Since Bashir’s arrest by his once-loyal military, top figures from his regime seem to be in retreat mode as commanders apparently maneuver behind the scenes, analysts say.

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“This isn’t an unfamiliar situation when a strongman falls,” said Zach Vertin, a fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former senior adviser to President Barack Obama’s special envoy to Sudan. “The linchpin is removed, and you get the remnants of the regime jockeying for survival.”

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Awad Ibn Auf, the former vice president and defense minister who announced Bashir’s ouster, lasted just over a day as the head of a transitional military government. Then Salah Gosh, Bashir’s feared head of intelligence, resigned from his position Saturday.

Another win for the protesters came Saturday afternoon when a curfew imposed by the military council — which many saw as a tactic to disperse the demonstrators — was canceled by its new leader, Lt. Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan.

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Burhan struck a conciliatory tone and paid his respects to what he called “the revolution.” He also promised to prosecute security forces that had killed protesters, and he fired all state governors appointed by Bashir, effective immediately.

Many protesters remain jubilant. Most Sudanese people have only known Bashir’s autocratic rule, and the rapid changes are thrilling, if confusing.

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Still, their main demand, for a civilian government, has not been met. The possible timetable for the military to step aside has become a main point of friction.

Burhan, who took charge of the government late Friday, did not help ease the worries. He said Saturday that the transition to civilian rule could still take up two years. That brought immediate outcry from the demonstrators as simply too long.

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“We assert that our revolution is continuing and will not retreat or deviate from its path until we achieve . . . our people’s legitimate demands of handing over power to a civilian government,” the Sudanese Professionals Association, which has been leading the protests, said in a statement.

Burhan is a little-known and lifelong army commander who until recently led its infantry division and helped recruit many of its members to fight on behalf of Saudi Arabia-aligned factions in Yemen’s civil war.

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His appointment was seen as an appeasement to the protests, but it did little to answer major looming questions. Among them: What is the status of Bashir?

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No evidence has been made public to prove that Bashir was in custody — or even still in Sudan for that matter. Also unclear is what role, if any, was played by regional power brokers — such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates — that vied for influence in Sudan.

The United States, which repeatedly punished Bashir’s regime for alleged human rights violations, has been largely silent. Sudan remains on Washington’s list of state sponsors of terrorism; many of the former regime’s leaders are on sanctions lists, and there is no American ambassador in Khartoum.

The turmoil has distracted many Sudanese from a festering economic crisis. Since Bashir’s arrest, Sudan’s borders and airspace have been closed, exacerbating an already debilitating shortage of goods, all of which are becoming more expensive by the day. Fuel and wheat, in particular, have become flash points.

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With Sudan facing various crises, finding a way forward politically has become more urgent. The military council effectively in control of the country has stressed that it will negotiate with protest leaders only if their followers conduct themselves “without chaos.”

That raised questions about how long the military will keep its patience and allow the demonstrations to continue.

Protest leaders, on the other hand, have accused many members of the military council of being untrustworthy criminals because they are implicated in the military’s brutal crackdowns through Bashir’s years that earned some officials, including Bashir, indictments for war crimes in the International Criminal Court for atrocities in Sudan’s Darfur ­region.

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