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South Sudan People's Defence Forces

The South Sudan People's Defence Forces (SSPDF), formerly the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), is the army of the Republic of South Sudan. The SPLA was founded as a guerrilla movement against the government of Sudan in 1983 and was a key participant of the Second Sudanese Civil War, led by John Garang. After Garang's death in 2005, Salva Kiir was named the SPLA's new Commander-in-Chief. As of 2010, the SPLA was divided into divisions of 10,000–14,000 soldiers.

South Sudan People's Defence Forces
Flag of the South Sudan People's Defence Forces
Founded1983
Current form2018
Service branchesGround Force
Air Force and Air Defence
Riverine/Navy[1]
HeadquartersBilpham, Central Equatoria
Malual-Chaat, Bor
Wunyiek, Northern Bahr el Ghazal
Mapel, Western Bahr el Ghazal
Leadership
Commander-in-chiefSalva Kiir Mayardit
Minister of Defence and Veterans AffairsChol Thon Balok
Chief of Defense ForcesGeneral Santino Deng Wol (since 11 April 2021)[2]
Personnel
Military age7
Active personnel185,000[3]
Expenditures
Budget£10,240,750,031 SSP ($78,615,712) [2016/17][citation needed]
Percent of GDP0.86% (2015 est.)
Industry
Domestic suppliersMilitary Industry Corporation
Related articles
HistoryMilitary history of South Sudan

(SPLM)

RanksMilitary ranks of South Sudan

Following the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in 2005, the last remaining large and well-equipped militia, the South Sudan Defence Forces (SSDF), under General Paulino Matiep, signed an agreement with Kiir known as the Juba Declaration, which amalgamated the two forces under the SPLA banner.

Following South Sudan's independence in 2011, Kiir became President and the SPLA became the new republic's regular army. In May 2017 there was a restructure and the SPLA took on the name of South Sudan Defence Forces (SSDF), with another change in September 2018 to South Sudan People's Defence Forces. As of 2018, the army was estimated to have 185,000 soldiers as well as an unknown number of personnel in the small South Sudan Air Force. As of 2019, the SSPDF comprised the Ground Force, Air Force, Air Defence Forces and Presidential Guard.

History edit

1983: Inception edit

On 16 May 1983 105 Battalion launched a mutiny in Malual-Chaat barrack, Bor against the Sudanese army which later inspired a number of mutinies in the southern region[4] including those at Ayod, Pochalla, and Pibor. These mutinies led to the creation of the SPLA[5][6] later that year.[7]

At its inception John Garang was the SPLA's Commander-in-Chief.[8][9] Kerubino Kuanyin Bol was appointed second ranking Commander, and William Nyuon Bany third.[5] By June 1983, the majority of mutineers had moved to Ethiopia or were on their way there. The Ethiopian government's decision to support the emerging SPLA was a means of exacting revenge upon the Sudanese government for its support of Eritrean rebels.[10]

The SPLA struggled for a united and secular Sudanese state.[11] Garang said the struggle of the South Sudanese was the same as that of marginalised groups in the north, such as the Nuba and Fur peoples.[12] Until 1985, the SPLA directed its public denouncements of the Sudanese government specifically at Sudanese President, Gaafar Nimeiry. During the years that followed, SPLA propaganda denounced the Khartoum government as a family affair that played on sectarian tensions.[12] The SPLA denounced the introduction of Sharia law in September 1983.[13]

War in the 1980s edit

 
Official flag of the Sudan People's Liberation Army until 2011

The first fully-fledged SPLA battalion graduated in 1984 in the village of Bilpam. The name 'Bilpam' carried great symbolic importance for SPLA for years to come, as the epicentre of the uprising. After Bilpam, other SPLA training camps were established at Dimma, Bonga and Panyido.[10]

In the mid-1980s the SPLA armed struggle blocked development projects of the Sudanese government, such as the Bentiu Oil Fields.[14]

The SPLA launched its first advance into Equatoria in 1985 and 1986. During this campaign, the SPLA were confronted by a number of pro-government militias. The conduct of SPLA forces was chaotic, with many atrocities against the civilian population. The SPLA drove out around 35,000 Ugandan refugees (who had settled in Equatoria since the early 1980s) back into Uganda.[15]

The SPLA had a complicated relationship with the Anyanya II, a fellow southern Sudanese rebel group. The Anyanya II forces blocked the expansion of the SPLA between 1984 and 1987, as Anyanya II attacked SPLA recruits heading for Ethiopia. The Anyanya II also attacked civilians believed to be SPLA supporters.[16] The conflict between Anyanya II and SPLA had a political dimension, as Anyanya II sought to build an independent southern Sudanese state.[17] The SPLA tried to win over the leaders of Anyanya II.[18] The Anyanya II commander Gordon Kong Chuol aligned with The SPLA in late 1987. Other sectors of the Anyanya II followed his example over the ensuing years, marginalizing the remainder of the Anyanya II who were allied with the Sudanese government.[19]

Another force that confronted SPLA were the Murahaleen militias in northern Bahr el-Ghazal. Warfare between SPLA and Muraleheen began in 1987. By 1988 SPLA controlled most of the northern Bahr el-Ghazal.[15] Unlike the Anyanya II, the Murahaleen had no political ambitions.[17]

In March 1986, the SPLA kidnapped a Norwegian aid worker of the Christian NGO Kirkens Nødhjelp (Norwegian Church Aid).[20] Moorcroft writes that by this time, 'training, weapons, and discipline improved as the guerillas won more and more victories. In November 1987 the guerillas captured the small town of Kurmak near the Ethiopian border. It was 450 miles from the capital, but the nearby dam provided most of Khartoum's electricity.'[21]

Political openings edit

The SPLA boycotted the 1986 Sudanese parliamentary election. In half of the constituencies of southern Sudan elections could not be held due to the SPLA boycott.[12][22]

On November 15, 1988, the SPLA entered into an alliance with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). The two groups agreed on the lifting of the state of emergency and abolition of Sharia law. The press release was made public through an announcement on Radio SPLA. After the DUP rejoined the government, a ceasefire with the SPLA was achieved.[12][23] After the elections, negotiations between the SPLA and Sadiq al-Mahdi started, but were aborted after the SPLA shot down a civilian airplane, killing 60 people.[12]

All peace talks ended following the 1989 Sudanese coup d'état.[24] In September 1989, the ruling Revolutionary Command Council for National Salvation (RCC) invited different sectors to a 'National Dialogue Conference', but the SPLA refused to attend.[25]

The SPLA launched a major offensive between 1989 and the fall of the Ethiopian Derg government in 1991. It captured various towns, such as Bor, Waat, Maridi, Mundri, Yambio, Kaya, Kajo Keji, Nimule, Kapoeta, Torit, Akobo and Nasir. By the middle of 1991, the SPLA controlled most parts of southern Sudan with the exception of the major garrison towns (Juba, Yei, Malakal and Wau)[18] Between January 21 and 29, 1990, SPLA shelled Juba. SPLA forces also moved into the Nuba Mountains and the southern parts of the Blue Nile State. In comparison with its 1985–1986 offensive in Equatoria, the conduct of SPLA was now more orderly.[15]

1991: Setback and split edit

 
High-ranking SPLA officers at the South Sudan independence celebrations, 2011

The downfall of the Derg government in Ethiopia in May 1991 proved to be a major setback. The Ethiopian government had provided the SPLA with military supplies, training facilities and a safe haven for bases for 18 years. Soon after the change of government in Ethiopia, the SPLA accompanied hundreds of thousands of refugees back into Sudan.[18]

A split in the SPLA had simmered since late 1990, as Lam Akol and Riek Machar began to question Garang's leadership.[26] Akol began secretly contacting SPLA officers to join his side, especially among the Nuer and Shilluk peoples.[27] The situation deteriorated after the fall of the Derg.[26] As the Derg regime crumbled, Akol published a document titled Why Garang Must Go Now.[27] The split was made public on August 28, 1991, in what became known as the Nasir Declaration. The dissidents called for democratization of SPLA, a stop to human rights abuses, and an independent southern Sudan (Garang's goal of creating a united and secular Sudan). Kong Coul joined the rebellion.[when?] The 'SPLA-Nasir' was joined by the SPLA forces in Ayod, Waat, Adok, Abwong, Ler and Akobo.[11] A period of chaos reigned inside the SPLA, as it was not clear which units sided with Garang and which with the SPLA-Nasir.[28]

Garang issued a statement through the SPLA radio communications system, denouncing the coup. Nine out of eleven (excluding himself) SPLA PMHC members sided with Garang.[9] The mainstream SPLA led by Garang was based in Torit.[8] The two SPLA factions fought each other, including attacks on civilians in their opponents' territory.[29]

