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The Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War!

Each article in The Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War here peels back the false label of ‘civil war’ to reveal a crisis born from external engineering, ideological design, and memory suppression. My archive isn't just resisting labels, it's reclaiming Sudan's reality 🕊️📜🔥

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse... A haunting map of Sudan shattered like glass, each shard bearing faces, factions, and foreign influence. This is not internal conflict. It's fragmentation by design. A visual protest against reductionism, denial, and the misnaming of war.Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse... A haunting map of Sudan shattered like glass, each shard bearing faces, factions, and foreign influence. This is not internal conflict. It's fragmentation by design. A visual protest against reductionism, denial, and the misnaming of war.

Sudan's crisis has been mislabeled, misunderstood, and manipulated. This is not a civil war, it's an engineered collapse, orchestrated through ideological design, global complicity, and the strategic resurrection of Omer al-Bashir's remnants. The articles gathered here unveil the truth: from how the regime sowed the seeds of transnational terror, to how media narratives obscure Sudan's structural pain, to how rebel alliances recycle old power under new names. Together, they do not merely connect; they interlock, forming a mosaic that asks: Who benefits from this fragmentation? And who still dares to speak of unity?

No one, but only me who hold massive archives in exile vaults not of paper, but of living generations, memories with leaders, experiences from the inside of what was called Sudanese opposition and organizing figure of the last revolution and the one who said clearly to the Freedom and change and to the Ethiopian Prime Minister:

Don't sign an agreement with illegitimate to give them the legitimacy they seek, don't sell the blood of the martyrs, don't betray the revolution, don't buy power by shaking hands with killers. This is not about me, it's about the truth most hide.

This is not merely documentation; it is an archive that burns, smoldering with everything wrong that continues to disfigure Sudan. A country once vast enough to cradle a one million square miles now reduced, erased, and mislabeled.

And yet, to my pain, I watch a new generation unscarred, uninformed, and often indifferent wearing fragmented maps on T-shirts, above slogans that read "I am proud to be..." Proud of what? Of a Sudan stripped of its unity, its memory, its rightful borders? A mockery stitched in cotton, sold as identity. What a shame?

This is not pride. This is posture in place of knowledge, branding in place of belonging. Sudan was one. Its fracture was not fate, it was facilitated. And this archive exists to remind every map-maker, slogan-seller, and revisionist historian: you cannot redraw what still lives in fire.

Why Sudan's Crisis Is More Than a Civil War?

A Call for Deeper Understanding!

In the wake of Sudan's unfolding turmoil, international headlines have defaulted to a familiar and flattening label: "civil war". While this term may evoke the urgency of internal strife, it also veils a deeper truth, that the current conflict is not a spontaneous rupture between rival visions of Sudan's future, but rather a metastatic legacy of Omer al-Bashir's dictatorial Islamic regime.

Both warring factions, Sudan's Military Council and the Janjaweed paramilitary renamed Rapid Support Forces (RSF, formerly Janjaweed... repeating just to confirm) are not opposing revolutionaries. They are extensions of the same system: trained, empowered, and legitimized under the long shadow of al-Bashir's rule. This is not a civil war in the traditional sense. It is a fracture within the architecture of authoritarian continuity, dressed in the theater of nationalism.

🌍 The Role of International Media: Narrative Framing as Strategy

By circulating the term "civil war" without sufficient context, some international media outlets inadvertently, or strategically, contribute to a narrative that:

Obscures accountability, portraying both factions as chaotic actors equally removed from governance legacies

Legitimizes intervention, by allowing global and regional powers to side with one faction under the pretense of stabilization

Masks complicity, by avoiding deeper engagement with how global diplomacy, arms support, and political shelter helped entrench these actors over decades

Some analyses suggest that international preference subtly favors the Military Council, which is the main element in the military religious regime, framing it as the more "state-like" actor in hopes of securing long-term alignment with regional or global agendas — from counterterrorism to trade and migration management.

🧩 Beyond Simplification: Crisis as Regime Mutation

Sudan's crisis should not be treated as a vacuum. It must be read as regime adaptation, where fragments of an oppressive past vie not for transformation, but for control. The real struggle, the one buried beneath media scripts is the unfinished demand of Sudan's popular revolution: a civilian-led democratic future born not from military chess games, but from grassroots courage.

From Patron to Prosecutor: How Sudan's Remnants of a Terrorist Regime Created International Terrorism Then Claimed to Fight It?

