The Army Will Hinder Dagalo at This Rate, Folks!!

By Mahjoub Fadl Badri
The “Dignity War” has shocked us with the true colors of many whom we once considered friends. There are countless examples of this, including Professor Al-Amin Al-Doudou Abdullah, who previously served as Chad’s ambassador to Cairo before being dismissed by Mahamat Déby in his first decision after assuming the Chadian presidency.
I heard Al-Amin Al-Doudou saying, “Congratulations! Wherever you go, you’ll find the Junayd sons, the Atawiya, and the Himayd—these are your people,” as he addressed and incited Hussein Chucho, one of the leaders of the Chadian “Madhloom” movement. Chucho was seen strutting with his weapon in southern Khartoum before he met his end, like many other mercenaries before him.
What pains me the most about such individuals is that we shared bonds of friendship and camaraderie. Meanwhile, we saw the ruthless betrayal of militia fighters, who turned against their own army comrades at posts they were supposed to guard together. They captured their fellow soldiers, depriving them of even the most basic necessities. They besieged the General Command headquarters until those inside were forced to burn wooden doors and windows for fuel after cutting down all the trees in the barracks for the same purpose.
Then the tide turned. The army seized the initiative, shifting from defense to offense. It overran all the strongholds of the terrorist Dagalo militia, shattered its core forces, eliminated its commanders, and captured vast supplies of weapons, ammunition, and provisions sent by a certain hostile state.
All signs and indications point to a near victory, God willing. The army has defied observers’ expectations, moving from city to city, village to village—not daily, but hourly. The Commander-in-Chief, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, has astonished everyone by inspecting frontline positions personally, without prior announcements or public rallies, setting an example of true leadership. Meanwhile, Hemedti hides behind the curtains, behind which only God knows what lies.
With its battlefield achievements, the army is effectively signing the death certificate of the Dagalo terrorist militia. The only thing left is to bring down the final curtain on the sight of their rotting corpses, scattered across every place they once sought refuge from the might of the Sudanese Armed Forces, the Joint Forces, the Police, the Security Service, and all the mobilized citizens across the beloved homeland.
Many writers struggle to keep up with the army’s victories and the countless movements of the Commander-in-Chief, the Chairman of the Sovereignty Council. Some even ponder what the army will do next with the remaining militia fighters and their collaborators—those whom we once considered friends.
The reality is that the army is advancing steadily, strongly, and relentlessly. This prompted one observer to comment:
“At this rate, the army is seriously hindering Dagalo!”
Or as one mujahid once said during an operation in the South Sudan war, when he participated in battle for the first time:
After surviving an ambush and clearing it following a short but intense battle, he caught his breath amid the deafening mortar explosions, grenade blasts, and bullets whizzing past him and exclaimed:
“By God, at this rate, even the Majors (Najoor) are getting in trouble!”
And indeed, that’s the truth!
Source: Al-Muhaqqiq News