February 7, 2008 (LPAC)--Destabilizations continue to spread throughout Africa, ranging from eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (the largest war in modern African history, with a death toll of 5.4 million, making it the deadliest conflict since World War II), to Kenya, to Somalia, and now to the border region of Chad and Sudan. An international war now looms in Eastern Chad and the Darfur region of Sudan. French Defense Minister Herve, in Chad today, pledged French support to the Chad government in its fight against anti-government rebels, who failed in their attempt to overthrow the Chad government of President Idriss Deby Itno over the weekend. U.S. diplomats at the UN are cited today in the French daily Le Monde, as being favorable to a French military intervention into the region. The justification being given, is that Sudan was behind the anti-Chad rebels, because it wanted a friendly government in Chad, which would not allow the EU military force to be installed in Chad, so Sudan would have a free hand to wipe out anti-Sudan rebels in Darfur, which borders on Chad.
Deby blames Sudan and Libya for the rebel action, which came from Darfur, and has threatened to pursue them into Sudan, while Sudan has said it will repel any attacks by Chad. The just-defeated anti-Deby rebels, who are closely allied to anti-Sudan rebels in Darfur, vow to go on the offensive again, against Deby. Thus, a crucible for international conflict between Chad and Sudan has been put in place.
If France and the United States are so worried about the survival of the Deby government, why didn't they warn Deby, with information they had from satellite and aerial reconnaissance, of the invading column of machine-gun toting pickup trucks, which took four days to drive all the way across Chad, from Sudan, before the column began attacking government installations in the capitol, N'Djamena? Was it to legitimize Chad's claim that Sudan wanted to destabilize Chad, so the strategic hornets' nest in eastern Chad and western Sudan could be set up?
The London-designed string of destabilizations designed to go off around the globe as the financial system collapses, is now set to expand to a conflict between Chad and Sudan, disguised as a regional conflict between two countries, supported by the United States and France, in the case of Chad, and by China in the case of Sudan, with the initiating role of London not being mentioned in the western media.