The Jerusalem Post

Sudan is third Arab state to announce Israel ties

Khartoum and Jerusalem to establish diplomatic ties, Trump announces

- • By LAHAV HARKOV, OMRI NAHMIAS in Washington and CELIA JEAN

“Huge win today for the United States and for peace in the world,” Trump tweeted. “Sudan has agreed to a peace and normalizat­ion agreement with Israel! With the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, that’s three Arab countries to have done so in only a matter of weeks. More will follow!”

The tweet came after Trump, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Sudanese Chairman of the Sovereignt­y Council Abdel Fattah al- Burhan, and Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok spoke by phone.

Hours earlier, the US officially removed Sudan from its state sponsors of terrorism list, after the east African state paid $ 335 million in compensati­on to American victims of terror and their families.

The joint US- Israel- Sudan statement said Sudan and

Israel’s leaders “agreed to the normalizat­ion of relations... and to the end the state of belligeren­ce between their nations,” as well as to establish economic and trade ties.

Delegation­s from Israel and Sudan are expected to meet in the coming weeks to negotiate cooperatio­n agreements. Agricultur­e will be one of the major focuses of the new ties, as Sudan has large swaths of unused arable land and hopes Israeli agri- tech will help improve its economic situation.

The statement also mentions that the delegation­s will discuss “migration issues,” as thousands of Sudanese have moved to Israel in the past 15 years. Asked if repatriati­on of migrants, which Netanyahu has sought over the past decade, was on the table, an Israeli official said “the issue is still ahead of us.”

Sudanese nationals illegally entering Israel could not be deported previously because of the humanitari­an situation in their country and because Israel did not have ties with Sudan.

Netanyahu called the declaratio­n “another dramatic breakthrou­gh for peace, another Arab state joining the circle of peace.”

He highlighte­d the “great turnaround,” these ties symbolize, in that Khartoum was the site of the 1967 Arab League “three nos” declaratio­n of no peace, no recognitio­n and no negotiatio­ns with Israel.

“Today Khartoum has said,

‘ Yes to peace with Israel, yes to recognitio­n of Israel and yes to normalizat­ion with Israel,’” Netanyahu said. “This is a new era, an era of true peace, a peace that is expanding with other Arab countries, with three of them joining in recent weeks… We are expanding the circle of peace. What excitement; there should be more.”

In the conference call between the leaders, which Trump conducted in front of reporters, the US president said that there are “many, many more coming” and that there were “at least five” Arab and Muslim states who wanted to normalize ties with Israel.

Hamdok thanked Trump and Netanyahu, saying they are starting “a new chapter in our history of Sudan.

Burhan said “the agreement will strengthen our relations and serve the interest of local and regional security and peace.”

Normalizat­ion between Israel and Sudan will likely occur more slowly than the process with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, announced in August and September, respective­ly, because of the unique circumstan­ces.

Sudan’s current, transition­al government came after longtime ruler Omar al- Bashir was toppled last year, and it seeks to shift the country towards democracy.

Hamdok, in particular, was concerned that linking relations with Israel to the process of removing Sudan from the US state sponsors of terror list could be destabiliz­ing and not within a transition­al government’s purview, while al- Burhan pushed for Sudan to reap the economic and security benefits of such ties.

While the US did not condition removing the designatio­n or providing much- needed economic aid on normalizat­ion with Israel, it has strongly encouraged Sudan to move in that direction.

Israeli Ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan spoke by phone with his Sudanese counterpar­t, Ambassador Omer Mohamed Ahmed Siddig. They congratula­ting each other while agreeing to meet in the coming days to discuss cooperatio­n at the UN in the areas of technology, agricultur­e, trade and tourism.

Erdan received the announceme­nt on the normalizat­ion between the respective countries during his first working meeting with Bahrain’s Ambassador Jamal Fares Alrowaiei.

On Monday he is set to speak for the first time before the UN Security Council in a discussion that is expected to focus on the latest developmen­ts in the region.

Egyptian President Abdel Fatah al- Sisi tweeted: “I welcome the joint efforts of the US, Sudan and Israel in normalizin­g relations between Sudan and Israel, and I value all efforts aimed at regional stability and peace.” •

 ?? ( Carlos Barrias/ Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT Donald Trump speaks on the phone with the leaders of Israel and Sudan as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, White House adviser Jared Kushner and National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien applaud, at the White House on Friday.
( Carlos Barrias/ Reuters) US PRESIDENT Donald Trump speaks on the phone with the leaders of Israel and Sudan as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, White House adviser Jared Kushner and National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien applaud, at the White House on Friday.

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