Fallout spiraled fast as deleted military posts lit diplomatic nerves, ministers tried damage control, and party hardliners turned a radio spat into an online knife fight with bigger stakes than bruised egos.
Deleted posts and apology
Deleted posts and apology
- Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba tossed out claims about strained U.S. security ties.
- Floated halting cooperation with the U.S. mission in Kampala.
- Pulled the messages down after blowback.
- Backtracked, blaming bad intel and affirming cooperation continues.
- Chris Baryomunsi separated personal posting from state policy.
- Brushed the messages off as offhand social chatter.
- Said the cleanup complicated his spokesperson role.
- Flagged the issue upward to Yoweri Museveni.
- Daudi Kabanda rejected any attempt to detach the army chief.
- Argued that the office carries weight regardless of disclaimers.
- Framed the minister's stance as politically driven.
- Warned against publicly downgrading the CDF.
- Daudi Kabanda unloaded a long X rant at the minister.
- Smeared motives and character with harsh labels.
- Leveled allegations tied to the Kanungu election conduct.
- Pitched the CDF as intolerant of blackmail and mediocrity.
- Chris Baryomunsi answered with a scathing dismissal.
- Mocked the critique as empty noise.
- Questioned the author's intellectual seriousness.
- Helped the feud spread further online.
- Government voices worry about instant diplomatic ripple effects.
- PLU allies see factional muscle flexing.
- Civil-military messaging lines look blurry.
- Party unity and foreign posture feel exposed.