US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo ended his trip to Jerusalem by taking off on a historic flight – the first official nonstop flight from Tel Aviv to Khartoum – on Tuesday morning. Israel and Sudan do not currently maintain diplomatic relations and there are no direct flights between the two countries. Pompeo will “express support for deepening the Sudan-Israel relationship” during his visit in the wake of the historic Israel-UAE agreement, the US State Department said. U.S. Secretary of State @SecPompeo departs from Ben Gurion airport after completing his visit in #Israel, on August 25, 2020 pic.twitter.com/cNAyGI1mK6 — USEmbassyJerusalem (@usembassyjlm) August 25, 2020 While aboard the flight to Sudan, Pompeo tweeted: “Happy to announce that we are on the FIRST official NONSTOP flight from Israel to Sudan!” Happy to announce that we are on the FIRST official NONSTOP flight from Israel to Sudan! pic.twitter.com/eOXNsBAozC — Secretary Pompeo (@SecPompeo) August 25, 2020 According to Arabic media reports on Friday, Mossad head Yossi Cohen met with General Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, the deputy head of Sudan’s Sovereign Council, in a meeting arranged and hosted by the United Arab Emirates. In February, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Gen. Burhan, during a trip to Uganda where they pledged to pursue normalization. The meeting was held secretly and only announced after it happened. It also paved the way for another first — two weeks after the meeting in Uganda, an Israeli aircraft made a historic first flight over Sudanese territory. At the time of the Burhan-Netanyahu meeting, the Sudanese military said the talks with Israel were an effort to help end Sudan’s status as an international pariah state. Following a meeting with Hamdok on Monday, a coalition representing the protesters who helped topple al-Bashir last year, said in a statement that the transitional government “has no mandate” to decide on normalizing ties with Israel. The coalition, known as Forces for the Declaration of Freedom and Change, also “emphasized the right of the Palestinian people to their land and the right of free and dignified life,” the statement said. Sudan hosted the landmark Arab conference after the 1967 Mideast war where eight Arab countries approved the “three no’s”: no peace with Israel, no recognition of Israel and no negotiations. But in recent years those hostilities have softened, and both countries have expressed readiness to normalize relations. A Sudanese government official told The Associated Press last week that deliberations between Sudanese and Israeli officials have been going on for months, with the help from Egypt, the UAE and the U.S. “It’s a matter of time. We are finalizing everything. The Emirati move encouraged us and helped calm some voices within the government that were afraid of backlash from the Sudanese public,” the official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media. The UAE was the third Arab country to normalize ties with Israel, after Egypt and Jordan. Sudan is now on a fragile path to democracy after the popular uprising led the military to overthrow al-Bashir in April 2019. A military-civilian government now rules the country, with elections deemed possible in late 2022. The transitional authorities are desperate to lift sanctions linked to its listing by the U.S. as a state sponsor of terror. That would […]
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