The video reveals something far more troubling: the survival of Iran’s ideological and proxy doctrine inside elements aligned with Sudan’s armed forces.

 

 

 

Are you aware of being alive as Bible prophecy unfolds daily before your eyes and ears?

Sudan is part of Cush, as prophesied in Ezekiel 38.

Cush – Southern Alliance

• Territory south of Egypt, encompassing modern Sudan/Ethiopia (Isaiah 18:1Jeremiah 46:9).

• Known for tall, fierce warriors and swift rivers—symbolizing formidable manpower.

• Cush extends the invasion force from the south, surrounding Israel on another front and fulfilling God’s word that nations “from the ends of the earth” will gather for judgment (Jeremiah 25:31-33).

The photo caption above from Gatestone Institute writes of  “something far more troubling” in Sudan becoming a proxy of Iran.

No, not troubling at all to anyone truly born again, renewed of mind and spirit within by the Supernatural power of the Holy Spirit of God. The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

For if among that remnant, small number compared to the human population of the world, you know, as do I. You know, as do I. For God’s inerrant, infallible, unchangeable, eternal, living and active Word tells us, doesn’t it?

Now, if not truly born again, not truly renewed of mind and spirit within through repentance, confessing of sin to Jesus, acknowledging Jesus as LORD of lords, Lord needed in your life, Savior to you in need of saving, oh sinner! if not truly born anew, living faithfully and obedient to the LORD Jesus Christ, Yeshua Hamashiac, what are you waiting for? The Great Tribulation? If God blesses you with breath and a beating heart to that time.

Bible prophecy is unfolding not only before the discerning heart and mind of the true believers in Christ, but the same Bible prophecy is unfolding exactly the same to those in uttter darkness, in all the worldly Babel, delusion, lies and misdirection of people enslaved to this world, to self, in reality slaves to Satan their true master — though they contend they are the masters of their life.

Poppycock! Rubbish! Baloney! Better wake up before it’s too late to do so, and there is coming a day when that happens.

Be it by physical death, or having such a hardened heart, such a reprobate, wicked mind, there is no turning in you to see the Light, the Way, the Truth, to Life. You are so deaf and blind to it that there is no healing possible in you. Not according to me. According to God. See HERE.

Not that there was so much sin in you that you were beyond saving. You refused God. You refused the truth. You rejected Jesus, rejected God, and His Word. He then will spit you out. Only right isn’t it? No work, no eat. No faith and obedience, no saving. It’s each person’s choice.

Adolf Hitler, had he truly repented, TRULY repented of his great bloody oceans of sin to Jesus, humbled himself, bowed down, repented, confessed his sin, and truly allowed the Holy Spirit to work in him, to renew him of his heart and mind, to become a disciple of the LORD Jesus Christ? Yes, even Hitler could have been saved and gone to heaven. If only he had…even an ayatollah, yes, even an ayatollah. Imagine that.

All that ocean of precious shed blood, and it was precious life-giving blood, cannot compare, can’t come close to the Precious Shed Blood of God Himself, Jesus upon that tree of shame. God sacrificed Himself for me, for you, for anyone willing to see Him on that tree of shame, knowing then why He was there that day, to know He walked out of that tomb three days later, and then to anyone who not only believes but obeys and makes Him Lord of their life comes to know, to understand — no one’s sin is greater than the Sacrifice made by the Lamb of God, Jesus Christ, the LORD.

What? You’re worse than Adolf Hitler? An ayatollah? Really? Wow! you’d better stop reading this right now and fall on your knees and go to God Almighty! Worse than Hitler? Beyond saving? Wow…really? Wow.

How about you, friend? You as bad or worse than Hitler?

How excuse laden do you want to continue to be?

Think you’re so special and greater than God? For if you hold yourself beyond saving, you then make yourself higher than the words of God to every sinner — EVERY SINNER — who would hear Him, see Him, come to know Him, embrace Him, repent, and allow Him to change their hearts towards Him and from this fallen world.

How excuse laden do you want to continue to be?

Until death does part you from that breath within you, and it’s too late?

Eternity is quite a long time. Don’t like standing in lines? Being stuck in traffic? Commercials too much on TV? Well, there is no pause, no remote, no off ramp, no express lane in eternity, to eternity.

Hell lasts forever.

As does heaven.

Only two possible destinations for anyone in the human race.

Now, Sudan has become a proxy of Iran.

Here, if unfamiliar, read THIS and then…

Read on…

Ken Pullen, Wednesday, March 4th, 2026

 

 

Iran’s New Proxy: Sudan

VIDEO

 

An exclusive video circulating among intelligence sources shows a Sudanese army officer addressing a crowd during the country’s ongoing civil war. In the speech, he openly threatens Israel and expresses solidarity with Iran against the United States and its allies.