From Jihad to Counterterrorism: How Sudan's Military-Islamist Regime Rebranded Itself as the Solution to a Crisis It Created?

What kind of political order wages war against itself and then presents itself as peacemaker?

Since 1989, the regime that once carried the flag of pan-Islamism and clandestinely facilitated transnational jihad is now repackaged as a stabilizing force in Sudan's fragmented landscape. But the roots of Sudan's unraveling lie not in tribal animosity or accidental chaos. They lie in a carefully orchestrated system, one that was born from the National Islamic Front (NIF), matured into military-industrial rule, and now masquerades as a neutral "transitional" authority under various guises.

🔁 The Cycle: From Mujahid to Marshal

The same elements that once supported or sheltered militant movements abroad including logistical support to Islamist fighters in southern Afghanistan have now donned the garb of "counterterrorism partners." This transformation is not ideological; it's cosmetic. The deep state architecture that:

Enabled the rise of extremist networks under the banner of "pilgrimage conferences" and anti-colonial solidarity

Engineered wars across Sudan's own geography, weaponizing religion and ethnicity

Systematically dismantled civilian institutions and repressed opposition

…is now reframed by some international actors as the more "state-like" actor to engage - a presumed bulwark against chaos.

But this is no evolution. It is self-cannibalism masked as governance.

> They built the fire. > Then offered to sell the extinguisher. > Now they're praised for keeping the ashes from spreading.

🛑 The "Counterterrorism" Fallacy

In truth, "counterterrorism" has become a strategic language used to legitimize authoritarian stability across the Global South — Sudan included. In this narrative:

Military councils are labeled as reliable because they "control borders"

Civilian movements are deemed naïve, radical, or disorganized

Regional powers are granted impunity as long as they help contain migration or suppress insurgencies useful to Western goals

The Sudanese case is glaring. The Military Council, birthed from the same Islamist-military elite that orchestrated decades of war and repression, is now seen by some global actors as a lesser evil — or even a partner in "security."

But what kind of stability is built on recycled violence?

What kind of peace can grow in a soil sown with lies?

🕳️ A War Against the People - in the Name of the State

What we face in Sudan is not just internal conflict. It's a war by the state against its own possibility. A war designed:

To delegitimize civilian governance

To fracture public trust

To ensure that only those who built the dungeon hold the keys

This is why the crisis in Sudan cannot be framed as merely "civil war." It is an engineered implosion, with international complicity, masked by diplomatic language and counterterrorism contracts.

🗺 What the World Must See Clearly?

Sudan today is not just suffering. It is being erased while rebranded.

Its people are displaced by factions built from the same hand

Its culture is buried under false narratives of chaos

And its future is held hostage by actors who destroyed its past

This is not a crisis of leadership. It is a crisis of narrative — one where the arsonists are invited to rebuild the library they burned.

Let us not be fooled by uniforms or titles. Let us not confuse order with justice.

Sudan's crisis is more than civil war. It is a regime waging war against memory — and being rewarded for doing so.

There is No Civil War In Sudan, But, a Conspiracy of War of the Remnant of Omer al-Bashir's Regime!

Veteran activist and journalist Khalid Mohammed Osman writes about facts, not from his imagination: Deepening the distinction between true civil conflict and a crisis of power mutation within a single regime. It sharpens the analysis, adds historical clarity, and amplifies what the previous framing concealed.

Even before everything that still happening, I analysed the Muslim Brothers of Sudan from the day they have created a party by this name during the forties and explained why it changes its name every decade and strategies too to fit every decade and how is this party and the devil are one creature.

In a meeting in Asmara during the 1990s, and when the NIF leader assumed to confront the regime he brought to power, I pointed out that was one of the tactical movement of the party and explained that it happened because of fear, so they prepared to have two wings, as such one could continue, if anything happened to the regime.

The Regime Fought Itself So It Wouldn't Face Us: The Myth of Civil War and the Afterlife of Authoritarian Power

When the guns turned inward in Sudan, many called it a civil war. The truth buried beneath headlines and echoed in silence is that the regime split not to collapse, but to survive. What we see is not rival societies fighting. It's a regime fighting itself, to avoid answering to the people it once crushed.

