Live Wire
17:21ZENGLISHABUPakistan PM Shehbaz Sharif says final draft of peace agreement formulated17:20ZCLASHREPORGabbard declassified intelligence on US-funded biolabs across 30+ countries including Ukraine17:20ZCLASHREPORGreek defense minister says recent conflicts demonstrate nations must develop domestic drone production17:19ZWARTRANSLAUkraine's Zelensky signs law removing Russian from European language charter17:19ZMIDDLEEAST/🇮🇷 The upcoming Iran-U.S. deal, what details will I be looking for?1. Lebanon & Iran’s Frozen AssetsThe pr…17:18ZCLASHREPORGreece lacks unlimited resources, money for defense projects, Defense Minister Dendias says17:16ZOANNTVElon Musk set to become world's first trillionaire17:16ZOURWARSTODPakistan PM Sharif says final text of US-Iran peace deal agreed17:21ZENGLISHABUPakistan PM Shehbaz Sharif says final draft of peace agreement formulated17:20ZCLASHREPORGabbard declassified intelligence on US-funded biolabs across 30+ countries including Ukraine17:20ZCLASHREPORGreek defense minister says recent conflicts demonstrate nations must develop domestic drone production17:19ZWARTRANSLAUkraine's Zelensky signs law removing Russian from European language charter17:19ZMIDDLEEAST/🇮🇷 The upcoming Iran-U.S. deal, what details will I be looking for?1. Lebanon & Iran’s Frozen AssetsThe pr…17:18ZCLASHREPORGreece lacks unlimited resources, money for defense projects, Defense Minister Dendias says17:16ZOANNTVElon Musk set to become world's first trillionaire17:16ZOURWARSTODPakistan PM Sharif says final text of US-Iran peace deal agreed
Markets
S&P 500742.67 0.67%Nasdaq25,932 0.47%Nasdaq 10029,708 0.89%Dow513.95 0.90%Nikkei92.94 0.82%China 5035.27 1.02%Europe89.72 0.29%DAX42.32 0.12%BTC$63,775 2.34%ETH$1,668 2.18%BNB$606.58 1.76%XRP$1.13 2.48%SOL$67.6 3.95%TRX$0.3141 0.19%HYPE$61.77 10.29%DOGE$0.0884 4.70%LEO$9.55 0.60%RAIN$0.0131 0.13%QQQ$723.49 0.89%VOO$682.84 0.68%VTI$367 0.74%IWM$294.29 1.33%ARKK$75.51 0.07%HYG$79.97 0.03%Gold$387.62 0.34%Silver$61.36 0.89%WTI Crude$126.11 2.12%Brent$48.06 2.19%Nat Gas$11.32 1.43%Copper$39.26 0.82%EUR/USD1.1567 0.00%GBP/USD1.3402 0.00%USD/JPY160.20 0.00%USD/CNY6.7623 0.00%S&P 500742.67 0.67%Nasdaq25,932 0.47%Nasdaq 10029,708 0.89%Dow513.95 0.90%Nikkei92.94 0.82%China 5035.27 1.02%Europe89.72 0.29%DAX42.32 0.12%BTC$63,775 2.34%ETH$1,668 2.18%BNB$606.58 1.76%XRP$1.13 2.48%SOL$67.6 3.95%TRX$0.3141 0.19%HYPE$61.77 10.29%DOGE$0.0884 4.70%LEO$9.55 0.60%RAIN$0.0131 0.13%QQQ$723.49 0.89%VOO$682.84 0.68%VTI$367 0.74%IWM$294.29 1.33%ARKK$75.51 0.07%HYG$79.97 0.03%Gold$387.62 0.34%Silver$61.36 0.89%WTI Crude$126.11 2.12%Brent$48.06 2.19%Nat Gas$11.32 1.43%Copper$39.26 0.82%EUR/USD1.1567 0.00%GBP/USD1.3402 0.00%USD/JPY160.20 0.00%USD/CNY6.7623 0.00%
OPENNYSEcloses in 2h 35m
themonexus.
Vol. I · No. 163
Friday, 12 June 2026
17:24 UTC
  • UTC17:24
  • EDT13:24
  • GMT18:24
  • CET19:24
  • JST02:24
  • HKT01:24
← back to Saturday edition◉ LIVE ON THE WIREfollow this thread in real time
Africa

Sudan Accuses UAE of Khartoum Drone Strike; Abu Dhabi Denies Involvement

Sudan's armed forces have publicly identified an Emirati drone as responsible for a strike on Khartoum airport — a claim Abu Dhabi swiftly rejected, deepening the already fraught diplomatic fallout from a war now entering its third year.
Sudan's armed forces have publicly identified an Emirati drone as responsible for a strike on Khartoum airport — a claim Abu Dhabi swiftly rejected, deepening the already fraught diplomatic fallout from a war now entering its third year.
Sudan's armed forces have publicly identified an Emirati drone as responsible for a strike on Khartoum airport — a claim Abu Dhabi swiftly rejected, deepening the already fraught diplomatic fallout from a war now entering its third year. / DW / Photography

Sudan's Armed Forces have formally accused the United Arab Emirates of carrying out a drone strike on Khartoum international airport, citing an Emirati unmanned aerial vehicle as the source of the strike launched on Monday, 5 May 2026. Abu Dhabi rejected the claim within hours, calling it "baseless" and insisting it had no involvement in the incident.