At first glance, such rhetoric might appear to be the product of wartime propaganda. It is not.

The video reveals something far more troubling: the survival of Iran’s ideological and proxy doctrine inside elements aligned with Sudan’s armed forces. Even as Iran faces economic strain and growing regional pressure, the strategic model it developed over decades — cultivating ideological allies and proxy networks — continues to spread.

Sudan’s civil war may now be providing fertile ground for its revival.

A Civil War Becoming a Geopolitical Arena

The conflict that erupted in April 2023 between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), has devastated Sudan.

Sudan’s war is no longer simply a domestic struggle for power. The war instead has increasingly been intersecting with a broader geopolitical contest stretching from the Persian Gulf to the Red Sea.

As the war dragged on, Sudan’s military leadership sought external partners capable of providing weapons and strategic support. Iran emerged as one of those partners.

In 2023, after years of estrangement, Sudan restored diplomatic relations with Iran. Since then, reports have indicated that Iranian drones and other military technologies have been supplied to Sudan’s armed forces to help them regain battlefield momentum. For Iran, Sudan represents far more than a wartime client.

Sudan occupies critical strategic positions in the Middle East–Africa security architecture. Its coastline stretches along the Red Sea — one of the most vital maritime corridors in the world. Nearly 12% of global trade moves through these waters. Influence along this route would give Iran leverage far beyond Sudan itself.

The Ideological Dimension

The most revealing aspect of the emerging Sudan–Iran relationship may not be the weapons transfers. It is the ideological rhetoric appearing within factions aligned with Sudan’s military coalition .

The speech captured in the video echoes themes familiar across Iran’s regional network: hostility toward Israel, denunciations of the United States and appeals framed in Islamist ideological terms.

These narratives are central to what Iran calls the “Axis of Resistance” — a loose network of movements and militias aligned with Tehran’s geopolitical ambitions.

From Hezbollah in Lebanon to Iranian-backed militias in Iraq and Syria and the Houthi movement in Yemen, Iran has repeatedly demonstrated its ability to cultivate partners capable of advancing its strategic objectives without large-scale Iranian military deployment.

This model — the creation of ideological allies embedded within fragile states — has proven one of Tehran’s most effective instruments of influence. Sudan now risks becoming another node in that network.

Sudan’s Historical Role

This possibility is not unprecedented. During the 1990s Sudan served as a hub for Islamist movements and maintained close military cooperation with Iran under the regime of Omar al-Bashir. Iranian weapons, training and logistical networks operated through Sudanese territory during that period.

Although Sudan later distanced itself from Iran in order to rebuild relations with Western and Gulf governments, the institutional and ideological legacy of those years never completely disappeared.

The current civil war is creating conditions that could allow those networks to reemerge.

As the Sudanese Armed Forces search for external support in a prolonged conflict, Iran has an opportunity to rebuild ties with elements inside Sudan’s security establishment.

The rhetoric now emerging from figures aligned with the military suggests that this process may already be underway.

The Red Sea Factor

Sudan’s importance is magnified by the growing instability across the Red Sea region.

Iran-backed Houthi forces in Yemen have already demonstrated their ability to threaten international shipping, launching attacks on commercial vessels and disrupting one of the world’s most critical trade routes.

These attacks illustrate the broader strategy Iran has pursued across the region: positioning allied actors along strategic chokepoints capable of pressuring global commerce and Western security interests.

If Sudan were to drift further into Iran’s strategic orbit, Iran could gain influence on both sides of the Red Sea — through the Houthis in Yemen and potential partners inside Sudan.

Such a development would significantly expand Iran’s ability to challenge Western interests along one of the most vital maritime corridors in the world.

A Strategic Warning

Sudan’s civil war is often viewed primarily as a humanitarian catastrophe. That tragedy is real and immense. The conflict , however, also carries profound strategic implications.

An Iran-aligned ideological current emerging inside a national army positioned along the Red Sea would represent a major shift in the region’s security landscape.

The video, showing a Sudanese officer praising Iran and threatening the United States and Israel, should therefore not be dismissed as mere propaganda.

The video may instead be offering a glimpse into the ideological forces shaping parts of Sudan’s military coalition.

Iran’s power may rise or fall. Sanctions may weaken its economy. Regional alliances may shift — but Tehran’s most enduring weapon has never been its army.

It has been its doctrine.

Sudan’s civil war may now be giving that doctrine a dangerous new battlefield.

Robert Williams is based in the United States.