🧠 Regime Mutation, Not Civil War

A civil war implies rupture between opposing visions of governance or nationhood. But in Sudan, the military factions at war - the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) are not ideological rivals. They are two branches of the same tree, grown under Omer al-Bashir's dictatorial Islamic regime:

Both built their legitimacy through state violence.

Both enabled decades of repression and mass atrocities.

Both avoided accountability by cloaking themselves in nationalism.

This is not societal schism. It's fragmented regime power, splintering to avoid a reckoning with justice.

⚖️ Justice Muted by Design

At the heart of this fragmentation is a common fear: international prosecution.

For years, the International Criminal Court (ICC) pushed by the people of Sudan and international rights groups pursued indictments for genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity against:

Omer al-Bashir, the dictator who empowered both SAF and RSF

Janjaweed commanders, many of whom later formed the RSF

Elements within the Muslim Brothers' military and intelligence services who facilitated repression, displacement, and targeted killings

But instead of justice, a new version of the same regime reassembled itself... SAF retaining the symbols of the state, RSF reinventing itself as a "people’s force," and both claiming they are no longer tied to al-Bashir.

Yet many of the same individuals remain. The violence continues. And the justice promised has been replaced by strategic forgetting.

🪞 The Military Council as Regime Continuity

While international analysts debate "who's in charge", they rarely ask who has always been. The Military Council is not a new entity. It is the institutional soul of al-Bashir regime, repackaged. Many of its commanders:

Shielded al-Bashir during mass protests

Oversaw the crackdown on sit-ins made by the Sudanese protesters I and other operators gathered, educated, prepared and planed the sit-in at the gate of the Muslim Brothers's army (The Sudanese army has been emptied from national soldiers, when the NIF moved its members in the army to take the government down through the coup of Omar al-Bashir. I was there and I witnessed all of this.

Negotiated immunity deals and obstruction of ICC referrals.

They now posture as the only force capable of stabilizing Sudan. But stability without transformation is not peace, it's entrenchment by another name.

🔥 Why the People Were Removed

The greatest threat to both factions is not each other, it's the Sudanese people. The youth organizers, the resistance committees, the families of the disappeared, the union leaders, the women who led protests without protection. These are the ones demanding civilian rule, constitutional justice, and the full exposure of war crimes.

By turning the crisis into a "war between armed groups", the regime accomplishes three things:

Avoids accountability by burying the call for international justice in battlefield chaos.

Eliminates civil opposition by forcing protestors into exile, silence, or danger.

Invites foreign support under the guise of being the "legitimate" stabilizer against "rogue militias".

It is a strategy of self-cleansing, where one half of the regime fights the other to burn the evidence.

Recycled Power: How Media Framing Obscures Sudan's Structural Crisis?

When the narrative breaks, power doesn't disappear — it simply finds new disguise.

Sudan's descent into violence has been repeatedly branded a "civil war" by international outlets. But this phrase obscures more than it illuminates. It allows familiar powers — both regional and global — to reshape their involvement not as interference, but as alignment with "stability." The realignment happens not just on the battlefield — but in the discourse surrounding it.

🌐 Legitimizing Old Forces Through New Language

The Sudanese Military Council, despite its authoritarian lineage, is subtly framed in some international reports as the lesser of two evils — "organized," "state-aligned," and capable of ensuring borders, pipelines, and trade. By contrast, the RSF (Janjaweed-rooted) forces, while no less violent or complicit, are rhetorically cast as more "rogue," more "militia-like."

This false binary gives international actors a rhetorical on-ramp to re-engage with fragments of the old regime, while claiming to support transition or peace. But it's not transition — it's regime recycling, aided by language.

🧭 Quiet Partnerships, Visible Narratives

While media often focuses on combat, less is said about:

Security coordination between the Military Council and neighboring states

International financial flows that quietly support militarized governance

Multilateral silence on long-standing civilian demands for full democratic authority

Through think tank statements, news analyses, and press briefings, we see the language of "pragmatism" replacing that of "justice." The revolutionaries who once filled Sudan's streets are now framed as obstacles to stability — or worse, are omitted from the story entirely.

📣 What the People Still Say?

Despite this, Sudanese civil society remains defiant. Activists, union leaders, women's collectives, and displaced community organizers continue to resist the co-option of the revolutionary dream. Their refusal to return to military guardianship is a profound act of memory — and a refusal to let language close the case on unfinished justice.

> The struggle in Sudan is not about who can rule in chaos — it's about whether the people who overturned a dictator will be robbed of the future they imagined.

