---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Eric Reeves <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2017 at 16:58
Subject: The Khartoum Regime Continues to Import Large Quantities of
Weapons and Dual-Use Equipment from a Range of International Actors
To: Eric Reeves <[email protected]>


*The Khartoum Regime Continues to Import Large Quantities of Weapons and
Dual-Use Equipment from a Range of International Actors*

Eric Reeves | June 1, 2017 |  http://wp.me/s45rOG-7902

A new report from *Conflict Arms Research*
<http://www.conflictarm.com/publications/> makes clear that the Khartoum
regime continues to import large quantities of weapons in order to continue
offensive military action in South Kordofan, Blue Nile, and Darfur. The
weapons come from "East Asia, the Middle East, and Europe." This makes
nonsense of the regime’s commitment to end offensive military activity in
these areas, one of two key terms for permanent lifting of U.S. economic
sanctions (a decision to be made by the Trump administration by July 13,
2017).

To ignore such authoritative findings in assessing NIF/NCP genocidal
tyranny was a hallmark of U.S. Sudan policy under the Obama
administration—and a rudderless Trump administration is likely to make a
decision by default to lift sanctions permanently (the administration has
no Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs unless that task, too,
has fallen to Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner).

********************************************
*“Sudanese Stockpiles and Regions Weapon Diversion,” a report from Conflict
Arms Research (May 2017)*

An analysis of captured equipment in the possession of the Sudan People’s
Liberation Army-North in theNuba Mountains.

http://www.conflictarm.com/publications/

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-8.23.45-AM.png>

*EXECUTIVE SUMMARY*

For more than half a decade, Sudan has wageda war of attrition against the
Sudan People’s Liberation Army-North (SPLA-N) in South Kordofan’s isolated
Nuba Mountains region and the southeastern border state of Blue Nile.
Despite the Sudan Armed Forces’ (SAF) military superiority in terms of
logistics, air power, and heavy weaponry, government-aligned forces have
failed to dislodge the SPLA-N from the areas it controls.

For its part, the SPLA-N has been unable to capture key SAF garrison towns.
The military stalemate on the battlefield has contributed to an impasse in
negotiations led by the African Union (AU).

In June 2016, Conflict Armament Research (CAR) examined a range of weapons,
ammunition, vehicles, and other military and dual-purpose equipment
captured from SAF and its affiliated militias by the SPLA-N in the Nuba
Mountains.

Despite the imposition of a European Union (EU) arms embargo on Sudan since
1994 anda UN arms embargo on the Sudanese state of Darfur since 2005, CAR’s
findings suggest that the Sudanese government continues to benefit from
relatively unrestricted access to military imports. These imports have been
supplemented by the acquisition of non-military or dual-purpose equipment
from East Asia, the Middle East, and Europe.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-9.04.09-AM.png>

*[Note the necessary disclaimer in this photograph: the German government
and EU are supplying dual-use (military and civilian use) equipment to the
Khartoum regime, a fact they would rather keep quiet---ER]*

*THE ANALYSIS OF CAPTURED WEAPONS AND AMMUNITION CONTAINED IN THIS REPORT
PROVIDES A GLIMPSE INTO SUDANESE WEAPON STOCKPILES, SUPPLY LINES, AND
SOURCES OF EXTERNAL SUPPORT.*

While Sudan continues to import heavy weaponry, mainly from China and the
Russian Federation, it has also invested in its own domestic military
production and assembly capabilities, which have expanded significantly
over the last decade.

CAR’s findings also suggest that Sudan continues to supply arms to state
and non-state armed groups across the East African region and the western
Sahel. Since 2014, CAR and its investigative partners have documented newly
manufactured Sudanese military materiel captured from non-state armed
groups in South Sudan, the Central African Republic, Côte d’Ivoire, Libya,
Mali, and Niger.

*IN A NUMBER OF CASES, SUDAN APPEARS TO HAVE REPACKAGED AMMUNITION OR
OTHERWISE MASKED SHIPPING INFORMATION APPLIED TO AMMUNITION BOXES IN ORDER
TO CONCEAL ITS PROVENANCE.*

The newness and condition of some of this materiel, in addition to
testimonies and contextual evidence provided to CAR, suggest that Sudan has
supplied it directly to non-state groups—at least during the period 2014–15.

In a number of cases, Sudan appears to have repackaged ammunition or
otherwise masked shipping information applied to ammunition boxes in order
to conceal its provenance. This is notably the case for large quantities of
Chinese ammunition. One probable reason for this is Sudan’s attempts to
disguise its retransfer of Chinese-supplied ammunition to non-state groups
beyond its borders, which would constitute a clear violation of its
end-user agreements—and specifically their non-retransfer clauses—with the
Chinese government.

The analysis of captured weapons and ammunition contained in this report
provides a glimpse into Sudanese weapon stockpiles, supply lines, and
sources of external support. These findings provide a significant measure
of the effectiveness and impact of arms embargo restrictions, and highlight
the continued efforts on the part of the Sudanese government to conceal
violations of end-user agreements made with supplier states and its support
for non-state armed groups.

