Hemedti’s Speech… Plan (C)!!

As I See It
By Adel Al-Baz
Yesterday, the rebel Hemedti appeared in good physical condition but in a difficult psychological state, announcing Plan (C) after the failure of Plan (B). A constant element in all his “decisive” plans is lies.
In the first plan (the coup and takeover), he started with the lie about who fired the first shot, completely forgetting that 140 military vehicles occupied Merowe Airport, and thousands of soldiers took over the capital early, declaring in the streets, “We have taken Sudan.” As for Plan (B), which he promised the fools within the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and its social base, it was the so-called “Million-Man Invasion” from abroad. Clearly, all his plans and lies have failed, leading to repeated defeats, forcing him now to move on to Plan (C).
Plan (C): More Lies
This new plan is also based on deception. He tells his deceived forces:
“To all units on all fronts, do not think about what the army took from us in the General Command (Central Khartoum), the Signal Corps (Bahri), Jili Town (North of Khartoum), and Wad Madani (capital of Al-Jazira State).”
He claims that all these areas will be recaptured and that his forces should focus on what they can achieve rather than what they have lost. He insists:
“Our forces can once again drive the army out of Khartoum, just as we did before.”
This delusion suggests that they fought and captured the Republican Palace, national radio and TV, and government institutions—when in reality, these locations were entrusted to him for security before he decided on his coup, seizing them without firing a single shot! Now, how does he expect to reclaim them while his forces are being relentlessly crushed by the advancing army?
Another lie he constantly repeats is that this war is being orchestrated by Ali Karti and Osama Abdallah, while at the same time claiming that Burhan is personally trying to kill him. Such contradictory nonsense exposes the chaos within his rebel faction as he stumbles through one failure after another.
Hemedti has lost his ability to fight, his logic, and even his mind—if he ever had one. Who is he even addressing in this speech?
The Sudanese people, who see firsthand who is dying on the battlefield?
The “Taqaddum” supporters, who mock him at night while milking his funds during the day?
Or his deceived, demoralized fighters, who are being annihilated every day?
The Technology Myth
Plan (C) also relies on technology, including:
Drones
Long-range artillery
Satellite espionage
Advanced jamming vehicles (like the Russian ones captured in Bahri)
Of course, these high-tech weapons won’t be operated by Hemedti’s fighters or South Sudanese mercenaries but by foreign mercenaries from Europe, Colombia, and Russia.
Every day, aircraft deliver these advanced weapons to Nyala Airport, and they are used to kill civilians in El-Fasher. Just last week, a drone attack on El-Fasher hospital killed 70 patients!
However, these drones and long-range missiles won’t bring victory. Despite the weapons supplied by his foreign sponsors, his forces continue to collapse. If technology alone could win wars:
Israel would have won in Gaza
The U.S. and the Soviet Union would have defeated the Taliban
Russia would have crushed Ukraine
If you don’t have a cause and fighters willing to defend it, you will never win—no matter how much money your backers spend. And despite constant technological reinforcements, the RSF militia is falling apart.
The Third Element of Plan (C)
To boost his forces’ shattered morale, Hemedti announced a third element of Plan (C), promising:
“This time, the RSF will take control of specific areas.”
He refused to specify which areas but hinted that details would be revealed in commanders’ orders.
However, how can the RSF take new areas when they are fleeing from the ones they already occupied? And what’s the point of capturing new areas if they lack the strength to hold them?
Clearly, he is referring to two places:
1. El-Fasher (which remains resilient, with reinforcements heading its way)
2. Dabba (where the army arrived two weeks ago with enough forces to repel any attack)
Any RSF attack on Dabba would be a suicidal move. If they attempt this reckless adventure, they will be crushed before reaching El-Fasher.
The Only Plan That Could Work
Hemedti keeps jumping from one failed plan to an even worse one. The only realistic plan—the one he hasn’t even considered—is:
Complete surrender, ending the war, and dissolving the RSF lie.
But Hemedti and his backers are too historically and strategically foolish to realize this truth.