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04/02/09
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Alleged Israeli Attack Draws Attention to Sudan's Ties to Iran
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By Alisha Ryu,
VOA, Nairobi
Sudan Believed to Play Key Role in Iranian
Efforts to Deliver Weapons to Hamas
Reports that Israel may have carried out an air attack on an Iranian weapons
convoy in the Sudanese desert 2.5 months ago have drawn attention to an alleged
Iranian arms smuggling network in Africa. Sudan is believed to be playing a key
role in Iranian efforts to deliver weapons to militant Hamas fighters in Gaza.
Israeli officials have refused to confirm or deny reports that their fighter
bombers, backed by unmanned drones, carried out the attack in Sudan in January
as Israeli forces and Hamas engaged in pitch battles in Gaza.
U.S. news reports, quoting unnamed U.S. and Israeli sources, say the air strikes
targeted a convoy of arms-laden trucks traveling in the eastern part of Sudan
near the Egyptian border. The remote, underdeveloped area is home to nomadic
Bedouins and is a well known route for smugglers.
Reva Bhalla, Director of Analysis at Stratfor Global Intelligence Company in the
United States, says it is not clear whether Israel has targeted such convoys
before in Sudan. But she says Iran has been smuggling weapons from Sudan into
Egypt for quite some time.
"It is a very practical supply route for the Iranians to use," said Reva Bhalla.
"The arms market in Sudan is thriving and acts as a very easy way for Iran to
send agents, mainly through Hezbollah, to come under false passports into Sudan,
buy those arms, and transport them primarily via trucks across Sudan and into
the Sinai Peninsula, where they can pay off local Bedouins with all sorts of
things to get those arms into the Hamas underground tunnel network into Gaza."
Arms researcher at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Pieter
Wezeman, says Sudan is awash in arms from Iran.
"For example, weapons have been sighted during military parades," said Pieter
Wezeman. "They clearly are Iranian-produced weapons. The quantities involved and
also the time involved are very difficult to find information about. But it
seems over the past 10 years, Iran has supplied a constant supply of weapons to
Sudan."
Another report released by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy last
month says Iran may also be sending arms overland to Egypt through a variety of
routes in Yemen, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and South Africa. The authors say the
shipments are gathered in Sudan and then moved through the Sinai Peninsula into
Gaza.
Omar Hassan el-Bashir's Cooperation with Iran no Secret to West
If the Khartoum government of President Omar Hassan el-Bashir is cooperating
with Tehran, it comes as little surprise to the West. Sudan has had close
relations with Iran since 1989, when a military coup brought el-Bashir to
power.
At the time, Iran was emerging from an eight-year war with neighboring Iraq and
was looking for allies in the Sunni Muslim-Arab world. Many analysts believe the
Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps played a major role in helping el-Bashir
consolidate power by training and giving logistical support to the new Sudanese
army.
Reva Bhalla says the Sunni Arab-dominated Sudanese government and Iran's Shi'ite
government have maintained close ties because they are focused on a shared anti-U.S./anti-Israel
agenda, not on their sectarian differences. She notes that Sudan is part of a
wider pro-Iranian regional alliance, which includes Syria, Qatar, and militant
Islamic groups such as Hezbollah in Lebanon, Islamic Jihad, and Hamas.
"Iran loves to flaunt its ability to reach out to Sunni Arab powers in this
region to show that it does not have to be limited to its Persian Shi'ite
identity - that it has the Islamist leverage to reach out far beyond its border
and exert its influence elsewhere," she said. "That is why we see, despite Iran
being a Shi'ite power, it has very close ties to Hamas, a radical Sunni power.
And that very much alarms the Sunni-Arab powers in the region, most notably the
Egyptians and the Saudis, who all have an interest in keeping Hamas contained
and the Iranians at bay."
At the annual Arab League summit in Qatar this week, Arab leaders, except
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak who did not attend, united behind President el-Bashir
by rejecting the decision of the International Criminal Court to indict the
Sudanese leader over alleged war crimes in Darfur. An international warrant was
issued for el-Bashir's arrest in early March.
Analysts speculate that some Arab powers, concerned about the rising clout of
Iran in the region, may now urge President al-Bashir to distance himself from
Tehran in exchange for their support in fighting the indictment.
Helmoed Heitman with Jane's Defence Weekly magazine says he believes the Israeli
air strike on Sudanese soil may cause the government in Khartoum to move even
closer to Tehran. Heitman says there are rumors circulating in Sudan that
intelligence sources in Egypt had leaked the information about the weapons
convoy to Israel.
"I suspect it is going to make them paranoid about who leaked the movement of
the stuff through their territory and possibly trigger greater hostility between
Sudan and Egypt," said Helmoed Heitman.
On Wednesday, President el-Bashir arrived in Saudi Arabia from Qatar, marking
the 5th state visit he has made since the international warrant for his arrest
was issued.
... Payvand News - 04/02/09 ... --
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