THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

Sudan dissolves ties with Chad

New clashes could imperil Darfur

Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Stephanie McCrummen
Washington Post / May 12, 2008

NAIROBI - Sudan cut diplomatic ties with Chad yesterday after accusing its neighbor of backing an audacious rebel attack on the Sudanese capital.

Sudanese officials claimed to have crushed the assault on Khartoum by a Darfur rebel group known as the Justice and Equality Movement, or JEM, which crossed hundreds of miles of desert in armored pickups and struck the Omdurman suburb of the capital Saturday.

Yesterday morning, President Omar Hassan al-Bashir of Sudan, appearing on state-run television in military fatigues, said the rebels had been "totally destroyed."

"These forces come from Chad, who trained them," Bashir said, according to the Reuters news agency. "We hold the Chadian regime fully responsible for what happened. We have no choice but to sever relations."

Analysts say there were several layers of interests at work in the attack, which is likely to alter the already tangled process of reaching a settlement to end the crisis in Sudan's western Darfur region, where the government and a militia known as the Janjaweed have waged a five-year campaign of violence against civilians and numerous rebel groups.

First, there is the Chadian factor. The strike by JEM, a rebel group known to have the backing of Chad and Libya, was likely to have been payback by the Chadian government, which accused Sudan of backing rebels in a similarly audacious - and similarly crushed - attack on the Chadian capital of N'Djamena earlier this year.

Bashir and President Idriss Deby of Chad have a history of trying to destabilize each other's countries, and JEM leaders move freely across the Chadian border into Sudan.

There is also the question of JEM's motives. Though rebel leaders said the strike was an attempt to topple a government that has brutalized Darfurians for years, some analysts said it was more likely aimed at pushing Sudanese officials to negotiate directly with the group.

JEM is the fiercest fighting force of the Darfur rebel factions, which have become increasingly fragmented in the past two years, seemingly unable to unify their political and military structures.

"The fighting in Omdurman represents a gambit by JEM to position itself to negotiate directly with Sudan's ruling party, cutting the other Darfur factions out," said John Prendergast, co-chairman of the Enough Project, an initiative to end genocide and crimes against humanity. "It is a power grab that goes beyond the Darfur-specific agenda."

Libya is the wild card factor, he said, noting that the North African country, which historically has had rocky relations with Sudan, may be avenging perceived slights by Sudan.

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