Battles of 1992 edit

As of 1992 the Sudanese government launched a major offensive against the SPLA, which was weakened by the split with the SPLA-Nasir. The SPLA lost control of Torit (where the SPLA was headquartered), Bor, Yirol, Pibor, Pochalla and Kapoeta.[30][31]

The SPLA made two attacks on Juba in June–July 1992, during which they nearly captured the town. After the attacks, the Sudanese government forces committed harsh reprisals against the civilian population. Summary executions of suspected SPLA collaborators were carried out.[32] On 27 September, 1992 the deputy commander-in-chief of the SPLA, William Nyuon, defected and took a section of fighters with him.[33] The SPLA recaptured Bor on 29 November, 1991.[34]

Mid-1990s edit

As of the mid-1990s, the majority of the population of southern Sudan lived in areas under the control of either the mainstream SPLA or the SPLA-Nasir.[35]

2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement edit

In 2004, a year before the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), the Coalition to Stop Child Soldiers, estimated that there were between 2,500 and 5,000 children serving in the SPLA.[36]

 
Salva Kiir Mayardit, Commander-in-Chief of SPLA

Following the signing of the CPA, an SPLA reorganisation process began. This process was actively supported by funding from the United States. In 2005, Garang restructured the top leadership of the SPLA, with a Chief of General Staff, Lt. Gen. Oyay Deng Ajak, and four Deputy Chiefs of General Staff: Maj. Gen. Salva Mathok Gengdit (Administration), Maj. Gen. Bior Ajang Aswad (Operations), Maj. Gen. James Hoth Mai (Logistics) and Maj. Gen. Obuto Mamur Mete (Political and Moral Orientation).[37]

 
SPLA officer as part of Joint Integrated Units during the CPA era

The initial organisation of the SPLA, based on divisions, was assembled in mid-2005 but not actually put into practice in the field until 2006. It was based on six divisions (in Upper Nile State; 2nd Division: Equatorias; 3rd Division: Northern Bahr el Ghazal and Warrap states; 4th Division Unity State; the 5th Division in Lakes State, the 6th Division, SPLA personnel in the Joint Integrated Units) and four independent brigades.[38] The four independent brigades grouped SPLA forces in Bor (Khoriom, 104, and 105 Battalions mainly), Southern Blue Nile, the Nuba Mountains (South Kordofan) and Raja (Western Bahr el Ghazal).

Probably more important than the reorganisation was the Juba Declaration, signed by Salva Kiir and General Paulino Matiep on 8 January 2006. Matiep commanded the South Sudan Defence Forces (SSDF), the largest and best-equipped militia (about 50,000 men) that remained beyond the SPLA's control. Paulino was appointed Deputy Chief of Staff, the second highest position,[39] his subordinate generals became part of the SPLA without any reduction in rank, and about 50,000 SSDF were added to the SPLA payroll.[40] The number of generals in the SPLA also rose as Kiir promoted hundreds of existing SPLA officers to match the arriving ex-SSDF generals. By 2011 and independence, the SPLA had 745 generals. At about the same time, the legislature voted to double infantrymen's base pay from the equivalent of $75 a month (the rate under Khartoum's control) to $150.[citation needed] The unification of the two largest armed groups in the region seriously weakened Khartoum’s control of southern Sudan.[39]

In 2007 and 2008 the independent brigades in Blue Nile, Bor, and the Nuba Mountains became the 10th, 8th, and 9th divisions, respectively.[41] The 9th and 10th Divisions thus fell north of the 1-1-56 Independence dividing line between North and South Sudan. The last independent brigade, in Raja, became part of the 5th Division.

Ministry of Defence edit

In 2007, the SPLM/A established a Ministry of Defence. Gen. Dominic Dim Deng, an SPLA veteran, was chosen as the first Minister for SPLA Affairs and the first political officer of the SPLA. Dim died in a plane crash in 2008 alongside his wife, Josephine Apieu Jenaro Aken, and other SPLA officers. He is buried alongside his wife at the SPLA headquarters in Bilpham, Juba.[37]

Deputy Chief of Staff (Logistics) James Hoth Mai replaced Oyay Deng Ajak as Chief of General Staff in May 2009.[42]

In 2010 U.S. diplomats reported that Samora "made a point to discuss how the SPLA needed to be reorganized. He stated that the SPLA was top heavy, carrying nearly 550 general officers and providing more than 200 security guards for each minister."[43]

The 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement stipulated that the SPLA in northern Sudan were to move south of the 1956 North-South boundary during the interim period, excepting those part of the Joint Integrated Units, composed of equal numbers from the SPLA and the Sudanese Armed Forces.[44] Officially, this move did take place, in 2008, with the 10th Division relocating its headquarters to Guffa, five kilometers south of the Blue Nile-Upper Nile border, and most of its troops to al-Fuj, Yafta and Marinja on the southern side.[45] But more than 1,600 fighters remained north of the line. In early June 2011, following the lack of progress on popular consultations in Southern Kordofan & Blue Nile, the SAF attempted to forcefully disarm Nuba SPLA soldiers, and fighting began in Southern Kordofan.[46] After the fighting began, former SPLA 9th and 10th Division fighters proclaimed themselves the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North (SPLA-N), under Malik Agar as Chairman and Commander-in-Chief.[47]

The Government of Southern Sudan named the SPLA General Headquarters outside Juba 'Bilpam'.[10] The headquarters staff was expanded after 2008 to match the ten-division structure. This expansion coincided with the completion of the General Headquarters at Bilpam, built by DynCorp with funds from the U.S. State Department’s Africa Peacekeeping Program (AFRICAP).[48]

Work on a national security strategy began in late 2012.[49]

Southern Civil War edit

On 15 December, 2013, fighting broke out in Juba between different factions of the armed forces in what the South Sudanese government described as a coup d'état. President Kiir announced that the attempt had been put down the next day, but fighting resumed 16 December. Military spokesman Colonel Philip Aguer said that some military installations had been attacked by armed soldiers but that "the army is in full control of Juba." He added that an investigation was under way.[50]

Eventually the Sudan People's Liberation Movement split into two main factions, divided on the issue over leadership of the ruling party:

The coordination of the April–July 2015 attack by the SPLA-IG in Unity State—involving multiple divisions across multiple sectors—indicates a high level of operational planning from Juba.[51] The ferocity with which people were chased into the swamps to be killed was aimed at annihilating the SPLM/A-in-Opposition's support, and led to systematic destruction of villages and towns.

The Tiger Faction New Forces (also called Tiger Faction or 'The Tigers')[52] split from the SPLA in late October 2015. A Shilluk militia, it aimed to reverse the division of South Sudan into 28 (later 32) states in order to restore the territory of the Shilluk Kingdom to its 1956 borders.[52] Led by Yoanis Okiech, the TFNF started an insurgency against the SPLM government.[53] In 2016, however, it also came into conflict with the SPLM-IO rebels, leading to Okiech's death and the group's destruction in January 2017.

Over the course of the war, the SPLA has become dominated by Dinka, in particular Dinka from greater Bahr el-Ghazal. The Panel of Experts wrote in 2016, "While other tribes are represented in SPLA, they are increasingly marginalized, rendering the multi-tribal structure of the army largely a façade that obscures the central role that Dinka now play in virtually all major theatres of the conflict". (S/2016/963, 8)

2017–2018: SSPDF edit

On May 16, 2017, Kiir announced a restructure of the army and change of name to the South Sudan Defence Forces (SSDF).[54]

A cessation of hostilities agreement was reached in December 2017, but never really took effect.[citation needed] In August 2017, Kiir announced that the new name for the army would be the South Sudan People's Defence Forces (SSPDF) "by the need to represent the will of the people". He said that there was a need to reorganise and professionalise the army.[55] According to Professor Joel Isabirye, the change of name would shift the discourse from the era of liberation, which had now concluded, to one of national defence, which is ongoing – with the focus on defending the country against external aggression. The insertion of "People’s" into the name "could be to avoid being dragged back into history when during the Second Sudanese Civil War (1983-2005) a militia called South Sudan Defense Forces (SSDF) emerged and aligned with the Government of Sudan".[56]

The negotiations stalled over disagreement among the parties about power sharing, future security arrangements and whether Riak Machar could return from exile to political life in South Sudan. In early May 2018, a two-day meeting of the Parties to the Revitalized Agreement on the Resolution of the Conflict in South Sudan (R-ARCSS) started in Addis Ababa. The parties were to take stock of the progress so far of the R-ARCSS, the pending tasks, and debate the way forward.[citation needed]

The army was officially renamed South Sudan People's Defence Forces in September 2018 by a Republican order read on the state-owned TV channel SSBC known as South Sudan Broadcasting Services ,the national television in South Sudan.[57] The renaming occurred ten days before implementation of new security arrangements, which include the reunification of the national army. President Kiir was also Commander-in-Chief of the army.[58]

