Drone attacks raise stakes in new phase of Sudan's civil war
Just weeks after the army celebrated the recapture of Khartoum, its foe the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) launched a series of unprecedented drone strikes on Port Sudan in the east of the country.
The attacks have led to worsening power blackouts, as well as city residents facing water shortages.
"It's a level of power projection within this region that we haven't seen yet," says Alan Boswell, the Horn of Africa expert for the International Crisis Group.
"I think it raises the stakes quite a bit," he added.
The barrage of attacks on the war-time capital and humanitarian hub signals that the RSF is determined and able to carry on the fight despite significant territorial losses.
And it has showcased the growth of advanced drone warfare in Africa.
Drones have played an increasing role in the conflict, which has entered its third year.
The war began as a power struggle between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the RSF and has drawn in other Sudanese armed groups and foreign backers, plunging the country into what the UN calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) helped the army advance earlier this year. And the RSF escalated its own use of drones as it was pushed out of central Sudan, especially Khartoum, back towards its traditional stronghold in the west of the country.
In recent months the paramilitaries had stepped up drone strikes on critical civilian infrastructure in army-controlled areas, such as dams and power stations.
But their sustained attacks on Port Sudan, until now seen as a safe haven home to government officials, diplomats and humanitarian organisations, underlined a shift in strategy to a greater emphasis on remote warfare, and aimed to demonstrate strength.
"The RSF is trying to show that they don't need to reach Port Sudan by land in order to be able to have an impact there," says Sudanese political analyst Kholood Khair.
The group is trying to achieve a "narrative shift" away from "the triumphant SAF that took over Khartoum," she says.
"It is saying to the Sudanese Armed Forces: 'You can take Khartoum back, but you'll never be able to govern it. You can have Port Sudan, but you won't be able to govern it, because we will cause a security crisis for you so large that it will be ungovernable'... They want to unequivocally show that the war is not over until they say so."
The paramilitary group has not directly addressed the Port Sudan drone attacks. Rather, it has repeated its assertion that the SAF is supported by Iran and accused the armed forces of targeting civilian infrastructure and state institutions, calling the military strikes on Khartoum and RSF-held areas in the west and south of the country war crimes.
Both sides stand accused of war crimes which they have denied, but the RSF has been singled out over allegations of mass rape and genocide.
The change in its tactics may have been triggered by battlefield necessity, but is possible because of technological advancement.
The RSF had previously used what are known as suicide or loitering drones, small UAVs with explosive payloads that are designed to crash into targets and can carry out coordinated attacks.
It seems to have deployed this method in Port Sudan, with the commander of the Red Sea Military Zone Mahjoub Bushra describing a swarm of 11 Kamikaze drones in the first strike on a military airbase.
He said the army shot them down, but they turned out to be a tactical distraction to divert attention from a single strategic drone that successfully struck the base.
The make of this drone is not clear. But satellite images reported by Yale researchers and the Reuters news agency have shown advanced UAVs at an airport in South Darfur since the beginning of the year.
The defence intelligence company Janes has determined them to most likely be sophisticated Chinese manufactured CH-95s, capable of long-range strikes.
Jeremy Binnie, an Africa and Middle East analyst at Jane's, told the BBC that photos of what appear to be the remnants of the smaller kamikaze drones suggest they are probably a different version than the RSF had used before, and might be better at penetrating air defences because of their shape.
One regional observer suggested the RSF had been able to breach the SAF's anti-drone technology with signal jammers attached to the drones, but cautioned this was still unproven.
The South Darfur airport in Nyala, the presumptive capital and military base of the Rapid Support Forces, has been repeatedly bombed by the SAF, which destroyed an aircraft there earlier this month.
Some experts see the RSF's bombardment of Port Sudan at least partly as retaliation.
Inside Khartoum, a city left in ruins
Sudan war: A simple guide to what is happening
The escalating drone warfare has again highlighted the role of foreign actors in Sudan's civil conflict.
"This is a war of technology," says Justin Lynch, managing director at Conflict Insights Group, a data analytics and research organisation.
