
Sudan Rejects U.S.-Backed Ceasefire Framework as War Enters Protracted Phase
Executive Overview
On 24 February 2026, Sudan’s government formally rejected a U.S.-supported ceasefire roadmap presented days earlier before the United Nations Security Council. The proposal, introduced by Massad Boulos, advisor to former U.S. President Donald Trump on Africa and the Middle East, outlined a phased path toward de-escalation, humanitarian stabilization, and political transition.
Khartoum’s response was unequivocal. In an official statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs declared that any proposal failing to safeguard Sudan’s “supreme national interests” would neither be approved nor implemented. The decision reinforces a consistent strategic posture adopted by the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF): resistance to externally mediated frameworks perceived as undermining sovereignty or institutional control.
The rejection further entrenches a diplomatic deadlock amid one of the world’s most severe humanitarian crises.
The American Roadmap: Structured De-Escalation and Political Transition
The U.S. proposal presented on 19 February consisted of five sequential pillars:
1. Immediate humanitarian truce
2. United Nations supervision of aid corridors
3. Gradual negotiation of a permanent ceasefire
4. Transition toward civilian governance
5. Organization of democratic elections
While the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) signalled conditional acceptance in principle, Sudan’s military leadership rejected the plan in its entirety.
From Khartoum’s perspective, the sequencing of ceasefire before military restructuring risks legitimizing the RSF as a parallel armed authority. The SAF leadership appears unwilling to engage in any arrangement that could consolidate the paramilitary group’s political or territorial leverage before a decisive shift in battlefield dynamics.
A Consistent Pattern of Refusal
This latest rejection aligns with a broader pattern. Since late 2025, Khartoum has systematically declined mediation efforts:
- A Quartet-backed proposal was dismissed in September 2025.
- In November, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan publicly criticized an earlier U.S. initiative as fundamentally flawed, alleging it sought to weaken the national army while preserving militia structures.
The current refusal is therefore not reactive but strategic. The SAF continues to prioritize institutional preservation and military consolidation over negotiated compromise.
Sovereignty and the Quartet Question
Sudan’s objections extend beyond procedural concerns to geopolitical mistrust. The mediation Quartet—composed of the United States, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Egypt—remains controversial in Khartoum.
Sudanese officials have repeatedly accused the United Arab Emirates of supplying arms and drones to the RSF, allegations Abu Dhabi denies. Whether substantiated or not, these accusations have deepened perceptions within the SAF that the mediation architecture is politically skewed.
The government maintains that no external actor will dictate Sudan’s internal political restructuring. Sovereignty has become not only a legal principle but a central narrative tool framing the conflict as resistance to foreign interference.
Humanitarian Collapse Under Diplomatic Stalemate
Since the outbreak of hostilities in April 2023 between SAF and RSF forces, Sudan has experienced catastrophic humanitarian consequences:
- Over 40,000 reported deaths (with many estimates suggesting significantly higher figures)
- More than 14 million displaced persons
- Severe food insecurity and famine risk
- Near-total collapse of health and public services in several regions
The United Nations continues to describe Sudan as facing the most acute humanitarian emergency globally.
Despite these realities, the military leadership appears to calculate that premature compromise would jeopardize long-term institutional dominance.
Strategic Assessment
1. Military Consolidation Before Negotiation
The SAF leadership appears to be operating under a clear assumption: negotiation should follow battlefield stabilization, not precede it. Entering a structured political transition while territorial control remains contested could weaken state authority.
2. Prolonged Stalemate Risk
Without a viable diplomatic channel, Sudan risks descending further into a protracted war of attrition characterized by fragmented governance, localized armed economies, and deepening civilian suffering.
3. Erosion of International Mediation Leverage
Repeated rejections may reduce international engagement capacity over time. Washington reportedly aimed for July 4, 2026, as a symbolic target date for a peace agreement. That objective now appears increasingly unrealistic.
Outlook
Sudan’s rejection of the U.S.-backed ceasefire framework underscores a broader strategic reality: the conflict is no longer merely a power struggle between rival commanders, but a contest over the future structure of the Sudanese state.
Khartoum has chosen to prioritize sovereignty and military continuity over externally designed transition frameworks. However, the longer diplomatic paralysis persists, the greater the humanitarian cost and the higher the risk of regional destabilization.
Absent recalibrated mediation mechanisms capable of addressing sovereignty concerns while preventing further civilian collapse, Sudan’s war is likely to enter an extended and increasingly complex phase.
The current trajectory suggests endurance over compromise—at significant national and regional cost.
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Sudan Rejects U.S.-Backed Ceasefire Framework as War Enters Protracted Phase
On 24 February 2026, Sudan’s government formally rejected a U.S.-supported ceasefire roadmap presented days earlier before the United Nations Security Council.
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