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Tuesday, December 22, 2015

ISRAEL FUELS CIVIL WAR IN SUDAN

Shortly after 9/11 General Wesley Clark was informed of a plan for war and regime change in seven countries in five years. Those seven countries were:
Iraq (invaded in 2003)
Lebanon (Israel tried to defeat Hezbollah in 2006)
Libya (NATO bombed the shit out of Libya in 2011, with Gaddafi murdered)
Syria (since 2011 Syria has been invaded by a plague of iinternational cutthroat Jihadis)
Sudan
Somalia
Iran

Iraq, Iran, Syria and Lebanon were named in A Clesn Break, which was written in 1996 for then PM of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu.

Another Zionist document is Rebuilding America's Defenses which was published by PNAC in 2000, which called for "a new Pearl Harbor" to provoke the American public into calling for wars on nations like Iraq and Iran, which were named as the greatest threats to US national security in the document.

But what of Sudan?

Why was Sudan named to Clark?
Since the 1960’s Israel has been fighting a secret war in South Sudan by supporting the rebels’ struggle to break free from Khartoum’s tyranny. Israel’s support does not reflect its humanistic values or solidarity with a just and legitimate fight for freedom, but rather is the result of various strategic interests in the region. In 2011 a referendum was held in South Sudan following massive pressure from the international community. Ninety-nine percent of residents voted in favor of breaking away from Khartoum, and on July 9th of the same year South Sudan became an independent country.

The State of Israel was one of the first countries to recognize the new state, and in 2011 Salva Kiir Mayardit, president of South Sudan, came to Israel on official visit. For Israel, an independent South Sudan was a golden opportunity to further its security and economic interests in the area, and it subsequently made hefty investments in civil and military infrastructure there. The relationship between the two countries is exceptional even when compared to Israel’s close ties with other African countries, showing some signs of sponsorship.

This special relationship should also be understood in the context of regional power struggles. The local conflict between Sudan and South Sudan is sponsored by Iran and Israel respectively. As Iran reinforced its ties with Muslim Sudan, Israel strengthened its relations with Christian South Sudan, which also provides it with oil. Two-and-a-half years ago Israel allegedly bombed an Iranian owned arms factory in Khartoum; a year ago the IDF intercepted a ship carrying munitions from Sudan to Gaza; and just this month an Israeli drone was reportedly shot down in Sudan. It is evident that Iran and Israel are fighting a proxy war through their African allies.

...Israel has no real way of ensuring the weapons it sells to South Sudan are not used to massacre civilians or threaten women as they are being raped by soldiers and militia fighters. Furthermore, there is no way to ensure that the training of security forces is not used for the murder and torture of civilians and that the technology it provides is not used for persecuting citizens for their political or ethnic affiliations — not to mention supporting horrific war crimes and crimes against humanity — unless it completely stops all military and security-related exports to this country. It is important to clarify that international law also forbids the sale of technologies and devices that “don’t shoot” if they may be used in committing war crimes and crimes against humanity.

[source : The untold story of Israeli military exports to South Sudan, 972 Mag, http://972mag.com/the-untold-story-of-israeli-military-exports-to-south-sudan/107137/, 28th May 2015]

So Israel has been supporting the south of Sudan in a proxy war against Iran, and supplying the south with weapons. This has been confirmed by a UN investigation.

And by doing so, Israel unleashes chaos on its Muslim neighbours, supported by the United States of America.

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