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SudanResponsible Statecraft
•World
World
80% Informative
Sudan 's de facto president and army chief, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan , visited Saudi Arabia just two days after his troops dealt a significant blow to the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces ( RSF ), recapturing the capital Khartoum .
Missing from the frame was the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the Gulf power that has backed al-burhan's rivals in Sudan ’s civil war with arms, mercenaries, and political cover.
Instability across the Red Sea poses a direct threat to Saudi Arabia’s ambitious Vision 2030 economic overhaul.
U.S. lawmakers confirmed in January that the UAE was arming the RSF .
The widening gulf over Sudan is symptomatic of a deeper strategic divergence between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi .
Sudan is paying the price for this fractured Gulf relationship, writes Peter Bergen .
Saudi Arabia , driven by its Vision 2030 imperatives and a desire to reassert regional leadership through stability, has placed its bet on the SAF .
VR Score
81
Informative language
78
Neutral language
44
Article tone
formal
Language
English
Language complexity
75
Offensive language
not offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
short-lived
External references
20
Source diversity
14
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