CAR bases its findings exclusively on materiel documented in the field and
supported by contextual interviews with those in possession of the materiel
at the time of documentation. CAR never bases its findings on reports or
images presented on social media, due to the difficulties of verifying the
provenance of the reports or the materiel depicted in them.

*KEY FINDINGS*

•  Despite international pressure to end the conflicts in South Kordofan
and Blue Nile, SAF has little difficulty in acquiring weapons and
ammunition of recent manufacture (both domestically manufactured and
imported) and deploying them in the South Kordofan theatre. While the
composition of SAF stockpiles has remained relatively consistent in recent
years, CAR notes recent additions to SAF’s arsenal, including commercially
available Chinese unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) or drones, a T-85 main
battle tank, and a Chinese- manufactured anti-materiel rifle. Sudan
continues to rely on imported military technology from several foreign
countries, most notably China, to expand the production andassembly
capabilities of its state-owned Military Industry Corporation (MIC).

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-9.19.10-AM.png>

Data plate from a Dutch-manufactured DAF YA4440 DT 405 truck documented in
Dabbi following its reported capture from SAF in March 2016.

•  With the valuable assistance of the Dutch government, CAR has determined
that SAF continues to procure military and dual-purpose transport vehicles
of European manufacture, exported in particular from the Netherlands.

•  In response to CAR and investigative partners reporting Sudan’s military
use of these vehicles, the Dutch government has revised its export rules to
better control exports of heavy logistics vehicles. However, these revised
rules do not cover some of the Dutch-manufactured heavy vehicles that SAF
has procured and deployed in South Kordofan.

•  Sudan continues to benefit from relatively unrestricted access to
military imports, as well as to dual-purpose and civilian equipment, which
it routinely repurposes for military use. This includes Chinese commercial
UAVs and European-manufactured dual-purpose transport vehicles—supplies of
which are arguably less vulnerable to external diplomatic pressure than
exclusively military commodities.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-9.20.03-AM.png>

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-9.19.50-AM.png>

*KEY FINDINGS*

•  With the assistance of the Toyota Motor Corporation, CAR has identified
four private distributors in the Middle East that have bulk purchased
almost all of the Toyota Land Cruisers documented in use by SAF since 2009.
CAR does not suggest any wrongdoing on the part of these distributors or
implies that they supplied vehicles directly to SAF. However, the fact that
supplies of Land Cruisers to SAF originate from such a small group of
distributors indicates the potential ease with which due-diligence
procedures might be enforced to address Sudan’s diversion of commercial
vehicles to military uses.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-9.16.55-AM.png>

*[Toyota Land Cruisers are the vehicle of choice for all sides in the
conflict--ER]*

•  Despite longstanding US sanctions on Sudan (only recently and partially
lifted), the purchaser of at least one SAF vehicle documented on the South
Kordofan battlefield is a US citizen. The person concerned purchased the
vehicle from a Gulf State distributor more than three years prior to the
current investigations. CAR continues to investigate the vehicle’s onward
transfer to SAF.

•  Sudan continues to conceal the origins of foreign-made ammunition. It
does so primarily by repackaging newly produced Chinese ammunition into
Sudanese-manufactured ammunition boxes. This must be viewed inlight of
Sudan’s continued violation of its end- user obligations—particularly
non-retransfer clauses—to the Chinese government. This trend is further
evidenced by CAR’s documentationof large quantities of newly produced
Chinese ammunition captured from the Sudan People’s Liberation Army in
Opposition (SPLA-iO) in South Sudan.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-9.18.03-AM.png>

•  CAR also documented 1970s-era Soviet- manufactured small arms ammunition
repackaged in cartons consistent with Ethiopian industry standards.

• The weapon types and lot/serial number sequences of captured SAF materiel
documented in the Nuba Mountains correlates with weapons and ammunition
captured from non-statearmed groups in the Central African Republic, Côte
d’Ivoire, Libya, Mali, and Niger. These correlations support allegations
that Khartoum continues to divert weapons and ammunition to state and
non-state forces across the northern half of the African continent.

[full report at | http://www.conflictarm.com/publications/ ]

*Other photographs from the scores compiled by CAR:*

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-9.21.34-AM.png>

*[The** medical center at Kauda was the target, as it has been on countless
other occasions---ER]*

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-9.15.36-AM.png>

*[The** military odds are heavily stacked against the Sudan People's
Liberation Army/Movement-North---but the people of the region know full
well that they are fighting against a regime that is bent on their
annihilation---ER]*

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-01-at-9.15.19-AM.png>
-- 

Eric Reeves, Senior Fellow at Harvard University’s François-Xavier Bagnoud
Center for Health and Human Rights



[email protected]

www.sudanreeves.org

Twitter@SudanReeves

About Eric Reeves: http://sudanreeves.org/about-eric-reeves

Philanthropy: 
*http://ericreeves-woodturner.com/woodturnings-available-for-purchase-dire
<http://ericreeves-woodturner.com/woodturnings-available-for-purchase-dire>*

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