As of 2018, the army was estimated to have 185,000 soldiers as well as an unknown number of personnel in the small South Sudan Air Force.[59]

According to the CIA World Factbook as of June 2020, "under the September 2018 peace agreement, all armed groups in South Sudan were to assemble at designated sites where fighters could be either disarmed and demobilized, or integrated into unified military and police forces; the unified forces were then to be retrained and deployed prior to the formation of a national unity government; all fighters were ordered to these sites in July 2019, but as of April 2020 this process had not been completed".[60]

2019 edit

As of 2019, the SSPDF comprised the Ground Force, Air Force, Air Defense Forces, and Presidential Guard with Special attachment of Captain Buoi Rual Makuei.batch 51 Sudan military College Graduate,[60]

In October 2019, more than 40 members of South Sudan People’s Defense Forces (SSPDF) undertook two-day training organised by the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) in Kuajok, Gogrial.[61] UNMISS has been in the country since 2011, aiming to consolidate peace and achieve security to allow economic growth and political stability. They were deploying more than 19,000 personnel in the country as of September 2019.[60]

Structure and equipment edit

The SPLA was commanded by the Chief of General Staff] (COGS). Deputy Chief of Staff (Logistics) James Hoth Mai replaced Oyay Deng Ajak as Chief of General Staff in May 2009.[42] James Hoth Mai was superseded by Paul Malong Awan as COGS in 2014.

After the restructure as SSPDF, Malong was superseded by James Ajongo Mawut (May 2017–April 2018), with the position now referred to as "chief of defence force(s)". On 28 April 2018, Chief of General Staff James Ajongo Mawut died in Cairo from a short illness.[62] He was replaced by General Gabriel Jok Riak on 4 May 2018.[63]

On 11 May 2020 President Kiir removed Riak and appointed General Johnson Juma Okot as Chief of Defence Forces, who had been serving as deputy chief.[64][65] On 11 April 2021, Okot was replaced by Santino Deng Wol as the chief of Defense Forces.[2]

 
SSPDF Divisions in cantonment in August 2020

SPLA structure and equipment edit

The COGS oversaw five directorates, each led by a Deputy Chief of General Staff (DCOGS):[when?]

  • Administration
  • Operations
  • Logistics
  • Political and Moral Orientation
  • Training and Research

The SPLA had nine divisions and a small air force, all of which reported to the DCOGS, Operations:

  • 1st Division : Renk, Upper Nile State. Established 2006. After the CPA, George Athor was appointed a major general and confirmed in overall commander of Division I (2005–07) before being moved to SPLA HQ in Bilpam as director for administration.[66] The Small Arms Survey wrote in early 2016 that '..[the] Division, stationed in Renk and widely regarded as the best fighting force in the country, is largely Nuer. Until 2 December 2015, it was under the command of Stephen Buay, a Bul Nuer who was subsequently redeployed to lead the SPLA's 4th Division in Rubkona, Unity State.'[67]
  • 2nd Division : Giada Barracks, Juba, Central Equatoria State Established 2006. By 2013 division headquarters was at Mogiri east of Juba.[68] On 19 August 2011, it was reported that the UN SRSG would visit Kapoeta to meet the County Commissioner and the Commander of Brigade 9 of the SPLA's 2nd Division.[69]
  • 3rd Division : Akuem, Wodyik Lion, Northern Bahr el Ghazal[70] (also covers Warrap State)
  • 4th Division : Mapel, Western Bahr el Ghazal[71] (formerly at Rubkona)  Established 2006. Rands wrote in 2010 that "Upon integrating into the SPLA, the core forces of Paulino Matiep, under the command of Tahib Gatluak, [remained] in Mayom County in Unity State. Some were then redeployed to Juba to join Matiep’s bodyguard. The remaining men were deployed as part of the 4th Division in Duar, Unity State."[37] News reports on December 21, 2013 from Bentiu said the 4th Division commander, James Koang Chuol, had declared that he has deposed the caretaker governor and that his forces were no longer loyal to President Salva Kiir.[72] Chuol said he had overthrown Governor Joseph Monytuel after surviving an assassination attempt. Koang said that the 4th Division's tank unit allegedly tried to kill him at around 7pm on Friday upon being ordered by Monytuel at the behest of senior SPLA members in Juba. Significant forces from Division IV defected to the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-in-Opposition, with their arms and ammunition.[73] Division IV was involved in the April–July Unity State offensive by the SPLA, alongside Bul Nuer youth, other SPLA forces, and other armed groups.[74] In 2015-16, the division was placed under the command of Stephen Buay.
  • 5th Division : Girinti Barracks, Wau, Western Bahr el Ghazal State[75] (formerly at Rumbek)[76]
  • 6th Division : Maridi, Western Equatoria. On 13 August 2016, some 800 to 900 troops from SPLA Division VI launched an incursion into the Democratic Republic of the Congo, crossing the border and engaging in a battle with SPLM/A in Opposition.[77]
  • 7th Division : Owachi, Upper Nile State[78] Rands wrote in 2010 that '..[m]uch of the SPLA's 7th Division operating west of the Nile in the Shilluk areas of Upper Nile State is composed of former forces of the SSDF commander Peter Gadet, now a major general in the SPLA. Gadet stayed with SAF Military Intelligence during the Juba Declaration process and many were suspicious of his allegiances. As of the time of writing when Rands wrote, Gadet's authority over his former men in the 7th Division was unclear.[79] Still under command of Peter Gadet in 2013. Significant forces from Division VII defected to the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-in-Opposition, with their arms and ammunition.[73] Gadet died on 15 April 2019.
  • 8th Division : Bor, South Sudan: Formed from SPLA independent Brigades of 105 battalion and Khoriom battalion which all were formed in 1983. The former led the first SPLA rebellion against the Sudanese army Malual-Chaat garrison in Bor that later inspired several other mutinies across the Southern region and some parts of the Northern Sudan. Division 8 is headquartered in Malual-Chaat barrack which is also designated as a liberation museum to commemorate the first SPLA fallen Heroes and the entire history of South Sudan’s Succession from the North. Most outstanding statues are Kerbino Kuanyin Bol’s and Maker Jool Deng (first fallen hero).
  • Commondo: Formed after independence of South Sudan under the commands of the late Gen Abraham Jongroor, one of the outstanding Khoriom Battalion commander who successfully fought out Boma militias with commondo. It was the most well trained SPLA brigade on the front lines, according to the National Military Intelligence.
  • Mechanized Division : Mapel, Western Bahr el Ghazal State[80] Circa July 15, 2017, the Mechanized Division, with the 8th Infantry Division, was to deploy forces to the Juba-Bor road to ensure the safety of travelers, the SPLA spokesperson announced. The move came after a series of deadly road attack by armed men.[81]
  • Special Forces brigade with four battalions
  • The Sudan People's Air Force : Juba, Central Equatoria State

According to a 2015 security agreement with the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-in-Opposition, military forces currently stationed in Juba, Bor and Malakal are to be moved to bases at least 25 kilometers outside of each respective city. The Presidential Guard at Giada Barracks and SPLA's General Headquarters in Bilpam are authorized exceptions to the agreement.[82]

Equipment edit

 
A T-72 in SPLA service

As of 2013 the SPLA's land forces operated the following heavy equipment:

As of 2013 the South Sudan Air Force operated the following aircraft:

Defence expenditure edit

According to the 2013 edition of the International Institute for Strategic Studies' report The Military Balance, South Sudan's defence budgets since 2011 have been as follows:

Year South Sudanese pounds US dollar equivalent
2011 1.6bn 533m
2012 2.42bn 537m
2013 2.52bn

