The US on Monday eased back from threats to take coercive action against Sudan over its failure to allow the deployment of UN peacekeepers to Darfur, saying Khartoum was not solely at fault for the lack of progress on the issue.
US officials had earlier warned Khartoum that if deployment of the UN-led peacekeeping force was not underway by Jan. 1, they would turn to an unspecified "Plan B" of tough measures believed to include sanctions and the imposition of a no-fly zone over Darfur.
But US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack on Monday said it was still too early to take such action.
"We are thinking about what happens if this current set of diplomatic tactics doesn't work, but we're not prepared at this point to talk about" those measures, he said.
Last month the US envoy to Sudan, Andrew Natsios, laid out a series of steps Khartoum needed to take by Jan. 1 to avoid coervice measures to halt violence in Darfur, which has left at least 200,000 people dead and 2.5 million displaced over the past four years.
The measures included formal acceptance in writing from Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir of a UN plan to deploy a joint UN-African Union peacekeeping force of some 20,000 troops to Darfur.
Sudan also had to allow about 70 UN officers and logistics experts into Darfur, to be followed by a second phase deployment of around 1,000 command staff to the region.
While Beshir confirmed his acceptance with the overall plan in a letter delivered on Dec. 26 to then-UN secretary general Kofi Annan, he stopped short of agreeing to specific troop numbers and none of the advance UN staff have yet deployed to Darfur.
McCormack said that logistics problems rather than obstruction by Khartoum were to blame for the failure to get the UN staff into place.
"There's another half to this, and that is the UN being ready to actually deploy and get its preparations ready," McCormack said, explaining that the first 70 UN officials had gone into Darfur but had to return to the capital because their base was not ready.
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