"That's why the foreign supporters are so important, because it's not like the RSF is making the weapons themselves. They're being given this stuff."
The army has accused the United Arab Emirates (UAE) of supplying the paramilitary fighters with the drones, and cut diplomatic ties with Abu Dhabi because of the attacks.
The UAE has strongly rejected the charges. It has long denied reports from UN experts, US politicians and international organisations that it is providing weaponry to the RSF.
But Mr Lynch says the evidence is overwhelming.
He was the lead author of a US State Department-funded report late last year that concluded with "near certainty" the the UAE was facilitating weapons to the RSF by monitoring imagery and flight patterns of airlines previously implicated in violating a UN arms embargo.
He told the BBC it would be surprising if the Emiratis were not helping deliver the drones used in the Port Sudan attacks.
He also determined with similar near-certainty that the Iranians were supplying weapons to the SAF, and he helped authenticate documents provided to the Washington Post that detail the sale of drones and warheads to the army by a Turkish defence firm.
Iran has not responded to the allegations. Turkish officials have denied involvement.
The increasing use of drones by both sides may be redefining the war, but it is the ability of the RSF to strike strategic targets hundreds of kilometres from its positions that has rattled the region.
Over a week of daily attacks on Port Sudan, the paramilitaries hit the country's only working international airport, a power station, several fuel depots, and the air base, apparently trying to disrupt the army's supply lines.
The city is also the main entry port for relief supplies and the UN has warned that this "major escalation" could further complicate aid operations in the country and lead to large-scale civilian casualties.
"This was such a shock and awe campaign that it has not only stunned SAF, I think it's also stunned Egypt, Saudi Arabia, others who were behind SAF, and remakes the entire war," says Mr Boswell, adding that it closing the gap in air power between the RSF and the army.
"The RSF is widely viewed as a non-state actor," he says "and normally, groups like that can muster quite a bit of an insurgent force. But the government with the air force is the one that always has the aerial capacity, and this just turns all those old adages on its head."
The development has triggered comparisons to the long-range drone warfare between Russia and Ukraine.
"These weapons have more precision, you don't need a manned aircraft any more, and they are much more affordable than operating sophisticated jets," says Mr Binnie.
"This is part of a broader trend in technological proliferation where you can see what used to be really high-end capabilities being used in a civil war in sub-Saharan Africa."
The Sudanese foreign ministry has warned that the attacks threaten regional security and the safety of navigation in the Red Sea, calling on international actors to take "effective action against the regional sponsor of the militia," a reference to the UAE.
Mr Lynch believes that only an agreement between the UAE and the Sudanese army will end the war.
"This war is always evolving, always changing," he says, "but you'll see it will continue for years and decades unless there is serious diplomatic action to stop it."
WATCH: 'They ransacked my home, and left my town in ruins'
The children living between starvation and death
BBC reporter: My heartbreaking decision to leave Sudan
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Newsweek
26 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Russian Breakthrough Highlights Ukraine's Biggest Weakness Ahead of Summit
Based on factual reporting, incorporates the expertise of the journalist and may offer interpretations and conclusions. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A sudden infiltration of Russian units through one of Ukraine's most crucial defensive lines has exposed the embattled nation's critical manpower disadvantage just as U.S. President Donald Trump prepares to discuss the future of the war with his Russian counterpart. While the extent of Russia's thrust toward the critical supply hub of Pokrovsk in eastern Ukraine's Donetsk province is still unclear, analysts and former officials say the penetration speaks to a persistent problem for Kyiv that has the potential to also influence the White House's perception going into Friday's summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin. "It reinforces the acknowledgement that Ukraine has a military disadvantage here," Dan Caldwell, who recently served as senior adviser to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, told Newsweek. "The Russians currently have the upper hand on the battlefield and, while for good reasons there may be an unwillingness to acknowledge that out loud directly, it also reinforces the