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Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo leads by 11.8 pts · 2 figures compared

General · Modern

General · Modern
Ahmed Suleiman Dafle was appointed as the Chief of the Somali Police Force after Siad Barre's coup. He was a loyalist who helped enforce Barre's authoritarian rule and suppress dissent.
As police chief, Dafle oversaw the repression of political opponents, including the arrest and torture of dissidents. His tenure was marked by human rights abuses and the consolidation of Barre's dictatorship.
After the collapse of Siad Barre's government in 1991, Ahmed Suleiman Dafle fled Somalia. He went into exile, avoiding the civil war and the retribution of the victorious rebel factions.
Dagalo led the RSF (then Janjaweed) in the Darfur conflict, where they were accused of war crimes, including ethnic cleansing and mass atrocities against non-Arab populations. The conflict resulted in hundreds of thousands of deaths and millions displaced.
Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo was appointed Commander of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilitary group formed from Janjaweed militias. The RSF became a key force in Sudan's conflicts, including the Darfur war and later the 2023 civil war.
Dagalo was appointed Deputy Chairman of the Sovereignty Council, making him the second-highest ranking official in Sudan's transitional government. This position gave him significant political power alongside General al-Burhan.
Dagalo's RSF launched a major offensive against the Sudanese Armed Forces in April 2023, triggering a full-scale civil war. The conflict caused widespread destruction, a humanitarian crisis, and the displacement of millions in Sudan.
This comparison has not been analyzed yet.
One-time AI generation (~1 minute). Scores and timeline are already available below.
Each figure is scored on 6 dimensions (0—100 scale) based on structured historical data: Military (10%), Political (20%), Influence (20%), Legacy (20%), Leadership (15%), Strategy (15%). The weighted total produces the final ranking.
Scores are computed from structured sub-indicators in the database. Scale factors adjust for era (Ancient ×0.85, Modern ×1.0) and civilization size (Eastern ×1.05, Other ×0.80) to account for differences in population and military scale.
Comparisons are limited to 2—3 figures to ensure readability and statistical meaningfulness.
±5 points per dimension — Sub-scores are derived from historical records with inherent uncertainty. Two figures within 5 points on a dimension should be considered roughly equivalent in that area.
±3 points overall — The weighted combination of 6 dimensions produces a total score with approximately ±3 points of uncertainty. Differences of less than 3 points are not statistically significant— the figures are effectively tied.
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