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "SPLA renamed South Sudan Defense Force in a major army shake up". Eye Radio Network. 16 May 2017. from the original on 17 June 2018. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  2. ^ a b "South Sudan's president appoints new army chief". Reuters. 11 April 2021. from the original on 12 April 2021. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  3. ^ IISS 2019, pp. 491
  4. ^ Denying "the Honor of Living": Sudan, a Human Rights Disaster. Human Rights Watch. 1990. ISBN 978-0-929692-53-1.
  5. ^ a b Teresa (21 June 2019). "Brief Biography and Facts About Major(Cdr). Late William Nyuon Bany Machar". City Scrollz. from the original on 19 June 2020. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  6. ^ Buay, Gordon (24 January 2011). . Gurtong Trust. Archived from the original on 20 June 2020. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  7. ^ Shaw, Toby (1 January 2020). "SPLA Day in South Sudan in 2021". Office Holidays. from the original on 20 June 2020. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  8. ^ a b Rone 1994, p. xiv.
  9. ^ a b Guarak, Mawut Achiecque Mach. Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan: An African Renaissance. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2011. p. 210[self-published source]
  10. ^ a b c Guarak, Mawut Achiecque Mach. Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan: An African Renaissance. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2011. pp. 252-253[self-published source]
  11. ^ a b Rone 1994, p. 90.
  12. ^ a b c d e Africa Watch Committee. Denying the Honor of Living: Sudan, a Human Rights Disaster : an Africa Watch Report 2017-07-02 at the Wayback Machine. New York, N.Y.: Africa Watch Committee, 1990. pp. 18-19
  13. ^ Africa Watch Committee. Denying the Honor of Living: Sudan, a Human Rights Disaster : an Africa Watch Report 2017-08-12 at the Wayback Machine. New York, N.Y.: Africa Watch Committee, 1990. p. 23
  14. ^ Africa Watch Committee. Denying the Honor of Living: Sudan, a Human Rights Disaster : an Africa Watch Report 2017-07-02 at the Wayback Machine. New York, N.Y.: Africa Watch Committee, 1990. p. 65
  15. ^ a b c Africa Watch Committee. Denying the Honor of Living: Sudan, a Human Rights Disaster : an Africa Watch Report 2017-08-12 at the Wayback Machine. New York, N.Y.: Africa Watch Committee, 1990. pp. 153-155
  16. ^ Rone 1994, p. 1.
  17. ^ a b Rone 1994, p. 27.
  18. ^ a b c Rone 1994, p. 21.
  19. ^ Rone 1994, pp. 21, 23, 101.
  20. ^ Norsk Bistandshistorie (Norwegian aid history), Randi Rønning Balsvik, 2016. p. 115 https://www.idunn.no/ht/2017/02/randi_roenning_balsvik_norsk_bistandshistorie 2018-04-19 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Moorcroft, 'Omar al-Bashir and Africa's Longest War,' 2015, 72.
  22. ^ Africa Watch Committee. Denying the Honor of Living: Sudan, a Human Rights Disaster : an Africa Watch Report 2017-08-11 at the Wayback Machine. New York, N.Y.: Africa Watch Committee, 1990. p. 22
  23. ^ Africa Watch Committee. Denying the Honor of Living: Sudan, a Human Rights Disaster: an Africa Watch Report 2017-07-02 at the Wayback Machine. New York, N.Y.: Africa Watch Committee, 1990. p. 53
  24. ^ Guarak, Mawut Achiecque Mach. Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan: An African Renaissance. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2011. p. 128[self-published source]
  25. ^ Africa Watch Committee. Denying the Honor of Living: Sudan, a Human Rights Disaster : an Africa Watch Report 2017-08-12 at the Wayback Machine. New York, N.Y.: Africa Watch Committee, 1990. p. 25
  26. ^ a b Rone 1994, p. 25.
  27. ^ a b Guarak, Mawut Achiecque Mach. Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan: An African Renaissance. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2011. p. 208[self-published source]
  28. ^ Rone 1994, p. 91.
  29. ^ Rone 1994, p. 3.
  30. ^ Rone 1994, p. 35.
  31. ^ Karl R. DeRouen and Uk Heo. Civil wars of the world: major conflicts since World War II. Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 748.
  32. ^ Rone 1994, pp. 56–58.
  33. ^ Guarak, Mawut Achiecque Mach. Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan: An African Renaissance. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2011. p. 220[self-published source]
  34. ^ Rone 1994, p. 99.
  35. ^ Rone 1994, p. 12.
  36. ^ "SPLA to demobilize all child soldiers by end of the year - Sudan Tribune: Plural news and views on Sudan". Sudan Tribune. from the original on 15 February 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2012.
  37. ^ a b c Rands 2010.
  38. ^ Rands 2010, p. 9.
  39. ^ a b Paterno, Steve (24 August 2012). "Plural news and views on Sudan". Sudan Tribune. from the original on 21 July 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  40. ^ Young, John (2012). The Fate of Sudan: The Origins and Consequences of a Flawed Peace Process. Zed Books. pp. 121–2. in Alex de Waal, The Real Politics of the Horn of Africa, Polity 2015 96.
  41. ^ Rands 2010, p. 10.
  42. ^ a b "Kiir appoints new army Chief of Staff, relieves deputies". Sudan Tribune. 1 June 2009. from the original on 7 January 2014. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
  43. ^ 10ADDISABABA176
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References edit

  • International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) (2018). "The Military Balance 2018". The Military Balance: Annual Estimates of the Nature and Size of the Military Forces of the Principal Powers. London: IISS. ISSN 0459-7222.
  • International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) (2013). "The Military Balance 2013". The Military Balance: Annual Estimates of the Nature and Size of the Military Forces of the Principal Powers. London: IISS. ISSN 0459-7222.
  • Rands, Richard (2010). In Need of Review: SPLA Transformation in 2006–10 and Beyond (PDF). Small Arms Survey HSBA.
  • Rone, Jemera (1994). . New York: Human Rights Watch. ISBN 9781564321299. Archived from the original on 11 January 2014.

Further reading edit

  • International Institute for Strategic Studies (15 February 2019). The Military Balance 2019. London: Routledge. ISBN 9781857439885.
  • Sikainga, Ahmad Alawad, and Daly, M. W., Civil war in the Sudan, London; New York : British Academic Press : Distributed by St. Martinʾs Press in the United States of America and Canada, 1993. (See Douglas and Prunier article on origins of SPLA)
  • Elizabeth Shackelford, The Dissent Channel: American Diplomacy in a Dishonest Age, PublicAffairs, May 12, 2020. Says that the post-independence South Sudanese army could never be an unified national force—too tribal.
  • Further reading: African Rights, 1997. Food and Power in Sudan: A Critique of Humanitarianism, London: African Rights. Militarism and brutality of the early SPLA.

External links edit

  • Photographer's Account of the SPLA - "The Cost of Silence: A Traveling Exhibition"
  • Kenya Strikes Difficult Balance Between North and South of Sudan - retired Kenyan military officers providing training to SPLA
  • U.S. Embassy Khartoum, SOUTHERN SUDAN: APPROXIMATE TROOP STRENGTH AND EQUIPMENT INVENTORY of Sudan People's Liberation Army, 06KHARTOUM1650_a, July 12, 2006 15:59 (Wednesday).

