Exclusive: Egypt and Turkey boost support for Sudan's army following RSF capture
of el-
Sudanese Armed Forces coordinating with regional allies following atrocities by Rapid Support Forces in North Darfur and Kordofan
06.11.2025
By MEE correspondent in Cairo and Oscar Rickett in London and Ragip Soylu in Ankara
Source: https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/egypt-
When the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) seized el-
As RSF fighters subject the people of el-
The fall of North Darfur’s capital is a turning point. Egypt has always played a part in this war. The Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), which has been fighting the RSF since April 2023, enjoys a longstanding relationship with Egypt’s military, and Cairo has helped its ally throughout the war.
But the RSF's capture of the Sudanese section of the arid triangle border region
that includes parts of Egypt and Libya in June, followed by the horrors of el-
Fearing that, unchecked, the war could spill over its frontiers, the government of
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-
Meanwhile, the SAF and its Joint Forces allies, which were outgunned in el-
“SAF expects Egypt and Turkey to provide it with weapons after the fall of el-
With this in mind, Egypt has quietly reinforced its positions along the frontier with Sudan and Libya. Rather than waiting for danger to reach its gates, it is working closely with Sudan’s army to push it back.
Egypt moves to help the SAF
A senior Egyptian military intelligence source told Middle East Eye that “cooperation has been underway between the Egyptian and Sudanese armies to set up a joint command force to deter RSF and any possible infiltration into Egypt through the borders with Sudan or Libya.”
The urgency of the situation for Cairo was underscored when the Egyptian army’s chief
of staff, Lieutenant General Ahmed Fathi, made two visits within 24 hours -
In Saudi Arabia, which is believed to favour the SAF in Sudan's war, Fathi co-
According to the same Egyptian source, the visit paved the way for a joint operations
room in North Kordofan and new early-
This region of Sudan is rich in oil. But Bara is also about four hours from the capital Khartoum and its twin city, Omdurman. The RSF, which took the capital region at the beginning of the war but lost it to the SAF in March this year, is believed to be planning an attack on Omdurman
“The RSF’s planned attack on Omdurman in the coming months could hasten Cairo’s involvement as the capital has always been a red line for the Egyptians,” Khair said.
The senior Egyptian military intelligence source said: “The joint operations room in Kordofan will enable Egypt to restore the Sudanese army’s presence in areas recently seized by the RSF… regaining control of Darfur is vital for regional stability and safeguarding Egypt’s borders.”
Cairo's strategic shift
On the ground, Egypt has mobilised troops along both its Sudanese and Libyan frontiers, conducting continuous air patrols.
“The Egyptian Air Force has avoided approaching RSF-
Another official Egyptian source told MEE that “Egypt has supplied Sudan under Sudanese
General Abdel Fattah al-
The source warned that “mistakes or delays in responding to RSF movements could threaten Egypt’s border security”.
For Egypt, the capture of el-
The town had long been a link between east and west Darfur, and its fall effectively splits the vast western region of Sudan, which is now under the RSF’s control, from the rest of the country. This, once again, raises the prospect that Sudan will break in two.
The RSF’s capture of the Sudanese part of the triangle region and of el-
“The RSF’s growing power creates a vacuum that non-
The UAE in Sudan
The rise of the RSF and the atrocities it is committing in el-
Though Abu Dhabi denies it, extensive reporting from Middle East Eye using satellite imagery, flight and ship tracking data, video evidence, weapons serial numbers and multiple sources from across the region, indicates that the UAE has supplied weapons to the RSF throughout the war.
Using routes that include the port of Bosaso in Somalia’s Puntland region, bases
in southeastern Libya under the control of General Khalifa Haftar, Chad, the Central
African Republic and airbases in Uganda, the UAE, which has a longstanding relationship
with Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, the RSF chief better known as Hemedti, has been able
to transport supplies to two bases inside Sudan, Nyala in South Darfur and al-
The RSF contributed at least 40,000 fighters to the UAE’s coalition in Yemen a decade ago, and Hemedti’s financial links to the Gulf state, which are primarily in gold and agricultural land, have helped him amass an estimated fortune of $7bn.
The US has previously accused the RSF of genocide in Darfur and sanctioned RSF leaders. Egypt, whose ailing economy is dependent on what US President Donald Trump called the “unbelievable cash” of the UAE, is juggling diplomacy with an increasingly militarised policy on its borders.
Support from Turkey
In a significant development, the Egyptian and Turkish armies have begun cooperating directly over Sudan, marking a rare convergence between two regional rivals.
According to a high-
“Preparations are underway for a potential future offensive to retake el-
A Turkish source with direct knowledge of the matter told Middle East Eye that Turkey is planning to increase its support for the Sudanese army.
“We were already planning to send more systems, but the el-
Turkey has, since last year, supplied the SAF with military drones, air-
The Turkish source argued that Ankara could not supply air defence systems to the SAF because it had a limited quantity of such locally produced equipment.
Corroborating MEE’s Egyptian and Sudanese sources, Turkish sources said that Egypt had been quietly backing the Sudanese army throughout the war. “Now,” one of these insiders said, “the Egyptians are comfortable being more visible, since the RSF disrupted diplomatic negotiations in Washington.”
Sudanese parties have been negotiating in Washington for over two weeks, even as
el-
“It is now almost certain that SAF has rejected the ceasefire,” Khair said. “This
will be embarrassing for Cairo, after Trump effectively charged Sisi with securing
SAF’s buy-
To counter the split between RSF-
“This will allow for the Sudanese army’s presence in areas recently taken by the
RSF and stabilise the wider region,” the high-