Unfinished Fire: The Civil Voice Sudan Won't Let You Silence!

While warlords wrestle for power in the rubble of a regime, a quieter, deeper story still breathes in Sudan — one that many international reports neglect or reduce to background. It's the story of those who ignited revolution without armies. Who organized, resisted, wept, danced, and dreamed in the name of a freedom no general could promise.

In Khartoum’s alleys, in refugee camps, in diaspora gatherings — a different Sudan speaks. And what it says is clear:

> We are not a battlefield. We are a people whose revolution is not yet finished.

🎙 Voices in the Static

The language of international discourse often ignores these civil voices, or flattens them beneath terms like "civil unrest" or "sectarian strife." But the truth remains:

The neighborhood resistance committees still coordinate — sometimes underground, sometimes in defiance.

The mothers of the disappeared still chant their children’s names.

The youth who toppled a dictator haven't surrendered their dream to factions wearing fatigues.

From poetry to street murals, digital journals to whispered community meetings, Sudanese civil expression is not extinct — it's evolving.

🧭 Beyond Binary: A Refusal to Be Represented by Guns

Many Sudanese refuse to recognize either the Military Council or the RSF as legitimate heirs of their struggle. Both factions emerged from the architecture of authoritarianism. Neither speak for the voices that filled the streets in 2019 — calling not for new generals, but for an entirely different social contract.

This is not a civil war. It is a war against a revolution — one that dares to remember.

🕊 The Vocabulary of Refusal

Across Sudanese communities, a new lexicon has emerged:

Sawra (Revolution) is not a moment, but an ethic

Al-Haq (Justice) is not negotiable

Madaniya (Civic rule) is not a slogan, but a promise

Qulubna ma' al-shuhada' — our hearts remain with the martyrs

This language resists being subsumed by military discourse. It insists on a narrative in which dignity, not dominance, writes the future.

Sudan's struggle is ongoing — but so is its remembering, its imagining, its refusing.

Narratives the Guns Tried to Silence!

Amid the noise of armed clashes and negotiated alliances, a quieter battlefield unfolds — one where truth itself becomes territory to conquer. In Sudan, the crisis is often framed as a spontaneous breakdown — a "civil war" between two opposing visions. But beneath this performative collapse lies a far more calculated conflict: a struggle between former regime partners vying for control over state, memory, and meaning.

Both the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) are not foreign to each other. They are offspring of the same authoritarian legacy — Omer al-Bashir's regime — now divorced by ambition and thirst for dominance. Their fight is not for democratic reform or ideological divergence. It is for inheritance: who will claim the remnants of the state they both helped erode.

🧱 Silencing Memory, Sanitizing Power

While bombs fall and civilians flee, there is a strategic vacuum being carved: a deliberate clearing of critical voices. Activists, journalists, union organizers, and neighborhood resistance committees — those who challenged the state’s violence with nonviolent courage — have been systematically silenced, displaced, or disappeared.

This absence is not collateral. It is intentional.

With Sudan's civil backbone fractured, narrative space is seized by militarized actors who now rebrand themselves — one as the nationalist defender, the other as revolutionary corrector. The international media, by echoing simplistic framings like "civil war," unintentionally amplifies the fiction. In this erasure, the voices of the Sudanese people — who rose in 2019 demanding a civilian, just, and inclusive state — are treated as ghosts.

🌍 Resource Wars in Disguise

Behind the propaganda curtain, what drives this war is economic geography:

Control over Red Sea ports and marine resources, including submerged oil reserves and fishing corridors, has become strategic currency.

Mining zones in the eastern mountains represent not only wealth, but influence — regional powers eye these zones with silent eagerness.

The Halaib Triangle, long contested with Egypt, holds both archaeological evidence of Sudanese civilization and strategic positioning that alters Sudan's territorial narrative. The erasure of this history serves a broader interest: rewriting borders to benefit neighboring alliances.

These "resources" are not neutral, they become bargaining chips. Whichever faction consolidates control can offer them in exchange for regional support, conveniently burying Sudanese claims that complicate larger geopolitical schemes. This isn't just a war, it's a marketplace of national assets traded for power and immunity.

🩸 Beyond the Janjaweed: Sudan's Two Rebel Fronts and the Struggle for Power and Wealth!