fact that there really aren't any good options to fundamentally change that," he added. "From what I saw previously, and from what I'm seeing now in open-source, is that what has been building up for the Ukrainians is fundamentally a manpower issue." Caldwell noted that Ukrainians also suffered from "other disadvantages around certain supplies or certain munitions" including "the technological side," where Russia's increased use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), or drones, have also contributed to recent gains. "But if you don't have enough infantry to hold a line, to occupy a city, to maintain a line of communication or a supply line," he said, "then you are going to be pushed out of these positions eventually by a force that actually has manpower, has infantry, has forces that can go and hold and seize terrain." A Ukrainian National Guard serviceman of 3rd Brigade "Spartan" runs through a tree line during a training not far from the frontline on the Pokrovsk direction, on August 8, 2025. A Ukrainian National Guard serviceman of 3rd Brigade "Spartan" runs through a tree line during a training not far from the frontline on the Pokrovsk direction, on August 8, 2025. Evgeniy Maloletka/AP Manpower Advantage Caldwell, speaking at a virtual event hosted by the Defense Priorities think tank, placed Russia's manpower advantage at a factor of three-to-one, the same figure cited by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during a meeting with journalists on Tuesday. Zelensky also said that Russian forces were suffering casualties at roughly three times the rate of the Ukrainian side on a daily basis. Kyiv and Moscow regularly dispute one another's casualty figures provided throughout the conflict. At the same time, the Ukrainian leader acknowledged a recent push by "groups of Russians" advancing approximately six miles toward the town of Dobropillia, located around 12 miles north of Pokrovsk. The development was first reported earlier this week by a number open-source intelligence platforms, including the Ukraine-based DeepState mapping group. The move prompted the Ukrainian military to mobilize members of its National Guard's First Corps Azov to respond to the incursion. Reached for comment, the First Corps Azov referred Newsweek to a statement issued Tuesday in which the group confirmed its deployment to the Pokrovsk sector, where "the situation remains complex and dynamic." "The enemy is attempting to advance in this direction at the cost of significant losses in manpower and equipment," the First Corps Azov said. "Units within the corps have planned and carried out actions to block enemy forces in the area." Zelensky described the infiltrators as being lightly equipped, with some already "partially destroyed" and "partially captured." The Ukrainian Armed Forces chief of staff reported that the front was "stabilizing" as of Thursday, with clashes ongoing. Meanwhile, Moscow-aligned officials see the battle for Pokrovsk, still referred to in pro-Russia circles by its former name, Krasnoarmeysk, as particularly decisive ahead of the looming U.S.-Russia talks. "Krasnoarmeysk is now a focal point for everyone," Denis Pushilin, head of the largely unrecognized, Russia-backed Donetsk People's Republic, said Wednesday on the Soloviev Live channel, in comments carried by the official TASS Russian News Agency. "Especially ahead of the upcoming meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump in Alaska, this area is receiving particular attention," Pushilin said. "The enemy is transferring more forces, including units of the Azov battalion. However, they have reason to fear because our units' successes are clear." Evolving Tactics Rob Lee, senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute's Eurasia Program who closely tracks battlefield developments in Ukraine, told Newsweek that the "picture is not fully clear" regarding the extent to which Russia's push toward Pokrovsk could yield a greater impact but called it "troubling development" for Kyiv. Rather than viewing the operation as a deliberate attempt to skew the talks, Lee saw the advance as a pre-planned part of a broader trend of Russian infiltration attempts on this key axis, possibly enhanced by the use of local separatist Ukrainian units from Donetsk, as well as the Ukrainian military's persistent manpower shortages. "Ukrainian brigades are undermanned. They've been undermanned for some time, particularly the infantry component is undermanned," Lee said. "What that means is the infantry are spending longer times in position without rotations. There are fewer infantry holding onto individual positions, the positions might be kind of spread apart." "In most cases, [Ukrainian forces] can still stop these infiltrators with UAVs, whether it's in front of the frontline or behind the frontline," he added. "But if Russia sends one guy at a time, two guys at a time, some of them will be killed, but some of them