The allegation adds a new and volatile dimension to a conflict that has already consumed the country since April 2023, pitting Sudan's military government — led by de facto head General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan — against the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces commanded by General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo. Both sides have repeatedly blamed external actors for accelerating the destruction, but Sudan's direct naming of the UAE marks a significant escalation in the diplomatic pressure campaign against Abu Dhabi.

A Claim, Denied

According to reporting by The Cradle Media on 6 May 2026, Sudan's official statement identified the weapon as an Emirati-manufactured or Emirati-operated drone that struck the airport perimeter. The claim did not include independently verifiable evidence such as debris imagery, flight tracking data, or satellite coordinates — limitations that Abu Dhabi's denial immediately exploited.

The UAE foreign ministry described Sudan's accusation as "incorrect and misleading," framing it as part of a broader campaign to distract from the Sudanese Armed Forces' own battlefield difficulties. A readout attributed to UAE officials — as reported by The Cradle — maintained that Abu Dhabi maintains a policy of non-interference in Sudan's internal affairs, a position the government has repeated since the war began.

International observers note that independent verification of drone strikes in active war zones is technically complex. Open-source intelligence analysts tracking the conflict have documented multiple air frames operating over Khartoum, including craft assessed as Chinese-manufactured Wing Loong systems and, reportedly, Iranian-supplied drones — attribution in all cases remains contested.

A Relationship Already Fractured

The UAE-Sudan relationship has been deteriorating since before the current war. Abu Dhabi developed close ties with the RSF throughout the 2010s, channeling financial support and military hardware to the paramilitary as part of a broader strategy to cultivate allies across the Horn of Africa. That investment paid dividends diplomatically — the UAE secured port access and influence in a strategically vital region — but it created deep resentment within Sudan's military establishment, which watched a rival armed force acquire external patronage at scale.

Since the war broke out in April 2023, Sudan has repeatedly accused the UAE of materially backing the RSF. Emirati officials have denied this consistently, though reporting by multiple wire services throughout 2024 and 2025 documented evidence — cargo tracking, satellite imagery, and witness accounts — suggesting that weapons supplies transited through Port Sudan and other entry points into RSF-controlled territory. The International Crisis Group and the UN Panel of Experts both flagged UAE-linked supply chains in separate reports covering 2024.

Monday's strike accusation is the sharpest direct charge yet. If Khartoum's account is accurate — and that remains unverified by this publication — it would represent not merely indirect support for the RSF but active Emirati military engagement against the Sudanese state itself.

The Regional Geometry Shifting

The Khartoum airport incident arrives at a moment of intensified competition across the Horn of Africa. Egypt has watched the conflict's spillover with increasing alarm, hosting displaced Sudanese civilians and providing quiet political backing to Burhan's forces. Egypt's alignment with Sudan's military government places Cairo in indirect opposition to the UAE, with whom it has clashed repeatedly over Ethiopian dam politics and Red Sea influence.

Saudi Arabia, which initially attempted to broker a ceasefire through the Jeddah process, has found its mediation effort largely stalled. Riyadh's relationship with both Abu Dhabi and Khartoum is complicated — the kingdom has its own interests in stability along the Red Sea corridor but has not been willing to confront the UAE publicly over the RSF question. The net result is a vacuum in which external actors operate with relative impunity.

The African Union and the UN's trilateral mechanism have struggled to impose constraints. A January 2026 ceasefire agreement brokered under Swiss mediation collapsed within weeks, with both sides accusing each other of violations. The credibility of international mediation has eroded substantially.

What Comes Next

If Sudan escalates diplomatically — expelling UAE diplomats, bringing the matter to the UN Security Council, or filing a formal complaint with the African Union — it will force a reckoning on the question of Emirati involvement that Western capitals have largely preferred to leave ambiguous. Washington has maintained a careful balance, issuing statements of concern about the conflict's humanitarian toll without directly naming Abu Dhabi as a spoiler. Britain and France have followed a similar line.

The UAE's denial, however swift, does not resolve the underlying question of what drones are operating over Khartoum and who is piloting them. The conflict has entered its third year with no credible peace architecture in place. More than eight million people have been displaced, according to UN estimates, and famine conditions have been documented across multiple governorates. External actors continue to shape the battlefield in ways that make political settlement increasingly difficult to imagine.

Whether Monday's strike represents a new threshold — Emirati direct engagement rather than covert supply — or remains another contested data point in a deeply confused conflict will depend on what evidence Khartoum produces and how Western governments choose to respond. So far, there is no indication that Sudan possesses the forensic capability to make its case beyond a formal diplomatic statement.

This publication covered the accusation through Sudanese Armed Forces channels and the UAE foreign ministry readout as reported by regional wire services. The evidentiary basis for the strike attribution remains disputed; this article does not independently verify the UAE's involvement.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/thecradlemedia/12591
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire