Gordon Kong signed the
Khartoum peace agreement with the government in 1997, and was appointed a commander with the
South Sudan Defence Forces (SSDF) under Riek Machar. Gordon Kong received separate funding from the
Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and in 1999 defected from Machar's command and became a direct client of the Government of Sudan. His forces reportedly helped push Machar's SSDF forces out of
Ler in 1998. On 27 April 2001, the provisional military council of the SSDF was announced, with Major General
Paulino Matiep as Commander and Gordon Kong Chuol as Deputy Commander and Commander for Operations. The civil war ended in January 2005, and the
Juba Declaration of 8 January 2006 laid out the basis for unifying rival military forces in
South Sudan. Gordon Kong resisted the merger. His core faction, the "Nasir Peace Force" was based in the village of Ketbek, just north of Nasir, with 75-80 fighters as of August 2006 and perhaps 300 reserve forces in the area. His position on the border with Sudan to the north and near to the functioning
Adar Yale oilfield was sensitive. Paulino Matiep accepted the agreement, but Gordon Kong proclaimed himself the new SSDF Commander-in-Chief, saying that his forces still supported the Sudan Government. A newspaper report speculated that while Matiep was looking at political opportunities in the Government of South Sudan, Gordon Kong was looking at potential gains from control of the oil-rich
Bentiu area. ==References==