As Sudan's civil war deepens, the Janjaweed, now rebranded as the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) remain a central force of violence and fragmentation. But beyond their notorious legacy, two other rebel fronts have emerged as pivotal players: the Sudan People's Liberation Movement–North (SPLM-N) and the Sudan Liberation Gathering Forces (SLGF).

Both are now engaged in negotiations with remnants of Omer al-Bashir's religious military regime, seeking not just survival, but recognition, power, and access to Sudan's wealth.

🗺️ 1. SPLM-N: From Margins to the Center

Background The SPLM-N was born from the ashes of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), which led the fight for South Sudan's independence. After the South seceded in 2011, the SPLM-N continued its rebellion in South Kordofan and Blue Nile, regions still under Khartoum's control but historically marginalized.

Led by Abdel Aziz al-Hilu, the SPLM-N has long demanded secular governance, regional autonomy, and an end to religious authoritarianism. For decades, it fought both the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the RSF ironically, the same RSF it now allies with under the new coalition called Tasis.

Current Role In February 2025, SPLM-N shocked observers by joining forces with the RSF to form a parallel government. Al-Hilu was named deputy to Hemedti, the RSF commander. This move was strategic: SPLM-N now seeks international legitimacy, hoping to leverage its control over vast territories to gain recognition as a governing authority.

Intentions

Political Power: By aligning with RSF, SPLM-N aims to shape Sudan's future constitution and governance model.

Economic Access: Control over mineral-rich lands in South Kordofan and Blue Nile gives SPLM-N leverage in negotiations.

Global Legitimacy: The alliance with RSF is a bid to be seen not as rebels, but as state actors.

🏜️ 2. SLGF: The Darfur Front with Rising Ambitions

Background The Sudan Liberation Gathering Forces (SLGF) emerged from the fragmented Darfur rebellion. Unlike the SLA factions that joined the SAF-backed government in Port Sudan, SLGF remained independent positioning itself as a voice for non-Arab communities still suffering under RSF and SAF violence.

Led by Tahir al-Hajar, SLGF has gained prominence by joining the RSF-led coalition. It now holds a seat on the Tasis leadership council, signaling its intent to be more than a battlefield ally, it wants a stake in Sudan's future.

Current Role SLGF operates primarily in North and West Darfur, regions devastated by ethnic cleansing and displacement. By aligning with RSF, SLGF gains military protection and political visibility—but risks being complicit in RSF atrocities.

Intentions

Resource Control: Darfur's gold mines and trade routes are key to SLGF's economic ambitions.

Political Leverage: SLGF seeks ministerial positions and influence in any post-war settlement.

International Recognition: Like SPLM-N, SLGF wants to be seen as a legitimate stakeholder, not a fringe militia.

⚖️ The Dangerous Dance with Bashir's Remnants

Both SPLM-N and SLGF are now engaging with remnants of Bashir's regime, particularly factions seeking to rebrand themselves and regain regional and international recognition. This includes Islamist hardliners and military elites who once ruled Sudan through religious authoritarianism.

Why the Talks?

Bashir's remnants still control state institutions, foreign policy channels, and economic networks.

Rebel groups see these connections as a shortcut to legitimacy, funding, and diplomatic access.

The Risk By negotiating with the very forces that once oppressed them, SPLM-N and SLGF risk undermining their revolutionary credibility. They may gain power, but lose the moral high ground.

🔥 Conclusion: Power, Wealth, and the Price of Recognition

Sudan's war is no longer a binary clash, it's a multi-front scramble for power, where rebel groups, militias, and regime remnants all seek a piece of the future. The SPLM-N and SLGF are no longer just insurgents they are political entrepreneurs, navigating alliances, exploiting war economies, and chasing legitimacy.

But the question remains: Will their pursuit of power and wealth bring Sudan closer to peace or deeper into fragmentation?

Closing Statement: A Veteran's Warning

As a veteran activist and journalist who has witnessed Sudan's descent for more than fifty years, I see the future unfolding, not as hope, but as further fragmentation, orchestrated by those who crave only power and wealth.

What unfolds today is not a national, sincere struggle. It is a competition between thieves, those who looted Sudan in 1989 and those who were left behind, now scrambling to retain influence and resume the robbery.

This is not revolution. This is redistribution of corruption. And in their games, the dreams of true Sudanese nationals are sacrificed again and again.

