From Yahoo/Business Insider:
“Americans trying to flee Sudan are hiring private security
companies to get out of the civil war zone after the US said no military
evacuation is coming”
Private-security contractors are helping to evacuate
Americans and other foreign nationals from Sudan. The US government has
indicated it has no plans to assist with civilian evacuations. The escalating conflict is drawing
comparisons to the 2021 American withdrawal from Afghanistan. After the US said
it would not be conducting missions to evacuate American citizens from
conflict-torn Sudan — citing safety concerns — private companies are being
contracted to take some paying citizens to safety.
Early Sunday morning in Sudan, American military forces,
under the order of President Joe Biden, evacuated 70 staffers and their
families from the US Embassy in Sudan as the country descended into violence
over a power struggle between the country's de facto leader and the head of a
rival paramilitary group. Biden issued a statement calling for the violence in
Sudan to end in an "immediate and unconditional ceasefire." However,
the US said on Friday it would not be evacuating the estimated 16,000 private
US citizens that remain in the country. "We have advised Americans to not
travel to Sudan since August 2021, and the US embassy in Khartoum's security
alert on April 16th stated that due to the uncertain security situations in
Khartoum and closure of the airport, Americans should have no expectation of a
US government-coordinated evacuation at this time," Vedant Patel, the
Principal Deputy spokesperson with the US State Department said in a press
briefing on Friday. "It is imperative that US citizens in Sudan make their
own arrangements to stay safe in these difficult circumstances." As a
result, some citizens have taken it upon themselves to hire private security,
according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.
Private security for hire Dale Buckner, the CEO of Global Guardian, a
private-security firm, told the WSJ that the company's staff has escorted
dozens of expatriates to neighboring countries — sometimes dodging gunfire,
artillery, and mortar fire. "Our rescue teams have to navigate
dozens of checkpoints in an active war zone," Buckner told the WSJ.
"We have hundreds of other clients waiting. But it's increasingly getting
dangerous." The Global Guardian team is made up of former military
special operations and federal law enforcement personnel who provide
international services, including asset protection, personal security, and
evacuations from Sudan to Egypt and Eritrea over the past week. The company
previously helped evacuate Ukrainian citizens at the onset of Russia's invasion
of the country. Buckner is a 24-year US Army veteran with deployments
including Iraq, Afghanistan, Kuwait, Colombia, Cuba, El Salvador, Chile,
Panama, and Haiti. In an interview with CNN, Buckner told Julia
Chatterley that employees of Global Guardian reported seeing armed paramilitary
at various checkpoints, downed bridges, and airspace closed to civilian
aircraft. After a scramble during the first 48 hours to get people to the
neighboring countries of Egpyt and Eritrea, Buckner told CNN that the situation
had become more difficult for staff, who had to wait for temporary ceasefires
to transport people out of the country. Buckner said that the first few
attempts at a ceasefire can "fail because the people at the lowest level
do not actually get that message." "You can imagine that is
the risk here is that as you have forces on both sides deployed across the
country, that at the lowest level that communicate is not get to them, and
hence the fighting continues," Buckner told CNN. "So there's real
risk here even with a formalized ceasefire, with that window of opportunity
coming, that we could still see fighting." Buckner also said that
transportation infrastructure, water sources, and hospitals were being targeted
by the fighting. "They're fighting over what is the infrastructure
of the country, that if they quote-unquote, win, now they can control the
population," Buckner told CNN.
Travel is made more difficult as a result of the shut-down
airport in Khartoum, the country's capital. Those trying to escape Sudan face
treacherous roads that are difficult to access, long distances to the ocean,
and neighboring countries that may be hostile to US citizens, like Eritrea, the
Associated Press reported. Cameron Hudson, a former chief of staff to the US
special envoy for Sudan, criticized the failure to prepare for the possibility
of conflict in the country, telling the WSJ that the US put faith in Sudan to
have a peaceful transition of power following the 2021 coup, led by General
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan. General al-Burhan — now leading the country — promised
to step down to allow Sudan to have a democratic election in 2023. "The
descent in violence happened so quickly because at the time they were talking
to us, they were preparing for war," Hudson told WSJ. "We were
planning for success and ignored the possibility of conflict." Patel told
reporters on Friday that the country has "not been naïve about the fraught
security situation." "We have been clear-eyed about the kind of
circumstances that we're dealing with," Patel told reporters.
Learning lessons from the Afghanistan withdrawal The situation in Sudan brought swift
comparisons to the Biden administration's withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021 —
as people, desperate to flee the Taliban's takeover, tried to cling to US
military planes as they took off, and ultimately fell to their deaths. Insider
previously reported that weeks before the catastrophe, Biden had publicly
expressed confidence in the ability of the US-trained Afghan military to fend
off the Taliban. Instead, the world watched on live TV as the Islamist militant
group the US drove from power following the 2001 invasion retook control of the
country. The 2021 Afghanistan operation "demonstrated the
consequences of failing to plan adequately for worst-case scenarios, mixed
messaging by the State Department, unclear chains of command, the inadequate
coordination between the State Department and the Department of Defense, and
the failure to coordinate with private organizations evacuating American
citizens," House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul of Texas said in
a Friday statement regarding the Sudan conflict. McCaul added: "Not
wanting to repeat the mistakes of the Afghanistan evacuation, I seek
clarification of several key issues necessary for a successful evacuation of
American citizens in Sudan." But, despite leaders calling for
clarification, the White House remains steadfast in its plan not to intervene
on behalf of Americans caught in the Sudanese conflict. "It is not
our standard procedure to evacuate American citizens living abroad," the
White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said on Friday.
"Afghanistan was a unique situation for many reasons, including already
hosting a significant military presence and ending a 20-year conflict. The
Afghanistan evacuation was not the norm."
^ Biden is so proud of himself for evacuating 70 US Diplomats
from the US Embassy in Sudan (by Helicopter) yet he doesn't want to help the
16,000 US Citizens in Sudan to flee the War there.
The Khartoum International Airport is damaged and closed so
no one can fly out. The only way out is by land (either 500 miles to Port Sudan
to try and get a ship somewhere or 800 miles by land to a border.) ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/americans-trying-flee-sudan-hiring-034723350.html
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