudanese
soldiers appeared to have been poisoned in the battle. The traces of dirty
weapons used against soldiers would be my concern if I were in the South
Sudanese military investigative team. The world must know all.