The war in Sudan has entered its fourth year. Numerous peace proposals have put forward, including a framework backed by the United States, UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt to end the fighting between the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and Sudan’s head of armed forces (SAF) General Al-Burhan, whose forces operate in alignment with the U.S terror-listed Sudan's Muslim Brotherhood networks (SMB), has rejected every peace proposal put forward.


American analysts and experts have cautioned that networks linked to SMB are playing a chief role in prolonging Sudan’s war, undermining ceasefire efforts and deepening instability across the country.
Irina Tsukerman, a US-based international relations analyst, said the SMB has not disappeared following the fall of former president Omar al-Bashir, but has instead reorganized through entrenched networks of loyalty and patronage within state structures. Adding SMB-affiliated elements remain active on the battlefield, providing logistical backing and ideological support to armed actors, complicating efforts to enforce ceasefire agreements.


المصدر : Transparency News