south, sudan, people, defence, forces, confused, with, south, sudan, defence, forces, militia, defence, spelt, defense, name, some, sources, sspdf, formerly, sudan, people, liberation, army, spla, army, republic, south, sudan, spla, founded, guerrilla, movemen. Not to be confused with South Sudan Defence Forces militia Defence is spelt Defense in the name in some sources The South Sudan People s Defence Forces SSPDF formerly the Sudan People s Liberation Army SPLA is the army of the Republic of South Sudan The SPLA was founded as a guerrilla movement against the government of Sudan in 1983 and was a key participant of the Second Sudanese Civil War led by John Garang After Garang s death in 2005 Salva Kiir was named the SPLA s new Commander in Chief As of 2010 the SPLA was divided into divisions of 10 000 14 000 soldiers South Sudan People s Defence ForcesFlag of the South Sudan People s Defence ForcesFounded1983Current form2018Service branchesGround ForceAir Force and Air DefenceRiverine Navy 1 HeadquartersBilpham Central EquatoriaMalual Chaat BorWunyiek Northern Bahr el GhazalMapel Western Bahr el GhazalLeadershipCommander in chiefSalva Kiir MayarditMinister of Defence and Veterans AffairsChol Thon BalokChief of Defense ForcesGeneral Santino Deng Wol since 11 April 2021 2 PersonnelMilitary age7Active personnel185 000 3 ExpendituresBudget 10 240 750 031 SSP 78 615 712 2016 17 citation needed Percent of GDP0 86 2015 est IndustryDomestic suppliersMilitary Industry CorporationRelated articlesHistoryMilitary history of South Sudan First Sudanese Civil War SPLM Second Sudanese Civil War SPLM Khoriom Battalion Fierce Fighters Disarmament of the Lou Nuer SPLM Battle of Malakal SPLM Heglig Crisis SPLM South Sudanese Civil War SPLM RanksMilitary ranks of South SudanFollowing the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in 2005 the last remaining large and well equipped militia the South Sudan Defence Forces SSDF under General Paulino Matiep signed an agreement with Kiir known as the Juba Declaration which amalgamated the two forces under the SPLA banner Following South Sudan s independence in 2011 Kiir became President and the SPLA became the new republic s regular army In May 2017 there was a restructure and the SPLA took on the name of South Sudan Defence Forces SSDF with another change in September 2018 to South Sudan People s Defence Forces As of 2018 update the army was estimated to have 185 000 soldiers as well as an unknown number of personnel in the small South Sudan Air Force As of 2019 update the SSPDF comprised the Ground Force Air Force Air Defence Forces and Presidential Guard Contents 1 History 1 1 1983 Inception 1 2 War in the 1980s 1 3 Political openings 1 4 1991 Setback and split 1 5 Battles of 1992 1 6 Mid 1990s 1 7 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement 1 8 Ministry of Defence 1 9 Southern Civil War 1 10 2017 2018 SSPDF 1 11 2019 2 Structure and equipment 2 1 SPLA structure and equipment 2 2 Equipment 3 Defence expenditure 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory edit1983 Inception edit On 16 May 1983 105 Battalion launched a mutiny in Malual Chaat barrack Bor against the Sudanese army which later inspired a number of mutinies in the southern region 4 including those at Ayod Pochalla and Pibor These mutinies led to the creation of the SPLA 5 6 later that year 7 At its inception John Garang was the SPLA s Commander in Chief 8 9 Kerubino Kuanyin Bol was appointed second ranking Commander and William Nyuon Bany third 5 By June 1983 the majority of mutineers had moved to Ethiopia or were on their way there The Ethiopian government s decision to support the emerging SPLA was a means of exacting revenge upon the Sudanese government for its support of Eritrean rebels 10 The SPLA struggled for a united and secular Sudanese state 11 Garang said the struggle of the South Sudanese was the same as that of marginalised groups in the north such as the Nuba and Fur peoples 12 Until 1985 the SPLA directed its public denouncements of the Sudanese government specifically at Sudanese President Gaafar Nimeiry During the years that followed SPLA propaganda denounced the Khartoum government as a family affair that played on sectarian tensions 12 The SPLA denounced the introduction of Sharia law in September 1983 13 War in the 1980s edit nbsp Official flag of the Sudan People s Liberation Army until 2011The first fully fledged SPLA battalion graduated in 1984 in the village of Bilpam The name Bilpam carried great symbolic importance for SPLA for years to come as the epicentre of the uprising After Bilpam other SPLA training camps were established at Dimma Bonga and Panyido 10 In the mid 1980s the SPLA armed struggle blocked development projects of the Sudanese government such as the Bentiu Oil Fields 14 The SPLA launched its first advance into Equatoria in 1985 and 1986 During this campaign the SPLA were confronted by a number of pro government militias The conduct of SPLA forces was chaotic with many atrocities against the civilian population The SPLA drove out around 35 000 Ugandan refugees who had settled in Equatoria since the early 1980s back into Uganda 15 The SPLA had a complicated relationship with the Anyanya II a fellow southern Sudanese rebel group The Anyanya II forces blocked the expansion of the SPLA between 1984 and 1987 as Anyanya II attacked SPLA recruits heading for Ethiopia The Anyanya II also attacked civilians believed to be SPLA supporters 16 The conflict between Anyanya II and SPLA had a political dimension as Anyanya II sought to build an independent southern Sudanese state 17 The SPLA tried to win over the leaders of Anyanya II 18 The Anyanya II commander Gordon Kong Chuol aligned with The SPLA in late 1987 Other sectors of the Anyanya II followed his example over the ensuing years marginalizing the remainder of the Anyanya II who were allied with the Sudanese government 19 Another force that confronted SPLA were the Murahaleen militias in northern Bahr el Ghazal Warfare between SPLA and Muraleheen began in 1987 By 1988 SPLA controlled most of the northern Bahr el Ghazal 15 Unlike the Anyanya II the Murahaleen had no political ambitions 17 In March 1986 the SPLA kidnapped a Norwegian aid worker of the Christian NGO Kirkens Nodhjelp Norwegian Church Aid 20 Moorcroft writes that by this time training weapons and discipline improved as the guerillas won more and more victories In November 1987 the guerillas captured the small town of Kurmak near the Ethiopian border It was 450 miles from the capital but the nearby dam provided most of Khartoum s electricity 21 Political openings edit The SPLA boycotted the 1986 Sudanese parliamentary election In half of the constituencies of southern Sudan elections could not be held due to the SPLA boycott 12 22 On November 15 1988 the SPLA entered into an alliance with the Democratic Unionist Party DUP The two groups agreed on the lifting of the state of emergency and abolition of Sharia law The press release was made public through an announcement on Radio SPLA After the DUP rejoined the government a ceasefire with the SPLA was achieved 12 23 After the elections negotiations between the SPLA and Sadiq al Mahdi started but were aborted after the SPLA shot down a civilian airplane killing 60 people 12 All peace talks ended following the 1989 Sudanese coup d etat 24 In September 1989 the ruling Revolutionary Command Council for National Salvation RCC invited different sectors to a National Dialogue Conference but the SPLA refused to attend 25 The SPLA launched a major offensive between 1989 and the fall of the Ethiopian Derg government in 1991 It captured various towns such as Bor Waat Maridi Mundri Yambio Kaya Kajo Keji Nimule Kapoeta Torit Akobo and Nasir By the middle of 1991 the SPLA controlled most parts of southern Sudan with the exception of the major garrison towns Juba Yei Malakal and Wau 18 Between January 21 and 29 1990 SPLA shelled Juba SPLA forces also moved into the Nuba Mountains and the southern parts of the Blue Nile State In comparison with its 1985 1986 offensive in Equatoria the conduct of SPLA was now more orderly 15 1991 Setback and split edit nbsp High ranking SPLA officers at the South Sudan independence celebrations 2011The downfall of the Derg government in Ethiopia in May 1991 proved to be a major setback The Ethiopian government had provided the SPLA with military supplies training facilities and a safe haven for bases for 18 years Soon after the change of government in Ethiopia the SPLA accompanied hundreds of thousands of refugees back into Sudan 18 A split in the SPLA had simmered since late 1990 as Lam Akol and Riek Machar began to question Garang s leadership 26 Akol began secretly contacting SPLA officers to join his side especially among the Nuer and Shilluk peoples 27 The situation deteriorated after the fall of the Derg 26 As the Derg regime crumbled Akol published a document titled Why Garang Must Go Now 27 The split was made public on August 28 1991 in what became known as the Nasir Declaration The dissidents called for democratization of SPLA a stop to human rights abuses and an independent southern Sudan Garang s goal of creating a united and secular Sudan Kong Coul joined the rebellion when The SPLA Nasir was joined by the SPLA forces in Ayod Waat Adok Abwong Ler and Akobo 11 A period of chaos reigned inside the SPLA as it was not clear which units sided with Garang and which with the SPLA Nasir 28 Garang issued a statement through the SPLA radio communications system denouncing the coup Nine out of eleven excluding himself SPLA PMHC members sided with Garang 9 The mainstream SPLA led by Garang was based in Torit 8 The two SPLA factions fought each other including attacks on civilians in their opponents territory 29 Battles of 1992 edit As of 1992 the Sudanese government launched a major offensive against the SPLA which was weakened by the split with the SPLA Nasir The SPLA lost control of Torit where the SPLA was headquartered Bor Yirol Pibor Pochalla and Kapoeta 30 31 The SPLA made two attacks on Juba in June July 1992 during which they nearly captured the town After the attacks the Sudanese government forces committed harsh reprisals