Poetic Embers: شجن العشيات والثورة Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: 🖼️ Twilight Ache and the Revolution... 
Dedicated to Abdul-Khaliq Mahjoob and the Martyrs of the General Sudanese Workers Union (23 July 1980) An archival image of Khalid Mohammed Osman's written poem, capturing the pain and brilliance of vanishing revolutionaries. Between Echoes and Erosion: As history is rewritten by those who steal its ink, this poem stands as witness. It honors those whose light flickers briefly but burns eternally in memory. It confronts those who, in chasing wealth and power, erased not only names, but causes. May these words remain unstealable. However, the first couplet is written on a picture of Guevara while meeting Ahmed bin Bella... suggesting that the dedication also goes to them.Poetic Embers: شجن العشيات والثورة Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: 🖼️ Twilight Ache & the Revolution... Dedicated when published in al-Watan newspaper in Kuwait (23 July 1980) to Abdul-Khaliq Mahjoob & Al-Shafi’ Mohamed Al-Sheikh, the Secretary General of the Sudanese Workers' Union & Babiker Al-Nour, Hashim Al-Atta and Farouq Hamd'alla. They were part of the July 19, 1971 movement & were intercepted by Gaddafi while aboard their fleeing aircraft to Khartoum & handed to Jaafar Neimeri. An archival image of Khalid Mohammed Osman's written poem, capturing the pain & brilliance of vanishing revolutionaries. Between Echoes & Erosion: As history is rewritten by those who steal its ink, this poem stands as witness. It honors those whose light flickers briefly but burns eternally in memory. It confronts those who, in chasing wealth & power, erased not only names, but causes. May these words remain unstealable.

However, the first couplet is written on a picture of Guevara while meeting Ahmed bin Bella... suggesting that the dedication also goes to them.

Continue at Sudan From International Terrorism Patron to Prosecutor! When you finish reading the page, close it to come back here to continue with the Global Dynamics and the Action Guide.

Global Dynamics at Play: Unmasking Conspiracies in Sudan and Beyond!

In the Global Dynamics Sections: Unmasking Conspiracies in Sudan and Worldwide, we dive into the intricate web of power, secrecy, problems and influence that shapes events not only in Sudan, but across the globe. This thought-provoking analysis explores the underlying forces - political, economic, and ideological - that fuel conspiracy narratives and real-world manipulations.

From regional conflicts and hidden agendas to worldwide ripple effects, this exploration seeks to decode the patterns, provoke critical dialogue, and inspire actionable solutions. Whether you're a scholar, activist, or curious observer, this journey unpacks global dynamics with clarity and purpose.

The Action Guide of these International Dynamics provides a way map to healthy life in healthy planet, aiming to change this world.

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Crises Dynamics Add Specific Solutions to World Crises & Change Prevailing Perspectives

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Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Corona Dynamics Address World Pandemic Crises & Change Prevailing Heath Perspectives

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: The World is Heating Amid Trade Wars – A Crisis Ignored! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-24]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Dynamics Adjust World Crises & Change Prevailing Perspectives

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars - Trump's Tariffs Tango: Strategy or Show? [The Insight Lens: 2025-04-25]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Ecology Dynamics Advocate to Save the World Reorienting Innovation Toward Restoration

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Biovians Speak: Trade Wars & Climate Crisis Through Nature’s Voice [The Insight Lens: 2025-04-24]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Economies Dynamics Analyze World Economical Crises & Setup an Innovation on All Human Shared Economies

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars Reflect The Hidden Agenda of Free-Market Capitalism! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-19]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Environmental Dynamics Applied Environmental Methods to Drive Sustainable Change in Eritrea: A Grassroots Initiative for National Environmental Transformation

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: What If Trade Wars Were Like Beekeeping? [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-18]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Eras Dynamics Apply Steps to Change the World & Religious Myths

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars from History to Cultural Shock! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-19]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

French Dynamics Approach Conspiracies, Infiltrate Them and Provide Insights on How to Dismantle Them

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Investors Pay Attention: Trade Wars & Your Wallet: Survive & Thrive! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-19]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Goals Dynamics Approve Plans to Make this World Better

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Digital Marketers Pay Attention: Navigating the Storm [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-19]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Entrepreneurs Attention: Trade Wars: Online Income Survival Guide [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-19]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Ideas Dynamics Articulated the Best Solutions to Our Problems