will get back. And then, if they can mass six or seven guys behind the Ukrainian frontline, then that creates problems." Even smaller Russian raiding parties could prove a threat to defensive lines. Lee noted that many Ukrainian positions are also held by just three soldiers as both sides seek to adapt to the realities of drone warfare, which has proven devastating to large gatherings of personnel and vehicles. For a time, Ukraine's innovative use of UAVs helped to even the playing field against Russia, which began the war in February 2022 with more traditional large-scale assault tactics. Ukraine's drone arsenal includes larger, long-range attack systems such as Turkey's Bayraktar TB2 as well as smaller platforms, including various first-person view quadcopters and loitering munitions like the U.S.-made Switchblade. In more recent phases of the conflict, however, Moscow has accelerated its own modernization of battlefield techniques, including the use of loitering munitions like the Lancet and a domestically produced variant of Iran's Shahed, to bolster its numerical advantage and mitigate hemorrhaging losses of personnel and equipment. "Russia has continued to evolve. Russia has the manpower advantage that they're trying to maximize and capitalize on," Lee said. "So, their tactics involve a lot of infantry infiltration tactics, but they've also improved their UAV use. They've closed the gap with Ukraine on the kind of employment and organizational structure of how to use strike UAVs." "They've gotten better at using glide bombs for targets. They've gotten better at reconnaissance and locating targets and quickly striking them with artillery or UAVs," he added. "And so, it's kind of this combination of infiltration tactics and more sophisticated use of targeting." Russian soldiers prepare a Lancet drone for action in an undisclosed location in Ukraine, on July 23, 2025. Russian soldiers prepare a Lancet drone for action in an undisclosed location in Ukraine, on July 23, 2025. Russian Defense Ministry Press Service Press Service/AP 'A Question of Sustainability' Lee explained that the outcome of this combination — while yet to decisively shift the tide of the conflict one way or another — "leaves the perception that Russia is still advancing," and doing so at a rate that outpaces previous gains made over the past year in a conflict that has repeatedly fallen into bloody stalemates. And it's not just about territory, Lee pointed out, "it's a question of sustainability." "That's the bigger issue," he said. "And that's why fixing the manpower situation in Ukraine is so vital to keep this war sustainable for Ukraine." Mark Cancian, senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies' Defense and Security Department and former chief of the Force Structure and Investment Division at the White House's Office of Management and Budget, also saw the Russian gains as being about more than just land. "For the last 18 months they have been chewing away at the front line in half a dozen spots," Cancian told Newsweek. "In that time, they have captured territory about the size of Delaware though at immense cost in casualties." "The recent Russian advances are worrisome, not because of the territory gained, but because of the possibility that Ukrainian defenses might collapse," Cancian said. "A Russian breakthrough would restore maneuver to the battlefield, and Russia could bring its superior numbers to bear more effectively." They also serve the purpose of bolstering the Russian narrative of inevitable victory as Putin's first face-to-face meeting with Trump in six years looms. "Even before this latest advance, Putin thought that he was winning and that time was on his side," Cancian said. "These recent battlefield successes will reinforce those beliefs and make him less likely to consider compromise." John Helin, analyst and founder of the Black Bird Group intelligence analysis team that focused on the Russia-Ukraine war, echoed the broader threat the recent Russian infiltration poses to Ukraine's capacity to continue its defense in the long-term. "Even without a breakthrough the great risk is in the Ukrainian use of reserves and lack of manpower," Helin told Newsweek. "These sort of penetrations drain Ukrainian resources and stretch the frontline, further agitating Ukrainian manpower issues and making new penetrations possible." "Currently we are still quite some ways away from any active risk to Kramatorsk and Slovyansk," he added, "but the recent penetration proves that even using these infantry tactics Russia can move relatively rapidly, and that the Ukrainian frontline is strained to its limits." Relatives embrace in farewell as staff from the evacuation organization East SOS evacuate residents from Dobropillya, north of Pokrovsk, under the looming threat of Russian FPV attack drones on August 12, 2025 in Dobropillya, Ukraine.... Relatives embrace in farewell as staff from the evacuation organization