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HomeNewsExclusive: Fall of El-Fasher Engineered by UAE-Backed Electronic Warfare Operation

Exclusive: Fall of El-Fasher Engineered by UAE-Backed Electronic Warfare Operation

A shocking new investigation has revealed that the fall of El-Fasher was not the result of conventional warfare — but a devastating, foreign-backed digital siege that silenced an entire city before it fell.

According to findings published by AfricanHub, the collapse of El-Fasher on October 26 was orchestrated through a high-tech electronic warfare campaign financed and supported by the United Arab Emirates. The operation crippled all communication systems — from military radios to Thuraya and even Starlink satellite terminals — plunging Sudanese forces into isolation and chaos.

For hours, soldiers trapped in the besieged city were unable to receive or transmit orders. Units were cut off, unable to coordinate retreats or request reinforcements. In the ensuing confusion, hundreds of Sudanese troops were reportedly massacred as commanders fled and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) fighters swept through the city.

Exclusive testimonies and technical analyses point to the use of advanced Chinese-made jamming systems — including Wolves Team and Norinco multi-band disruptors — supplied and trained on by UAE operatives. Engineers confirmed that the electromagnetic blackout was “targeted, deliberate, and unprecedented” in scope.

“This wasn’t a communications failure — it was a precision strike in the digital domain,” said one Sudanese telecom expert involved in the investigation. “Every signal — military or civilian — was jammed simultaneously. It was total blackout warfare.”

Images obtained from the frontlines show RSF operatives carrying backpack-mounted jammers capable of neutralizing satellite networks within a wide radius. Analysts say the El-Fasher operation marked the first verified instance of full-scale electronic warfare being deployed in an African conflict.

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Since April 2023, intelligence reports have linked the UAE to the RSF’s growing technological edge — from drone warfare to logistics and now, electromagnetic dominance. El-Fasher, investigators warn, was “a live experiment” in 21st-century proxy warfare.

“The Sudanese army wasn’t defeated — it was digitally erased,” an African security analyst told AfricanHub. “What happened in El-Fasher shows how modern conflict is shifting: from bullets to bandwidth, from firepower to frequency.”

As the world grapples with the aftermath, experts fear the event may become a model for future proxy wars — where technology, not troops, decides the fate of nations.

Source: AfricanHub

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