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Tech Enthusiasts Pay Attention: China Gadget Powerhouse of World [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-19]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Illusion Dynamics Begin to Illuminate Our Perception of Truth & Clean Our Minds from any Illusion

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: China's Gadget Powerhouse vs. Trade Wars: Who Really Pays? [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-19]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Italian Dynamics Balance Ways that Cleanse Global Uncertainty & Offer Solutions to Chaotic Political Ventures

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars: China's Grip on Wellness Products! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-22]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Lingual-Cult Dynamics Banish the Gaps in Culture Created by Language-Based Misunderstandings Between People

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Navigating Global Chaos: Leadership in Trade Wars and Diplomacy! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-22]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

The Eritrean Martyr's Tree Base Evidences that the Global Dynamics Bear Fundamental Executive Processes to Make the World Behave Better

The Eritrean Martyr's Tree has been a successful project that resulted from my environmental activities, planning, fundraising, meeting, broadcasting and leading all of the Eritrean society to plant more than 5 million martyr's trees. Un fortunately, the Sudanese people are not revolutionists like the Eritreans, They failed to implement the martyr's tree I gave it their name to let their martyrs continue living and breathing through their trees.

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Bee Crisis: Government Cuts Sting Hard! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-17]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

"Mind You" Dynamics Bear Personal Mental Development by Highlighting Life's Serious Issues

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars and Tumult: Inflation's Reign and Recession's Grip! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-19]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Muslim Brothers' Dynamics Beat Down Most of the Sudanese Thinking... But, the People's Dynamics Can Beat Back the Religious Myths

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars - Trump Tariffs: Protests, Politics, and Future Impacts! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-18]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars - Trump's Visa Crackdown: Impact on International Students [The Insight Lens: 2025-04-18]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Political Dynamics Begin the Adjustment of Practiced Governance and Build Upon Other Structures of States

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars - Trump vs IMF: A Global Economic Showdown! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-18]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Press Media Dynamics Behave to Break the Behavior Patterns of Climate, Educational, Power, and Religious Dynamics

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars: Global Reactions Unveiled!! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-18]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Russian Dynamics Belong Practically to People as the Only Assets to Bring the World to Adapt New Systems

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: What If Trade Wars Were Like Beekeeping? [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-18]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Sense Dynamics Bend All the World Together to Adjust World Crises & Innovate New Systems

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars Fallout: Global Economic Battles! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-18]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Socialist Bloc Dynamics Bestow of Methods to Unite the Fragmented States of the Sake of People... Your Strength is in Your Reunion

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars Aftermath: Global Economies on the Edge! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-17]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Systems Dynamics Structured & Precise Bind Theories to Practice, Crafting Pathways for Methodological Innovation

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars: How They Hit U.S. Tourism Hard? [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-17]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Theory Dynamics Blend Abstract Thinking with Real-World Practice, Creating Blueprints for Transformative Methods

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trade Wars: Global Economy's Rollercoaster Ride! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-17]

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse:

Website Basic Dynamics Bloom Like a Tree First Planted in New Eritrea... Now Growing a Forest of Change Across the World

Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse: Trump's Trade War: Global Ripple Effects! [Latest on The Insight Lens: 2025-04-17]

🎯 The Action Guide: Turning Vision into Actions!

🧭 A Compass for Change

Change requires direction... a compass, not chaos. The Action Guide transforms insight into orientation and critique into forward motion.

This isn't a summons to react. It's a call to build, to collaborate, to begin. With tools and strategies that make the way forward not just possible, but global, grounded, and driven by people's agency.

🎯 The starting actions to Build Yourself a System of Power that Can Save the World From Political Catastrophes are here at the Action Guide with the following steps to join the Horn Africa's Network to be acquainted with it, the basic foundation of the Principles of Citizen Journalism that Can Save the World From Political Catastrophes and they let you know in additional to all of that more basic information about the press media principles that encouraged me to create the LPE of the Masses' Era with its mind-blowing solutions to global political catastrophes. Not withstanding this, the generator of the Action Guide itself are the Global Dynamics. The Global Dynamics are actually generated with the first I started to examine how these dynamics which I have invented can change the world. The proofs of optimal success lie in the success of the experimental project:

🎯 To become a good activist and maybe a leader of one of the associations of the world masses, as you learned from the slogans of the political campaigns on "Citizen Journalism that Can Save the World From Political Catastrophes", fill out the 'Contact Us' form. Be sure to let me know that you've read "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse", as well as the Global Dynamics. Show me that you understood what you read about the crises of the world along with the highlighted solutions through "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse" and would like to create, or join one of the global masses associations. Let me know more about that you have learned well and so you decided to join and create the ERA OF THE MASSES.