East SOS evacuate residents from Dobropillya, north of Pokrovsk, under the looming threat of Russian FPV attack drones on August 12, 2025 in Dobropillya, Ukraine. MoreThe Kremlin's Cards Questions over Ukraine's long-term capability to sustain the war effort have proven central to the U.S. debate over the conflict, fueled in part by Russian narratives of inevitable victory. While European allies have largely committed to backing Ukraine indefinitely, Trump has publicly questioned Zelensky's position, famously telling the Ukrainian leader he did not "have the cards" during a heated exchange at the White House in February. Since then, Trump softened his tone on Ukraine and hardened his rhetoric toward Russia, for whom he threatened "very severe consequences" should the upcoming summit with Putin fail to yield a successful outcome on Wednesday. But with Trump acknowledging that territorial changes were on the line in the talks, the recent Russian advances could prove pivotal to Putin's leverage when he arrives in Alaska seeking permanent control over at least Donetsk and Luhansk, as U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff has suggested, and potentially—as the Russian leader has repeatedly demanded—Kherson and Zaporizhzhia as well. All four provinces were collectively annexed by Russia without international recognition following a wartime referendum held in September 2022. A fifth province, Crimea, was earlier taken by Russia following a similar unrecognized vote held in March 2014, after Russian forces seized the Black Sea peninsula in tandem with separatist uprisings in Donetsk and Luhansk, serving as prelude to the full-scale invasion launched eight years later. Russia remains in full control of Crimea, has thus far established near-total control over Luhansk and currently occupies around three-quarters of Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia. Altogether, the Russian presence accounts for nearly a fifth of Ukraine's entire territory. "Putin already has the initiative on the frontline, but having clear recent successes to point at can only strengthen his hand," Helin said. "Earlier this year Trump famously said that Ukraine holds no cards, and these kind of developments can easily act as proof of that opinion." Now, Helin argue, "Putin can come to the table and try to persuade Trump that freezing the frontlines is unacceptable because Russia has no incentive for it: it will beat Ukraine eventually anyhow." "That's not necessarily true, the Russians can still exhaust themselves and with the dynamics of this year, even with the recent penetration taking all of Donetsk is going to take the Russians a long time," he added, "but it likely does give some weight to Putin's arguments at the table as he seeks to convince Trump of his maximalist goals in Ukraine."


The Hill
a day ago
- The Hill
UN rejects plans by Sudan's paramilitary group for a rival government amid civil war
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The U.N. Security Council on Wednesday rejected plans by Sudan's paramilitary group to establish a rival government in areas it controls, warning that the move threatens the country's territorial integrity and risks further exacerbating the ongoing civil war. The strongly worded statement by the U.N.'s most powerful body 'unequivocally reaffirmed' its unwavering commitment to Sudan's sovereignty, independence and unity. Any steps to undermine these principles 'threaten not only the future of Sudan but also the peace and stability of the broader region,' the statement said. The 15-member council said the announcement by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces also risks 'fragmenting the country and worsening an already dire humanitarian situation.' Sudan plunged into conflict in mid-April 2023, when long-simmering tensions between its military and paramilitary leaders broke out in the capital, Khartoum, and spread to other regions, including western Darfur. Some 40,000 people have been killed, nearly 13 million displaced and many pushed to the brink of famine, U.N. agencies say. The RSF and their allies announced in late June that they had formed a parallel government in areas the group controls, mainly in the vast Darfur region where allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity are being investigated. The deputy prosecutor of the International Criminal Court said last month that the tribunal believes war crimes and crimes against humanity are taking place in Darfur, where the RSF controls all regional capitals except el-Fasher in North Darfur. The Security Council reiterated that its priority is a resumption of talks by both parties to reach a lasting ceasefire and create conditions for a political resolution of the war, starting with a civilian-led transition that leads to a democratically elected national government. Council members recalled their resolution adopted last year demanding that the RSF lift its siege of el-Fasher, 'where famine and extreme food insecurity conditions are at risk of spreading.' They expressed 'grave concern' at reports of a renewed RSF offensive on the besieged city. U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said Wednesday that a year ago, famine was declared in the Zamzam displacement camp in North Darfur. The risk of famine has since spread to 17 areas in Darfur and the Kordofan region, which is adjacent to North Darfur and west of Khartoum, he said. The U.N. World Food Program is calling for access to el-Fasher to deliver aid to people facing starvation, Dujarric said. 