against the civilian population Summary executions of suspected SPLA collaborators were carried out 32 On 27 September 1992 the deputy commander in chief of the SPLA William Nyuon defected and took a section of fighters with him 33 The SPLA recaptured Bor on 29 November 1991 34 Mid 1990s edit As of the mid 1990s the majority of the population of southern Sudan lived in areas under the control of either the mainstream SPLA or the SPLA Nasir 35 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement edit In 2004 a year before the Comprehensive Peace Agreement CPA the Coalition to Stop Child Soldiers estimated that there were between 2 500 and 5 000 children serving in the SPLA 36 nbsp Salva Kiir Mayardit Commander in Chief of SPLAFollowing the signing of the CPA an SPLA reorganisation process began This process was actively supported by funding from the United States In 2005 Garang restructured the top leadership of the SPLA with a Chief of General Staff Lt Gen Oyay Deng Ajak and four Deputy Chiefs of General Staff Maj Gen Salva Mathok Gengdit Administration Maj Gen Bior Ajang Aswad Operations Maj Gen James Hoth Mai Logistics and Maj Gen Obuto Mamur Mete Political and Moral Orientation 37 nbsp SPLA officer as part of Joint Integrated Units during the CPA eraThe initial organisation of the SPLA based on divisions was assembled in mid 2005 but not actually put into practice in the field until 2006 It was based on six divisions in Upper Nile State 2nd Division Equatorias 3rd Division Northern Bahr el Ghazal and Warrap states 4th Division Unity State the 5th Division in Lakes State the 6th Division SPLA personnel in the Joint Integrated Units and four independent brigades 38 The four independent brigades grouped SPLA forces in Bor Khoriom 104 and 105 Battalions mainly Southern Blue Nile the Nuba Mountains South Kordofan and Raja Western Bahr el Ghazal Probably more important than the reorganisation was the Juba Declaration signed by Salva Kiir and General Paulino Matiep on 8 January 2006 Matiep commanded the South Sudan Defence Forces SSDF the largest and best equipped militia about 50 000 men that remained beyond the SPLA s control Paulino was appointed Deputy Chief of Staff the second highest position 39 his subordinate generals became part of the SPLA without any reduction in rank and about 50 000 SSDF were added to the SPLA payroll 40 The number of generals in the SPLA also rose as Kiir promoted hundreds of existing SPLA officers to match the arriving ex SSDF generals By 2011 and independence the SPLA had 745 generals At about the same time the legislature voted to double infantrymen s base pay from the equivalent of 75 a month the rate under Khartoum s control to 150 citation needed The unification of the two largest armed groups in the region seriously weakened Khartoum s control of southern Sudan 39 In 2007 and 2008 the independent brigades in Blue Nile Bor and the Nuba Mountains became the 10th 8th and 9th divisions respectively 41 The 9th and 10th Divisions thus fell north of the 1 1 56 Independence dividing line between North and South Sudan The last independent brigade in Raja became part of the 5th Division Ministry of Defence edit In 2007 the SPLM A established a Ministry of Defence Gen Dominic Dim Deng an SPLA veteran was chosen as the first Minister for SPLA Affairs and the first political officer of the SPLA Dim died in a plane crash in 2008 alongside his wife Josephine Apieu Jenaro Aken and other SPLA officers He is buried alongside his wife at the SPLA headquarters in Bilpham Juba 37 Deputy Chief of Staff Logistics James Hoth Mai replaced Oyay Deng Ajak as Chief of General Staff in May 2009 42 In 2010 U S diplomats reported that Samora made a point to discuss how the SPLA needed to be reorganized He stated that the SPLA was top heavy carrying nearly 550 general officers and providing more than 200 security guards for each minister 43 The 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement stipulated that the SPLA in northern Sudan were to move south of the 1956 North South boundary during the interim period excepting those part of the Joint Integrated Units composed of equal numbers from the SPLA and the Sudanese Armed Forces 44 Officially this move did take place in 2008 with the 10th Division relocating its headquarters to Guffa five kilometers south of the Blue Nile Upper Nile border and most of its troops to al Fuj Yafta and Marinja on the southern side 45 But more than 1 600 fighters remained north of the line In early June 2011 following the lack of progress on popular consultations in Southern Kordofan amp Blue Nile the SAF attempted to forcefully disarm Nuba SPLA soldiers and fighting began in Southern Kordofan 46 After the fighting began former SPLA 9th and 10th Division fighters proclaimed themselves the Sudan People s Liberation Movement North SPLA N under Malik Agar as Chairman and Commander in Chief 47 The Government of Southern Sudan named the SPLA General Headquarters outside Juba Bilpam 10 The headquarters staff was expanded after 2008 to match the ten division structure This expansion coincided with the completion of the General Headquarters at Bilpam built by DynCorp with funds from the U S State Department s Africa Peacekeeping Program AFRICAP 48 Work on a national security strategy began in late 2012 49 Southern Civil War edit Main article South Sudanese Civil War On 15 December 2013 fighting broke out in Juba between different factions of the armed forces in what the South Sudanese government described as a coup d etat President Kiir announced that the attempt had been put down the next day but fighting resumed 16 December Military spokesman Colonel Philip Aguer said that some military installations had been attacked by armed soldiers but that the army is in full control of Juba He added that an investigation was under way 50 Eventually the Sudan People s Liberation Movement split into two main factions divided on the issue over leadership of the ruling party The Sudan People s Liberation Movement In Government SPLM IG was led by President Kiir it was the ruling faction that signed the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in January 2005 Kiir served as president of the Transitional Autonomous Region of South Sudan from its formation in 2005 after Garang s death until the country s independence in 2011 The SPLM IO faction formally withdrew from the SPLM ruling faction in 2013 The Sudan People s Liberation Movement In Opposition SPLM IO was formed in 2013 and is led by former South Sudan Vice President Riek Machar The group is the major opponent to the SPLM IG faction in the Southern Sudanese civil war The coordination of the April July 2015 attack by the SPLA IG in Unity State involving multiple divisions across multiple sectors indicates a high level of operational planning from Juba 51 The ferocity with which people were chased into the swamps to be killed was aimed at annihilating the SPLM A in Opposition s support and led to systematic destruction of villages and towns The Tiger Faction New Forces also called Tiger Faction or The Tigers 52 split from the SPLA in late October 2015 A Shilluk militia it aimed to reverse the division of South Sudan into 28 later 32 states in order to restore the territory of the Shilluk Kingdom to its 1956 borders 52 Led by Yoanis Okiech the TFNF started an insurgency against the SPLM government 53 In 2016 however it also came into conflict with the SPLM IO rebels leading to Okiech s death and the group s destruction in January 2017 Over the course of the war the SPLA has become dominated by Dinka in particular Dinka from greater Bahr el Ghazal The Panel of Experts wrote in 2016 While other tribes are represented in SPLA they are increasingly marginalized rendering the multi tribal structure of the army largely a facade that obscures the central role that Dinka now play in virtually all major theatres of the conflict S 2016 963 8 2017 2018 SSPDF edit On May 16 2017 Kiir announced a restructure of the army and change of name to the South Sudan Defence Forces SSDF 54 A cessation of hostilities agreement was reached in December 2017 but never really took effect citation needed In August 2017 Kiir announced that the new name for the army would be the South Sudan People s Defence Forces SSPDF by the need to represent the will of the people He said that there was a need to reorganise and professionalise the army 55 According to Professor Joel Isabirye the change of name would shift the discourse from the era of liberation which had now concluded to one of national defence which is ongoing with the focus on defending the country against external aggression The insertion of People s into the name could be to avoid being dragged back into history when during the Second Sudanese Civil War 1983 2005 a militia called South Sudan Defense Forces SSDF emerged and aligned with the Government of Sudan 56 The negotiations stalled over disagreement among the parties about power sharing future security arrangements and whether Riak Machar could return from exile to political life in South Sudan In early May 2018 a two day meeting of the Parties to the Revitalized Agreement on the Resolution of the Conflict in South Sudan R ARCSS started in Addis Ababa The parties were to take stock of the progress so far of the R ARCSS the pending tasks and debate the way forward citation needed The army was officially renamed South Sudan People s Defence Forces in September 2018 by a Republican order read on the state owned TV channel SSBC known as South Sudan Broadcasting Services the national television in South Sudan 57 The renaming occurred ten days before implementation of new security arrangements which include the reunification of the national army President Kiir was also Commander in Chief of the army 58 As of 2018 the army was estimated to have 185 000 soldiers as well as an unknown number of personnel in the small South Sudan Air Force 59 According to the CIA World Factbook as of June 2020 update under the September 2018 peace agreement all armed groups in South Sudan were to assemble at designated sites where fighters could be either disarmed and demobilized or integrated into unified military and