The Jerusalem Post

Trump announces deal to take Sudan off state sponsors of terrorism list

Issue separate from normalizat­ion with Israel – American officials

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

The US reached a deal with Sudan on Monday to remove the North African country from the list of state sponsors of terrorism, US President Donald Trump announced.

Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok thanked Trump, taking to twitter to say that the US president’s “tweet and that notificati­on are the strongest support to Sudan’s transition to democracy and to the Sudanese people. As we’re about to get rid of the heaviest legacy of Sudan’s previous, defunct regime, I should reiterate that we are peace- loving people and have never supported terrorism.”

While the US favors normalizat­ion between Israel and

Sudan, a US official reiterated on Monday what has consistent­ly been the American position: that it is a separate matter from Khartoum’s designatio­n.

Still, the leadership of

Parts of the report also criticized the office of the IDF’s chief engineer, the technology and logistics branch and the IDF’s medical corps. Englman suggested that the IDF chief engineer work on closing the gaps in terms of necessary equipment for protection from the chemical weapons threat.

The IDF responded in May that it would study the issue.

It appeared that the IDF would not have tackled the issue at all without the comptrolle­r raising it, and that even once the issue was raised, it may take years before it is concretely

Sudan’s transition­al government, instituted after ruler Omar al- Bashir was toppled last year, has been discussing ties with Israel in conjunctio­n with its talks with the US about economic aid and relief from $ 3 billion in debt, which Sudan could only receive after the removal of its terrorism sponsor designatio­n. Diplomatic relations with Israel were discussed in a late- night cabinet meeting in Khartoum on Sunday.

The civilian leadership in the Sudanese transition­al government, led by Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, has resisted diplomatic relations with Israel, while the military leadership, with chairman of the Sudanese Sovereignt­y Council Abdel Fatah al- Burhan and his No. 2, Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, favor such ties.

Asked about normalizat­ion on Army Radio, Finance Minister Israel Katz said: “There are contacts facilitate­d by the Americans, and they’re complicate­d. I hope the intensive contacts bear fruit.”

The US put Sudan on its list of state sponsors of terrorism in 1993, while under Bashir’s rule, because it harbored al- Qaeda terrorists, including Osama bin Laden, among others, and later helped Iran transfer arms to Hamas and Hezbollah. The new government has cooperated with US counterter­rorism efforts.

The designatio­n blocks the transition­al government from accessing urgently needed debt relief and foreign financing, while Sudan’s growing inflation and devaluatio­n of its currency remain major challenges to the new government.

The Trump administra­tion’s deal with Sudan has faced obstacles in getting the US Congress to pass laws granting Sudan immunity from lawsuits from more victims of terrorism after it pays the $ 335 million in compensati­on.

Democrats and Republican­s support removing Sudan from the list as a way to foster democracy in Sudan and encourage population­s opposing tyrannical regimes. But Democratic senators are split on the details, with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Bob Menendez seeking compensati­on for victims of 9/ 11 and bombings of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.

A Sudanese organizati­on called “The People’s Initiative to Normalize Ties” on Sunday said a poll they conducted found 83% of Sudanese people support diplomatic ties with Israel, KAN News reported.

The organizati­on reportedly has the approval of Burhan and Dagalo to prepare the public for normalizat­ion.

In addition, a delegation of 40 athletes, artists and businessme­n from Sudan, led by former MP and businessma­n Abu al- Qasim Bartham, plans to visit Israel in November to “break the psychologi­cal barriers” between the countries, Bartham told KAN News last week.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Burhan in February, and Sudan subsequent­ly allowed Israeli planes to fly over its airspace.

Normalizat­ion between Israel and Sudan would be deeply symbolic, as Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, was the site of the 1967 Arab League decision on the Three No’s – no recognitio­n, no negotiatio­ns and no peace with Israel. •

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel