Sudan, Intelligence and Security
Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
|
2004
|
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information)
Copyright
Sudan, Intelligence and Security
Due to its role with connection to the international war on terrorism, Sudan has much greater importance in the realm of intelligence and security than do most nations of Africa's interior. Though it harbored al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden from 1991 to 1996, Sudan in 2001 became an unlikely ally of the United States in its efforts against Islamist terrorists.
The two principal intelligence agencies of the Sudanese government are Al Amn al-Dakhili and Al Amn al-Khariji, the bureaus of internal and external security respectively. Security issues in Sudan have, for the most part, sprung from internal issues, particularly a civil war with roots going back to the 1950s. The vast nation, Africa's largest geographically, is sharply divided culturally into northern and southern regions. The north, which the government controls, is Arabic and Islamic, whereas the south is sub-Saharan African and non-Muslim (either Christian or traditionalist). The opposition Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) controlled much of southern Sudan by the end of the twentieth century.
The Sudanese government has been notorious for its human rights violations, including the continuation of the black African slave trade in the 1990s. Its imposition of strict Muslim law on the south in 1983 sparked a civil war that claimed more than 1.5 million lives over the next 15 years. Meanwhile, the government in Khartoum provided safe haven to bin Laden, who had been exiled from his native Saudi Arabia. U.S. and Saudi pressure forced the Sudanese to eject bin Laden in 1996.
After the al-Qaeda attacks on U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, the U.S. military struck back at targets in Afghanistan and Sudan, whose Shifa Pharmaceutical Plant was reportedly making chemical weapons. In 2001, the Financial Times revealed that two months before the bombings, Sudanese external security bureau chief Gutbi al-Mahdi approached the regional head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and offered to share intelligence on al-Qaeda. Suspicious of Khartoum, the administration of President William J. Clinton declined the offer.
The inauguration of President George W. Bush in 2001 signaled a change in U.S.-Sudanese relations. Even before the September 11 terrorist attacks, Sudanese intelligence had begun providing Washington with information on suspected terrorists who had resided in the country during the period 1991–96. Soon after the attacks, a senior State Department official told the Washington Post that Khartoum had made an "implicit" offer for the use of its military bases to strike against al-Qaeda. In March 2002, Sudanese authorities captured and imprisoned Anas Al-Liby, a senior al-Qaeda militant.
The Khartoum government made a peace deal with the SPLA in July 2002, and the two sides began work toward a ceasefire agreement.
█ FURTHER READING:
PERIODICALS:
"Accused Al Qaeda Senior Militant Captured in Sudan." Los Angeles Times. (March 17, 2002): A20.
Alden, Edward, and Mark Turner. "Sudan's Surprise Deal with Rebels Catches Washington Off-Guard." Financial Times. (July 23, 2002): 10.
Huband, Mark. "U.S. Rejected Sudanese Files on al-Qaeda." Financial Times. (November 30, 2001): 1.
ELECTRONIC:
Sipress, Alan. "Sudan Provides Administration Intelligence on Bin Laden." Wall Street Journal (September 30, 2001): A14.
Sudan: Intelligence Agencies. Federation of American Scientists. <http://www.fas.org/irp/world/sudan/index.html> (March 1, 2003).
SEE ALSO
Egypt, Intelligence and Security
Kenya, Bombing of United States Embassy
Libya, Intelligence and Security
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
"Sudan, Intelligence and Security." Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security. The Gale Group Inc. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 22 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.
"Sudan, Intelligence and Security." Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security. The Gale Group Inc. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (November 22, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3403300726.html
"Sudan, Intelligence and Security." Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security. The Gale Group Inc. 2004. Retrieved November 22, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3403300726.html
Learn more about citation styles
|
Eye to (third) eye; scientists are taking advantage of unexpected similarities between the eye's retina and the brain's pineal gland.
Magazine article from: Science News; 11/9/1985; ; 700+ words
; ...suggestion that some cells in mammalian embryonic pineal glands resemble photoreceptor cells. The pineal gland does not, however, have the complex layered...the eye in processing information. "The pineal looks like a blob, compared to the retina...
|
|
Circadian genomics of the chick pineal gland in vitro.(Research article)
Magazine article from: BMC Genomics; 5/3/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...the cellular level, the avian pineal gland contains all the components needed...as in vivo [8, 9, 10]. The pineal glands of several species of birds rhythmically...rhythmically expressed in the chick pineal gland in vivo and in vitro , and rhythmic...
|
|
A Median Third Eye: Pineal Gland Retraces Evolution of Vertebrate Photoreceptive Organs[dagger]
Magazine article from: Photochemistry and Photobiology; 1/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...ABSTRACT In many vertebrates, the pineal gland serves as a photoreceptive neuroendocrine...functional similarities between the pineal and retinal photoreceptor cells indicate...hence the comparative studies on the pineal gland and the retina are the keys...
|
|
Melatonin and the pineal gland.
Magazine article from: Journal of Neuroscience Nursing; 4/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; Abstract: The pineal gland is an enigma within the central nervous...this information is relayed to the pineal gland. Light serves to suppress pineal...controls circadian patterns, it is the pineal gland that is considered the circadian timing...
|
|
Characterization of expressed sequence tags from a Gallus gallus pineal gland cDNA library.(Research Article)
Magazine article from: Comparative and Functional Genomics; 1/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; Abstract The pineal gland is the circadian oscillator in the...exposure, have been identified in the pineal gland (Semple-Rowland, 1999). Since...from a previously described chicken pineal gland-cDNA library (Chong et al., 2000...
|
|
Pineal gland speaks to the brain.
Magazine article from: Science News; 2/22/1986; 597 words
; Pineal gland speaks to brain The mammalian pineal gland, which sets the daily rhythm of hormone release that...winter (SN: 3/9/85, p. 152). In some reptiles the pineal gland acts as a light sensor, has direct neural connections with...
|
|
Seasonal Variations of Gonadotropins and Prolactin in the Laboratory Rat. Role of Maternal Pineal Gland
Magazine article from: Physiological Research; 1/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...influence of maternal pineal gland upon seasonal variations...melatonin from pineal gland on the secretion...fluctuations of melatonin or pineal gland synaptic body...inactivated the pineal gland or reduced the content...correlation between the pineal ...
|
|
The pineal gland and the immune system may talk via melatonin and cytokines.
Newspaper article from: Health & Medicine Week; 7/21/2003; 700+ words
; ...research from Poland, "The pineal gland is a vertebrate neuroendocrine...including lymphoid glands and immune cells, from...organ specificity. The pineal gland, via the rhythmical...reciprocally perceived by the pineal gland and provide feedback...
|
|
Pineal gland evolved to improve vision, according to theory by NICHD scientist.
Newspaper article from: Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week; 9/4/2004; 700+ words
; ...com & NewsRx.net) -- The pineal gland - which regulates the cycles of sleep...Neuroendocrinology. Klein studies melatonin, the pineal hormone that regulates sleep and...extends our understanding of the pineal gland as a factor controlling the...
|
|
Vertebral Metastases From Pineoblastoma.(malignant pineal gland tumor)
Magazine article from: Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine; 7/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...Pineoblastoma is a rare malignant primary pineal gland tumor that frequently metastasizes...neuraxis.[1] In a recent study of 76 pineal parenchymal tumors (PPTs),[2...of the relapses were outside the pineal region, and spinal relapses were...
|
|
pineal gland
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
pineal gland , small organ (about the size of a pea...the structure, which is also called the pineal body or the epiphysis, is present in most...In many animals, including humans, the pineal gland synthesizes a hormone called melatonin...
|
|
pineal
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
...pinēəl; ˈpī- / (also pineal gland , pineal body ) • n. a pea-sized conical mass of tissue behind...some mammals. • adj. of, denoting, or relating to the pineal.
|
|
pineal body
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
pineal body (pineal gland) Small gland attached to the under-surface of the vertebrate brain. In human beings, it has an endocrine function, secreting the hormone melatonin, which is involved in daily rhythms. See also endocrine system
|
|
Endocrine Glands
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of Psychology
...entire body. The endocrine glands — the pineal, pituitary, thyroid, parathyroids...system. The hypothalamus , the gland in the brain which serves...pituitary, a pea-sized gland located under it, which directs the work of all the other glands. The thyroid, a gland in the neck, ...
|
|
Melatonin
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of Alternative Medicine
...melatonin that is released by the pineal gland, thereby enhancing and regulating...produced at its highest level in the pineal gland during darkness. Since melatonin...supplements contain actual extracts from pineal glands. Synthetic melatonin is made from...
|