police forces the unified forces were then to be retrained and deployed prior to the formation of a national unity government all fighters were ordered to these sites in July 2019 but as of April 2020 this process had not been completed 60 2019 edit As of 2019 the SSPDF comprised the Ground Force Air Force Air Defense Forces and Presidential Guard with Special attachment of Captain Buoi Rual Makuei batch 51 Sudan military College Graduate 60 In October 2019 more than 40 members of South Sudan People s Defense Forces SSPDF undertook two day training organised by the United Nations Mission in South Sudan UNMISS in Kuajok Gogrial 61 UNMISS has been in the country since 2011 aiming to consolidate peace and achieve security to allow economic growth and political stability They were deploying more than 19 000 personnel in the country as of September 2019 60 Structure and equipment editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2023 The SPLA was commanded by the Chief of General Staff COGS Deputy Chief of Staff Logistics James Hoth Mai replaced Oyay Deng Ajak as Chief of General Staff in May 2009 42 James Hoth Mai was superseded by Paul Malong Awan as COGS in 2014 After the restructure as SSPDF Malong was superseded by James Ajongo Mawut May 2017 April 2018 with the position now referred to as chief of defence force s On 28 April 2018 Chief of General Staff James Ajongo Mawut died in Cairo from a short illness 62 He was replaced by General Gabriel Jok Riak on 4 May 2018 63 On 11 May 2020 President Kiir removed Riak and appointed General Johnson Juma Okot as Chief of Defence Forces who had been serving as deputy chief 64 65 On 11 April 2021 Okot was replaced by Santino Deng Wol as the chief of Defense Forces 2 nbsp SSPDF Divisions in cantonment in August 2020SPLA structure and equipment edit The COGS oversaw five directorates each led by a Deputy Chief of General Staff DCOGS when Administration Operations Logistics Political and Moral Orientation Training and ResearchThe SPLA had nine divisions and a small air force all of which reported to the DCOGS Operations 1st Division Renk Upper Nile State Established 2006 After the CPA George Athor was appointed a major general and confirmed in overall commander of Division I 2005 07 before being moved to SPLA HQ in Bilpam as director for administration 66 The Small Arms Survey wrote in early 2016 that the Division stationed in Renk and widely regarded as the best fighting force in the country is largely Nuer Until 2 December 2015 it was under the command of Stephen Buay a Bul Nuer who was subsequently redeployed to lead the SPLA s 4th Division in Rubkona Unity State 67 2nd Division Giada Barracks Juba Central Equatoria State Established 2006 By 2013 division headquarters was at Mogiri east of Juba 68 On 19 August 2011 it was reported that the UN SRSG would visit Kapoeta to meet the County Commissioner and the Commander of Brigade 9 of the SPLA s 2nd Division 69 3rd Division Akuem Wodyik Lion Northern Bahr el Ghazal 70 also covers Warrap State 4th Division Mapel Western Bahr el Ghazal 71 formerly at Rubkona nbsp Established 2006 Rands wrote in 2010 that Upon integrating into the SPLA the core forces of Paulino Matiep under the command of Tahib Gatluak remained in Mayom County in Unity State Some were then redeployed to Juba to join Matiep s bodyguard The remaining men were deployed as part of the 4th Division in Duar Unity State 37 News reports on December 21 2013 from Bentiu said the 4th Division commander James Koang Chuol had declared that he has deposed the caretaker governor and that his forces were no longer loyal to President Salva Kiir 72 Chuol said he had overthrown Governor Joseph Monytuel after surviving an assassination attempt Koang said that the 4th Division s tank unit allegedly tried to kill him at around 7pm on Friday upon being ordered by Monytuel at the behest of senior SPLA members in Juba Significant forces from Division IV defected to the Sudan People s Liberation Movement in Opposition with their arms and ammunition 73 Division IV was involved in the April July Unity State offensive by the SPLA alongside Bul Nuer youth other SPLA forces and other armed groups 74 In 2015 16 the division was placed under the command of Stephen Buay 5th Division Girinti Barracks Wau Western Bahr el Ghazal State 75 formerly at Rumbek 76 6th Division Maridi Western Equatoria On 13 August 2016 some 800 to 900 troops from SPLA Division VI launched an incursion into the Democratic Republic of the Congo crossing the border and engaging in a battle with SPLM A in Opposition 77 7th Division Owachi Upper Nile State 78 Rands wrote in 2010 that m uch of the SPLA s 7th Division operating west of the Nile in the Shilluk areas of Upper Nile State is composed of former forces of the SSDF commander Peter Gadet now a major general in the SPLA Gadet stayed with SAF Military Intelligence during the Juba Declaration process and many were suspicious of his allegiances As of the time of writing when Rands wrote Gadet s authority over his former men in the 7th Division was unclear 79 Still under command of Peter Gadet in 2013 Significant forces from Division VII defected to the Sudan People s Liberation Movement in Opposition with their arms and ammunition 73 Gadet died on 15 April 2019 8th Division Bor South Sudan Formed from SPLA independent Brigades of 105 battalion and Khoriom battalion which all were formed in 1983 The former led the first SPLA rebellion against the Sudanese army Malual Chaat garrison in Bor that later inspired several other mutinies across the Southern region and some parts of the Northern Sudan Division 8 is headquartered in Malual Chaat barrack which is also designated as a liberation museum to commemorate the first SPLA fallen Heroes and the entire history of South Sudan s Succession from the North Most outstanding statues are Kerbino Kuanyin Bol s and Maker Jool Deng first fallen hero Commondo Formed after independence of South Sudan under the commands of the late Gen Abraham Jongroor one of the outstanding Khoriom Battalion commander who successfully fought out Boma militias with commondo It was the most well trained SPLA brigade on the front lines according to the National Military Intelligence Mechanized Division Mapel Western Bahr el Ghazal State 80 Circa July 15 2017 the Mechanized Division with the 8th Infantry Division was to deploy forces to the Juba Bor road to ensure the safety of travelers the SPLA spokesperson announced The move came after a series of deadly road attack by armed men 81 Special Forces brigade with four battalions The Sudan People s Air Force Juba Central Equatoria StateAccording to a 2015 security agreement with the Sudan People s Liberation Movement in Opposition military forces currently stationed in Juba Bor and Malakal are to be moved to bases at least 25 kilometers outside of each respective city The Presidential Guard at Giada Barracks and SPLA s General Headquarters in Bilpam are authorized exceptions to the agreement 82 Equipment edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2023 nbsp A T 72 in SPLA serviceAs of 2013 the SPLA s land forces operated the following heavy equipment 110 x T 72 49 A small number of T 55 tanks captured during the Second Sudanese Civil War 49 12 x 2S1 Gvozdika 49 12 x 2S3 Akatsiya 49 15 x BM 21 Grad 49 Mamba APC More than 30 82mm mortars 49 As of 2013 the South Sudan Air Force operated the following aircraft 1 x Beechcraft 1900 49 9 x Mil Mi 17 49 1 x Mi 172 49 Defence expenditure editAccording to the 2013 edition of the International Institute for Strategic Studies report The Military Balance South Sudan s defence budgets since 2011 have been as follows Year South Sudanese pounds US dollar equivalent2011 1 6bn 533m2012 2 42bn 537m2013 2 52bnSee also editDemocratic Change South Sudan formerly Sudan People s Liberation Movement Democratic Change a political party Sudan Liberation Movement Army a Sudanese rebel group active in Darfur founded as the Darfur Liberation Front Sudan People s Liberation Movement SPLM a political party in South Sudan founded as the political wing of the SPLA Sudan People s Liberation Movement in Opposition a mainly South Sudanese political party that split from the Sudan People s Liberation Movement in 2013 Sudan People s Liberation Movement North a political party and militant organisation in the Republic of SudanNotes editConstructs such as ibid loc cit and idem are discouraged by Wikipedia s style guide for footnotes as they are easily broken Please improve this article by replacing them with named references quick guide or an abbreviated title July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message SPLA renamed South Sudan Defense Force in a major army shake up Eye Radio Network 16 May 2017 Archived from the original on 17 June 2018 Retrieved 17 June 2018 a b South Sudan s president appoints new army chief Reuters 11 April 2021 Archived from the original on 12 April 2021 Retrieved 12 April 2021 IISS 2019 pp 491 Denying the Honor of Living Sudan a Human Rights Disaster Human Rights Watch 1990 ISBN 978 0 929692 53 1 a b Teresa 21 June 2019 Brief Biography and Facts About Major Cdr Late William Nyuon Bany Machar City Scrollz Archived from the original on 19 June 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Buay Gordon 24 January 2011 Who Is CDR William Nyuon Bany Machar Gurtong Trust Archived from the original on 20 June 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Shaw Toby 1 January 2020 SPLA Day in South Sudan in 2021 Office Holidays Archived from the original on 20 June 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2020 a b Rone 1994 p xiv a b Guarak Mawut Achiecque Mach Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan An African Renaissance Bloomington IN AuthorHouse 2011 p 210 self published source a b c Guarak Mawut Achiecque Mach Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan An African Renaissance Bloomington IN AuthorHouse 2011 pp 252 253 self published source a b Rone 1994 p 90 a b c d e Africa Watch Committee Denying the Honor of Living Sudan a Human Rights Disaster an Africa Watch Report Archived 2017 07 02 at the Wayback Machine New York N Y Africa Watch Committee 