Israel Delegation Visited Sudan in Push to Normalize Ties

W460

An Israeli delegation has visited Sudan to discuss normalizing relations following the Jewish state's US-brokered deals with UAE and Bahrain, sources in Khartoum and Jerusalem said Thursday.

The one-day return trip on Wednesday has heightened speculation Israel could soon strike a peace deal with the Arab-led African country with which it is technically at war.

U.S. President Donald Trump, fighting for re-election on November 3, has pushed for further deals between Israel and majority Muslim states traditionally hostile to it.

A chartered plane left Tel Aviv for the Sudanese capital on Wednesday, according to the specialized air traffic website Flightradar24.

Sources in Sudan and Israel confirmed to AFP that the visit had taken place on Wednesday.

"A joint American-Israeli delegation visited Khartoum yesterday" and met with Sovereign Council president General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan for talks on a normalization of ties between Sudan and Israel, a Sudanese government source said.

Israeli sources requesting anonymity had earlier told AFP that an Israeli delegation had travelled to Sudan on Wednesday to discuss the same issue. 

The same day, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said he hoped Sudan would "quickly" recognize Israel.

And on Thursday the U.S. State Department said Pompeo had spoken by phone with Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok during which he "applauded... Hamdok's efforts-to-date to improve Sudan's relationship with Israel and expressed hope that they would continue."

That call came after Trump had pledged Monday to take Sudan soon off the U.S. state sponsors of terrorism blacklist, a legacy of the era of fallen dictator Omar al-Bashir.

Israel's top-selling daily, Yediot Aharonot, reported Sudan's post-Bashir transitional joint civilian and military government had internally agreed to normalize ties.

"According to reports that have been received in Jerusalem, the leadership in Khartoum has made a decision in principle to that effect," the newspaper said.

- 'Very close' -

It reported that "an agreement has been reached" between Burhan and Hamdok "who had been opposed up until now to normalizing relations with Israel."

The newspaper mentioned a possible announcement by Trump "in the coming days" from Washington, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Burhan to join by video conference.

As the reports emerged, Sudan's veteran opposition leader Sadiq al-Mahdi of the National Umma Party cried foul.

In a statement, he rejected any move to normalize ties with Israel, calling it "treason" and unlawful, and added that his party would file a lawsuit against the authorities and stop its support of the government.

Netanyahu and Burhan in February held a landmark meeting in Uganda.

Israeli intelligence minister Eli Cohen was also quoted in local media as saying Israel was "very close to normalizing ties with Sudan," in comments his foreign affairs advisor Arye Shalicar confirmed to AFP.

Sudan experienced a historic shift last year as Bashir was ousted in April in the face of youth-led street protests, and it is now turning the page on decades as an international pariah.

It has launched a series of reforms, put Bashir on trial and is cooperating with the International Criminal Court to try him over his regime's scorched-earth campaign in the Darfur region.

Sudan is one of four nations branded by Washington as a state sponsor of terrorism, along with Iran, North Korea and Syria, severely impeding access to loans, foreign investment and debt relief.

- Sudan 'on its knees' -

Sudan was designated in 1993 during the rule of Bashir, who had welcomed al-Qaida founder Osama bin Laden as he imposed a brand of political Islamism on the country.

Trump said he was ready to remove Sudan from the blacklist after Khartoum agreed to a $335 million compensation package for victims and relatives of past attacks. 

Pompeo had discussed the issue of normalizing ties with Israel in August on the first visit in 15 years by a top U.S. diplomat to Khartoum. 

But Hamdok at the time demurred on the controversial step, saying the transitional government did not have authority to normalize with Israel.

The diplomatic pressure on Sudan, one of the world's poorest countries, comes at a time it has been hit by a tanking economy, rising prices and natural disasters.

"The Sudanese can't take it anymore. Floods, inflation, power cuts: the country is on its knees and the government is powerless," said Marc Lavergne, a Sudan specialist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research. 

The Brookings Institute, a Washington-based think-tank, warned recently that the debate about Israel ties "has ignored the fragility of Sudan's political transition." 

It warned that "if normalization is seen as resulting from exploitation of Sudan's economic and humanitarian desperation, it will be even more polarizing among the public (and) accelerate the erosion of support for the transition."

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