
Ahmed Kodouda
@kodouda
Humanitarian policy and operations; conflict; governance; development; Africa; Sudan; Afghanistan;
ID: 15392413
11-07-2008 15:18:56
1,1K Tweet
4,4K Followers
869 Following



Sudan’s de facto partition is already beginning—and the country’s most likely future is more war, write Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda. fam.ag/4iKcwyR



If the key players in Sudan’s civil war continue to refuse a cease-fire or peace talks, rival powers could take hold in different parts of the country, write Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda. This de facto split would leave Sudan intact in name only. fam.ag/4iKcwyR


We’ve had some great guests lately on ASPI Stop the World. Ahmed Kodouda joined me to discuss Sudan where the world’s worst humanitarian crisis is unfolding. And who can top Nathan Ruser on satellite imagery? Nathan talks Kashmir. bit.ly/4mhrK1t apple.co/44Fy3pk

Sudan’s de facto partition is already beginning—and the country’s most likely future is more war, write Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda. foreignaffairs.com/sudan/sudan-un…

Listen to the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” featuring Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda in conversation with senior editor Eve Fairbanks: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…

Grateful to @Evefairbanks for the space to unpack what’s really driving Sudan’s conflict on the Foreign Affairs Interview podcast. Mai Hassan and I discuss war’s fragmentation, foreign backing, and collapse of formal politics. Please have a listen: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…

On the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda discuss how the war in Sudan has created the biggest humanitarian crisis ever recorded—and consider whether a path out of the conflict is possible: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…

On the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda warn that as the war in Sudan drags on, the consequences of the conflict are likely to get even worse—not just for Sudan, but for the rest of its region as well. foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…

Listen to the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” featuring Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda in conversation with senior editor Eve Fairbanks: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…

Listen to the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” featuring Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda in conversation with senior editor Eve Fairbanks: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…


Listen to the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” featuring Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda on the roots of the war in Sudan, how it became an intractable conflict, and whether a path to peace is possible: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…

“Now, with the expansion of the war and the increasing use of drones, the fronts are spreading to all corners of [Sudan].” Listen to the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” featuring a conversation with Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…

Following their recent essay in Foreign Affairs, Mai Hassan, faculty director of the MIT-Africa Program, and Ahmed Ahmed Kodouda discussed the roots of Sudan's intractable conflict on a new podcast episode. Listen here: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan… MIT School of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences MITPoliticalScience MISTI

Listen to the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” featuring Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda in conversation with senior editor Eve Fairbanks: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…

On the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” Mai Hassan and Ahmed Kodouda discuss how the war in Sudan has created the biggest humanitarian crisis ever recorded—and consider whether a path out of the conflict is possible: foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/sudan…