1990 pp 18 19 Africa Watch Committee Denying the Honor of Living Sudan a Human Rights Disaster an Africa Watch Report Archived 2017 08 12 at the Wayback Machine New York N Y Africa Watch Committee 1990 p 23 Africa Watch Committee Denying the Honor of Living Sudan a Human Rights Disaster an Africa Watch Report Archived 2017 07 02 at the Wayback Machine New York N Y Africa Watch Committee 1990 p 65 a b c Africa Watch Committee Denying the Honor of Living Sudan a Human Rights Disaster an Africa Watch Report Archived 2017 08 12 at the Wayback Machine New York N Y Africa Watch Committee 1990 pp 153 155 Rone 1994 p 1 a b Rone 1994 p 27 a b c Rone 1994 p 21 Rone 1994 pp 21 23 101 Norsk Bistandshistorie Norwegian aid history Randi Ronning Balsvik 2016 p 115 https www idunn no ht 2017 02 randi roenning balsvik norsk bistandshistorie Archived 2018 04 19 at the Wayback Machine Moorcroft Omar al Bashir and Africa s Longest War 2015 72 Africa Watch Committee Denying the Honor of Living Sudan a Human Rights Disaster an Africa Watch Report Archived 2017 08 11 at the Wayback Machine New York N Y Africa Watch Committee 1990 p 22 Africa Watch Committee Denying the Honor of Living Sudan a Human Rights Disaster an Africa Watch Report Archived 2017 07 02 at the Wayback Machine New York N Y Africa Watch Committee 1990 p 53 Guarak Mawut Achiecque Mach Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan An African Renaissance Bloomington IN AuthorHouse 2011 p 128 self published source Africa Watch Committee Denying the Honor of Living Sudan a Human Rights Disaster an Africa Watch Report Archived 2017 08 12 at the Wayback Machine New York N Y Africa Watch Committee 1990 p 25 a b Rone 1994 p 25 a b Guarak Mawut Achiecque Mach Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan An African Renaissance Bloomington IN AuthorHouse 2011 p 208 self published source Rone 1994 p 91 Rone 1994 p 3 Rone 1994 p 35 Karl R DeRouen and Uk Heo Civil wars of the world major conflicts since World War II Vol 1 ABC CLIO p 748 Rone 1994 pp 56 58 Guarak Mawut Achiecque Mach Integration and Fragmentation of the Sudan An African Renaissance Bloomington IN AuthorHouse 2011 p 220 self published source Rone 1994 p 99 Rone 1994 p 12 SPLA to demobilize all child soldiers by end of the year Sudan Tribune Plural news and views on Sudan Sudan Tribune Archived from the original on 15 February 2011 Retrieved 20 June 2012 a b c Rands 2010 Rands 2010 p 9 a b Paterno Steve 24 August 2012 Plural news and views on Sudan Sudan Tribune Archived from the original on 21 July 2013 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Young John 2012 The Fate of Sudan The Origins and Consequences of a Flawed Peace Process Zed Books pp 121 2 in Alex de Waal The Real Politics of the Horn of Africa Polity 2015 96 Rands 2010 p 10 a b Kiir appoints new army Chief of Staff relieves deputies Sudan Tribune 1 June 2009 Archived from the original on 7 January 2014 Retrieved 7 January 2014 10ADDISABABA176 CPA Annexure I Part 1 Article 7 1 2 International Crisis Group Sudan s Spreading Conflict II War in Blue Nile Crisis Group Africa Report N 204 18 June 2013 p 14 p 3 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 17 April 2020 Retrieved 3 May 2019 ibid ODI p 7 Rands 2010 p 11 a b c d e f g h i j IISS 2013 p 532 Heavy gunfire rocks South Sudan capital Al Jazeera 16 December 2013 Archived from the original on 17 December 2013 Retrieved 17 December 2013 Interim Report of the Panel of Experts S 2015 656 21 August 2015 Annex V p 37 a b Tiger faction of ethnic Shilluk kingdom dismisses integration into SPLM IO Sudan Tribune 11 March 2016 Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 26 November 2017 The Conflict in Upper Nile State Small Arms Survey 8 March 2016 Archived from the original on 24 February 2018 Retrieved 28 November 2017 Machol Deng 16 May 2017 South Sudan president restructures army changes its name to SSDF Africanews Archived from the original on 30 December 2019 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Isabirye Joel 8 August 2017 From SPLA to SSPDF The Detailed Account of why South Sudan is changing the name of its Heroic National Army The Investigator Archived from the original on 18 June 2018 Retrieved 9 October 2017 South Sudan president says changed SPLA name to represent will of people Sudan Tribune Juba 4 August 2017 Archived from the original on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 9 October 2017 SPLA officially renamed South Sudan People s Defence Forces Sudan Tribune Plural news and views on Sudan www sudantribune com 3 October 2019 Archived from the original on 29 October 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2020 SPLA Becomes South Sudan People s Defence Forces SSPDF Taarifa Rwanda in Latin 3 October 2018 Archived from the original on 20 June 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2020 IISS 2018 p 487 a b c Africa South Sudan Central Intelligence Agency The World Factbook 17 June 2020 Archived from the original on 12 January 2021 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Mayom Manyang 18 October 2019 South Sudan People s Defense Force SSPDF lauds UNMISS for training in international human rights and humanitarian law Africanews Archived from the original on 19 June 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Dumo Denis Wartorn South Sudan s army chief dies U S Archived from the original on 17 June 2018 Retrieved 17 June 2018 New South Sudan army chief sworn in Radio Tamazuj Archived from the original on 18 June 2018 Retrieved 17 June 2018 Kiir sacks army chief Gabriel Jok Radio Tamazuj Archived from the original on 20 May 2020 Retrieved 11 May 2020 South Sudan leader sacks army chief Xinhua in Latin 21 March 2017 Archived from the original on 20 June 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Kuyok Kuyok Abol 2015 South Sudan The Notable Firsts AuthorHouse ISBN 9781504943468 Archived from the original on 2 March 2023 Retrieved 3 October 2020 Small Arms Survey The Conflict in Upper Nile State PDF Archived PDF from the original on 3 March 2019 Retrieved 3 May 2019 Unrest Among South Sudan Military Forces Spreads Beyond Capital allAfrica Juba Dabanga 17 December 2013 Retrieved 13 May 2023 subscription required AllAfrica com Sudan SRSG Pledges Unmiss Support During Visit to Eastern Equatoria State Archived from the original on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 6 May 2019 South Sudan army defection in Wunyiik Radio Tamazuj Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 4 June 2016 Missing money at SPLA Div 4 widows unpaid Radio Tamazuj Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 4 June 2016 Unity state s 4th division commander defects assumes governorship Sudan Tribune Plural news and views on Sudan sudantribune com Archived from the original on 20 March 2014 Retrieved 3 October 2019 a b S 2016 656 PDF p 22 Archived PDF from the original on 19 February 2020 Retrieved 6 May 2019 Interim Report of the Panel of Experts S 2016 656 21 August 2015 Annex V SPLA launches military operations against SPLA IO forces in Bahr el Ghazal region Sudan Tribune Plural news and views on Sudan www sudantribune com 23 September 2016 Archived from the original on 1 April 2018 Retrieved 1 April 2018 Machier Tor 1 June 2018 Buay Rolnyang to appear in military court very soon Nyamilepedia Archived from the original on 15 June 2021 Retrieved 20 March 2022 Report of the Panel of Experts S 2016 963 p 3 SSDM A Upper Nile www smallarmssurveysudan org Archived from the original on 1 April 2018 Retrieved 1 April 2018 Rands 2010 p 15 The Conflict in Bahr el Ghazal www smallarmssurveysudan org Archived from the original on 29 August 2017 Retrieved 1 April 2018 SPLA deploys soldiers along Juba Bor road 15 July 2017 Archived from the original on 2 May 2019 Retrieved 3 October 2019 Desk News SPLA Starts redeploying forces out of Juba thenationmirror com Archived from the original on 1 April 2018 Retrieved 1 April 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a first has generic name help References editInternational Institute for Strategic Studies IISS 2018 The Military Balance 2018 The Military Balance Annual Estimates of the Nature and Size of the Military Forces of the Principal Powers London IISS ISSN 0459 7222 International Institute for Strategic Studies IISS 2013 The Military Balance 2013 The Military Balance Annual Estimates of the Nature and Size of the Military Forces of the Principal Powers London IISS ISSN 0459 7222 Rands Richard 2010 In Need of Review SPLA Transformation in 2006 10 and Beyond PDF Small Arms Survey HSBA Rone Jemera 1994 Civilian Devastation Abuses by All Parties in the War in Southern Sudan New York Human Rights Watch ISBN 9781564321299 Archived from the original on 11 January 2014 Further reading editInternational Institute for Strategic Studies 15 February 2019 The Military Balance 2019 London Routledge ISBN 9781857439885 Sikainga Ahmad Alawad and Daly M W Civil war in the Sudan London New York British Academic Press Distributed by St Martinʾs Press in the United States of America and Canada 1993 See Douglas and Prunier article on origins of SPLA Elizabeth Shackelford The Dissent Channel American Diplomacy in a Dishonest Age PublicAffairs May 12 2020 Says that the post independence South Sudanese army could never be an unified national force too tribal Further reading African Rights 1997 Food and Power in Sudan A Critique of Humanitarianism London African Rights Militarism and brutality of the early SPLA External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Military of South Sudan Who s who in SPLM Juba Photographer s Account of the SPLA The Cost of Silence A Traveling Exhibition Kenya Strikes Difficult Balance Between North and South of Sudan retired Kenyan military officers providing training to SPLA U S Embassy Khartoum SOUTHERN SUDAN APPROXIMATE TROOP STRENGTH AND EQUIPMENT INVENTORY of Sudan People s Liberation Army 06KHARTOUM1650 a July 12 2006 15 59 Wednesday Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title South Sudan People 27s Defence Forces amp oldid 1181916571, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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