Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, sent a letter to Blinken Friday raising concern for the safety of Americans in Sudan and urging the agency not to repeat the mistakes of the evacuation of U.S. government personnel and private citizens in Afghanistan in 2021.

Said Patel, “Throughout this whole process, even when you’ve heard the secretary speak to this on travels, we have also been very clear-eyed and consistent about the close attention that this department was, is taking as it relates to this. …  We’re taking appropriate actions that are in line with previous lessons learned, not just as it relates to Afghanistan, but in other circumstances where we have had personnel on the ground and they are in harm’s way.”

On Friday, White House spokesperson John Kirby told reporters that President Joe Biden would ultimately make the decision about any evacuation, “but it would be based on recommendations that he gets from senior military and State Department leaders.”

The Pentagon also said it had moved a small number of troops to a base in the nearby Horn of Africa country of Djibouti to support an evacuation. 

After a meeting of defense leaders from around Europe and the world at the Ramstein Air Base in Germany, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said they had been positioned there “to make sure we provide as many options as possible if we are called to do something.”  

Washington has traditionally had limited influence in Sudan, though this began to change after dictator Omar al-Bashir was ousted in 2019 and the country began to move toward democracy.

Austin’s comments came after Sudanese army chief Gen. Abdel Fattah Burhan pledged the military would prevail and secure the vast nation’s “safe transition to civilian rule,” according to The Associated Press.

Burhan’s speech came 18 months after he joined forces with his current rival and RSF leader Gen. Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo — a former camel dealer widely known as Hemedti — to seize power in a coup that cast aside Sudan’s pro-democracy forces.

April 20, 202301:40

Both men were leaders in a counterinsurgency against an uprising in Sudan’s Darfur region, a conflict that in 2005 saw al-Bashir become the world’s first sitting leader to be indicted by the International Criminal Court on suspicion of genocide.

Then they were part of the military establishment that helped oust al-Bashir after widespread popular unrest, raising hopes for democracy after his 30 years in power.

But the two generals have remained major political figures in the extremely unstable years since then.

Both sides disagree on how the RSF should be integrated into the military, a key condition of the framework agreement. The army wants the transition to happen in two years, while the RSF said it could take 10 years.

Talks broke down and an April 11 deadline to sign an agreement came and went.

Associated Press contributed.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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