Sudan today stands on the edge of a historic turning point that recalls moments when the nation stood alone against the ambitions of foreign powers. How similar tonight is to last night; colonial projects, with their modern tools and methods, return in different attire but with the same objectives: control of land and resources, and the reshaping of political geography in ways that serve forces seeking influence at the expense of Sudanese blood.
For this reason, the need is existential for the establishment of a broad Sudanese national front that reorganizes the national ranks in confronting this advance taking shape in the media, diplomacy, politics, and the tactics of proxy wars. It is a moment that requires rising above ideology and narrow partisan loyalties, unifying belonging under the banner of the homeland, just as our ancestors did when they stood as an unbreakable barrier before the colonizer.
And although the people rally around the army, the scale of the challenge facing Sudan is far greater than what a single institution can bear. What is required today is a civil, military, political, diplomatic, and media alignment that weaves a solid system preventing the state from fragmentation and reorganizes Sudanese power in one direction: protecting the country and securing it.
What heightens concern is not the internal situation alone, but also what UN reports have revealed about the nature of the war. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk stated that Sudan is “stuck in a proxy war being fought to control its natural resources,” warning of atrocities committed in El Fasher, including mass executions, rape, abductions, and targeting of medical facilities.
He affirmed that the international community “pretends to be concerned but does little,” while violations proceed without deterrence. In West Kordofan, the same scene is repeated, where areas are subjected to bombing, systematic siege, and forced displacement, as happened recently in the city of Babnousa, turning it into a war zone whose boundaries are drawn in blood.
In this context, the national front becomes an existential necessity, as it must include native administrations, university professors, scholars, doctors, lawyers, professional and sectoral unions, political leaders, activists, organizations, workers, farmers, craftsmen, students, and women’s sectors, to become a political and social lifeline reflecting Sudan’s strength across all its classes, generations, and aspirations, turning any external project into an unbreakable rock.
The national front, if established, will not be a mere organizational structure, but a unifying national condition that restores Sudan’s confidence in itself and renews hope for future generations in a strong state capable of confronting challenges. It is a historic moment that requires a courageous decision to reshape the country’s destiny before external forces impose their conditions on our people and our land.
Internally, this front is expected to create a qualitative transformation by reorganizing national ranks, unifying public discourse, and granting renewed confidence to state institutions in facing multiple pressures. It will create a political framework that elevates coordination between civilians and the military, restores discipline to the media sphere, and closes the doors to external manipulation of awareness and public opinion.
Regionally, the emergence of a unified national front will reposition Sudan within its surroundings and curb the appetite of forces betting on internal division. States, regardless of their interests, deal with greater respect for countries that demonstrate unity of decision and institutional strength. If the front is founded on a clear vision, it will restore Sudan’s weight in the Red Sea and Horn of Africa equations and form a barrier against ambitions targeting its resources and vital routes.
Internationally, this front will force covetous parties to recalculate. A united Sudan is not an open arena for proxy wars, but a party capable of imposing its terms in matters related to peace, relief, ports, and natural resources. It will also reduce the impact of targeted propaganda and grant Sudanese diplomacy a stronger platform for negotiation, defending rights, and regaining initiative instead of remaining in a reactive position.
Thus, according to #Face_of_Truth, the national front does not appear as a political option but as a historical necessity through which the country restores the legacy of generations who resisted in the past so we are not defeated in the present. It is a call for Sudan to stand once again as one rank in the face of a new colonialism. This front awaits the decision of the country’s leadership today before tomorrow. If it arises, it will not be merely a political title, but a national state that changes the equation and restores the spirit of the state. It is a step that not only saves Sudan’s present, but lays the foundation for a future worthy of its history and sends a message to the world that when Sudanese unite, no one can defeat or blackmail them.
Wishing you well and good health.
Monday, 8 December 2025
Shglawi55@gmail.com