🎯 Sign up for "Intelligentsia Multimedia Newspaper Revolutionizes Knowledge" by filling the form on this section of the "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse" and submit it. This is a double-opt-in list to prevent someone who knows your email address from subscribing you, without having you to know about it. Check an email with a confirmation link, I'll send to you. If you didn't find it in your incoming emails box, please check your junk folder and move it to your inbox folder.

🎯 Forward HOA Political Scene to your friends, including the link of "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse", as follows: https://www.hoa-politicalscene.com/rising-of-the-phoenix-from-poetry-to-the-real-life-of-a-nation.html. Motivate them to read it and join the pioneering solutions to global crises, and take the same actions outlined in the "Action Guide".

🎯 You make your move, they make their moves with you. The point is that it is so important to work with them, so that more friends and "friends of their friends" join the discussion about global crises, political shallowness, the lack of political depth and know the guidelines of the World Social Revolution, which is a reflection of credibility of "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse". You should at least make a few hundred friends as contacts to explain to them everything you have learned and understood from "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse".

🎯 Setup a time to work in this project and arrange your contacts systematically into lists with basic information about each one of your contacts, such as name, age, gender, profession, email address and location. In this way, you will guide, organize and teach them as you have been taught into groups to carry out the process to build everyone a system of power, inspired by "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse". I will let you know the specifications of these groups. Upon completion, please use the contact form to forward this information to me. You should have their consent, first. Then use the same "Contact Us" form to tell me you've done the first process and wait for further instructions.

🎯 Write your comments on "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse" - The comments form is at the end of the page - and provide details on them. Don't feel that you can't write good, even if your language isn't good. Just write your comments in any language and I will edit and translate them for you to become a global writer and you will see a better result in the process of participating in the Global Peaceful Revolution. Such revolution doesn't need a weapon, it needs minds. Share your page when it is published.

🎯 Share the links on "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse" and share the pictures of the global political campaigns on good websites. These images are on the first pages of the Global Dynamics I published earlier. Please don't do this on the social media of Facebook because it is a capitalist umbrella and more and if you want to know what's more, I will tell you, only when you ask and I will even show you methods to conquer any big social media, except Twitter.

🎯 Distribute the links of the videos you watch on "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse" and hang the posters of the Global Revolution in public places. It will be good if you or your friends have public places such as bars, cafes, cafeterias, clubs, hotels, mini-market places, public companies and restaurants.

🎯 Read about the nature problems that affect the world badly, including the effects of global warming on many countries and on people, as you read on the posters of "Citizen Journalism that Can Save the World From Political Catastrophes" at 100-beautiful-sites-in-the-world.com/100-beautiful-sites-blog.html. This is a site dedicated to the effects of global warming that you read about here politically on "How Sudan Was Hollowed from the Inside?".

🎯 Watch historical and political documentaries and films about the crises of environment and nature caused by classical regimes and open market big companies, and documentaries about some of the topics you read on the pictures of "Citizen Journalism Can Save the World From Political Catastrophes" at tvcinemaapp.com/tv-cinema-app-blog.html. This is another site oriented to the cinema and television that offers among documentaries cinematic analyzes movies and television series and lessons on how to install channels and watch movies free, so you don't need to pay for that.

** Please, if you find anything that does not make sense to you on "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse", use the feedback form to write about it. I will answer your questions and reward you for that by offering you some good books to read and learn more about how to improve your life.

What Do You Think of "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse"?

Every thing you read through "Crisis in Sudan is Not Civil War: This Is Not Civil War - It's Engineered Collapse" is accurate given more than 50 years experiences in this political field. I'll be glad to read what you think about this topic. If you think that positive changes are possible, you are welcome to Subscribe to Intelligentsia Newspaper and implement the Action Guide to change the hard situations we live in every day in the world.

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رواية "الموتُ شرقاً" تكشف لك سرّ الموت الشرقي التراجيدي المستمر للإنسان

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احصل علي الرواية الآن واكتشف إنهيار القواسم المشتركة، واستلهم إبداعا يشبه الأسطورة في النص الروائي

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