'As a coping mechanism, some residents of the area are reportedly surviving on animal fodder and food waste,' Dujarric said. WFP is providing digital cash to about 250,000 people in el-Fasher to buy dwindling food left in markets, he said, but escalating hunger makes it imperative to scale up assistance now. Sudan's foreign ministry accused the United Arab Emirates last month of sending Colombian mercenaries to fight alongside the RSF, saying the government has 'irrefutable evidence' that fighters from Colombia and some neighboring countries were sponsored and financed by Emirati authorities. The UAE's foreign affairs ministry said the government 'categorically rejects' the allegations and denies involvement in the war by backing armed groups. Without naming any countries, the Security Council urged all nations 'to refrain from external interference which seeks to foment conflict and instability' and to support peace efforts. The Security Council also condemned recent attacks in Kordofan that caused a high number of civilian casualties.


New York Post
a day ago
- New York Post
Lithuania wants to teach kids as young as 8 years old how to fly drones to counter Russian threats
The Lithuanian government plans to open nine drone training centers across the nation to teach more than 22,000 people — including children as young as eight years old — how to build and fly drones to counter any future threats from Russia. Defense Minister Dovilė Šakalienė touted the plan as a way to bolster the NATO member nation's security in the face of Russian aggression against Eastern Europe, where drone warfare has become the standout method of attack and defense in the modern era. 'We plan that 15,500 adults and 7,000 children will acquire drone control skills by 2028,' Šakalienė said in a statement. 4 Lithuanian Minister for National Defense Dovilė Šakalienė announced a plan to teach 22,000 people, including children, how to build and fly drones to counter Russia. AP 4 Drones have proven to be among the most effective tools for Ukraine's defense against Russia's full-scale invasion. AP Government officials noted that the program will be adapted to different age groups, which begins at the third- and fourth-grade level where students will learn to build and pilot simple drones. High school students will be tasked with learning the full design and manufacturing process of the drone parts as they learn how to fly the FPV drones, the same type as the ones used along the frontlines in Ukraine. The plan to 'expand civil resistance training' is estimated to cost nearly $4 million as Lithuania invests in advanced 'first-person view' (FPV) drones and a mobile app to oversee the training. Šakalienė said that by September, three drone training centers will open in Jonava, Tauragė and Kėdainiai, with six other facilities set to be rolled out in the next three years. 4 Russia has used its own mass drone system to launch ever-escalating bombardments against Ukraine. REUTERS Drones have proven themselves to be the most critical tool for both Ukraine and Russia during the war, which has raged on for more than three years. Moscow has used the UAVs to mount escalating assaults on Ukrainian military and civilian infrastructure, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky touting the same technology for allowing Kyiv to strike deep within Russia. Last month, Russian media celebrated the rollout of what Moscow dubbed the 'world's biggest drone factory,' which saw teens as young as 14 working on an assembly line to construct the Kremlin's killer drones. 4 Russian soldiers prep an attack drone to fly into Ukraine. AP Like the other Baltic nations, Lithuania has become increasingly worried about Russian President Vladimir Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, with many NATO member states preparing for the worst. Both Finland and Sweden have called on their residents to prepare for the possibility of war, issuing new guidance last fall on what to do if a conflict with Russia were to break out. Moscow, in turn, warned that the two nations — which joined NATO in 2022 following Russia's invasion of Ukraine — were viable nuclear targets in the event of war. Tensions soared higher following reports in April that the Kremlin expanded its military bases located just 100 miles from the Finnish border. With Post wires