Sudan Civil War - Constituent Concerns

Foreign Policy

Contact Information

Date Contacted: February 2026 Method: Email via Langworthy.house.gov Topic: Concerns about the Sudanese Civil War Response Status: Form letter received same day (Feb 12, 2026)


Langworthy’s Response

Tracking Code: [RWMPEG-7KPP3] Response Date: February 12, 2026 (3:05 PM)

“Thank you for contacting me to express your concerns about the Sudanese Civil War. I appreciate the opportunity to respond.”

On the conflict:

“As you know, beginning in 2023, the Sudan civil war is an ongoing conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF). This civil war has cost the lives of thousands of Sudanese, displaced many more from their homes, and contributed to the rapid spread of disease and famine.”

“You may be interested to know that President Trump and the State Department are currently engaged with both the SAF and RSF, as well as neighboring countries, to bring a peaceful end to this conflict. In addition to bringing about a peaceful resolution, the White House is also seeking solutions to address the ongoing humanitarian conflict.”

Delegating to Trump:

“I trust in President Trump and his dedication to achieving peace through strength, to bring peace to Sudan. In his second term, he has ended multiple wars by brokering a peace deal between Israel and Hamas that secured the release of all hostages and brought stability to the region, achieving a diplomatic resolution to the long-standing conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, obliterating Iran’s nuclear capabilities, and ending the war between Israel and Iran.”


Notable Claims Requiring Scrutiny

The response includes several factual assertions that constitute the letter’s substantive content:

ClaimStatus as of Letter Date (Feb 12, 2026)
Israel-Hamas peace deal “secured the release of all hostages”Ceasefire/hostage deal reached Jan 2025; not all hostages released as of this date
“Obliterating Iran’s nuclear capabilities”Operation Epic Fury (Feb 28, 2026) had not yet occurred as of Feb 12
“Ending the war between Israel and Iran”Israel-Iran military exchanges; “ended” is disputed
“Diplomatic resolution” between Armenia and AzerbaijanPartial agreement; full peace treaty not finalized

What This Response Does NOT Address

  1. Humanitarian crisis specifics — Does not address U.S. humanitarian aid to Sudan
  2. Congressional action — No mention of any legislation Langworthy supports for Sudan
  3. Constituent’s actual concerns — Defers entirely to executive branch action
  4. Rescissions Act (H.R.4) — Langworthy voted YES on July 17, 2025 to cut $8.3B in funding including foreign humanitarian aid

Pattern: Trust in President Trump Delegation

This letter exemplifies what we call the “Trust in President Trump” pattern: constituent raises specific concern about a crisis; response acknowledges the crisis and delegates responsibility entirely to the executive branch without any mention of Congressional oversight or Langworthy’s own role.


Form Letter Evidence

  • Tracking code: [RWMPEG-7KPP3]
  • Boilerplate Sudan conflict description
  • Standard closing: “My door is always open…”

Documents



Note: This entry documents publicly available information from official correspondence. Personal constituent information has been redacted.

Last updated: March 14, 2026