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US helping from afar as Americans flee fighting in Sudan


WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House said Monday the U.S. is trying to help thousands of Americans left behind in Sudan escape fighting in the east African nation, after the U.S. Embassy evacuated all of its diplomatic personnel over the weekend and shut down.

President Joe Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, defended the decision not to keep U.S. forces or diplomats in Sudan to help its citizens evacuate as several other foreign nations were still doing Monday, and as the U.S. has done in some conflict zones in the past.

Instead, Sullivan told reporters, the U.S. was now trying to remotely assist Americans trying to flee the country by road.

That included helping Americans in Sudan link up with convoys of foreigners now attempting to make it through fighting toward safety on Sudan’s eastern border.

The U.S. also is placing intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets over the route from the capital, Khartoum, to the country’s main seaport, the Port of Sudan, Sullivan said, to scope out safety threats.

Fighting between armed factions loyal to two rival commanders now battling for control of Sudan was making the journey a dangerous one for countless foreigners trying to escape fighting.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he had helped broker a 72-hour cease-fire to begin late Monday. It would extend a nominal truce coinciding with a Muslim holiday that brought almost no reduction in fighting but helped to facilitate the evacuations.

Sullivan said convoys with Americans in them were beginning to arrive at Port of Sudan on the Red Sea and the U.S. was working with neighboring countries to get them safely over the border.

Foreign governments have been airlifting hundreds of their diplomats and other citizens to safety as Sudan has spiraled into chaos. In dramatic evacuation operations, convoys of foreign diplomats, teachers, students, workers and their families from dozens of countries have wound past combatants at tense front lines in Khartoum to reach extraction points.

Others have driven hundreds of miles to Sudan’s east coast. A stream of European, Mideast, African and Asian military aircraft flew in all day Sunday and Monday to ferry them out.

U.S. special operations forces carried out a precarious evacuation at the U.S. Embassy in Sudan on Sunday, sweeping in and out of the capital with helicopters on the ground for less than an hour. No shots were fired and no major casualties were reported.

U.S. officials said members of the Navy’s elite Seal Team 6 were the main force in the evacuation of the embassy staff, using helicopters piloted by the Army’s 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment.

In Sudan, an estimated 16,000 private U.S. citizens are registered with the embassy as being in Sudan. The figure is rough because not all Americans registered with the embassy or notified the embassy when they depart.

Sullivan reiterated that the administration continues to look at “every conceivable option” to help Americans get out of Sudan but is not considering troops.

“It is not standard practice for the United States to send in the U.S. military” to extract American citizens from warzones, Sullivan said “We didn’t do it in Libya. We didn’t do it in Syria. We didn’t do it in Yemen, and no we didn’t do it in Ukraine. Afghanistan was a unique case involving the end of the 20-year war that the United States was centrally involved in.”

However, Sullivan omitted several other recent instances in which U.S. forces deployed to get American citizens out of danger in foreign wars.

In 2006, the State Department and Department of Defense cooperated in one of the largest evacuations of Americans in modern times, using helicopters, military warships and U.S.-contracted commercial shipping to extract 15,000 Americans from Lebanon when cross-border fighting flared between Lebanon-based Hezbollah and Israel.

Between 1991 and 2004, U.S. Marines evacuated U.S. citizens from conflict zones at least 10 other times, including going deep into the bush in Liberia to extract American citizens in 2003; an evacuation in Haiti in 2004; and during several post-Cold War conflicts in Africa.

U.S. diplomats, too, in the past were sometimes credited with staying on in U.S. embassies to serve U.S. citizens and seek to provide a stabilizing presence. In Liberia in 2003, for instance, then-U.S. Ambassador John Blaney stayed in Liberia’s capital as mortars pounded the city, crossing front lines and meeting with warlords to successfully mediate an end to deadly fighting. It earned Blaney the State Department’s highest honor, the Distinguished Service Award.

Sullivan said the U.S. “will go to great lengths to support and facilitate” the departure of Americans but also noted that the State Department…



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