Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli delegation in Sudan to finalize expanding the Abraham Accords

Khartoum reportedly intends to take a “significant step” regarding relations between the two countries.

Then-Israeli Intelligence Minister Eli Cohen with Sudanese leader Lt. Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, Jan. 27, 2021. Credit: Nerizuki via Wikimedia Commons.
Then-Israeli Intelligence Minister Eli Cohen with Sudanese leader Lt. Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, Jan. 27, 2021. Credit: Nerizuki via Wikimedia Commons.

Sudan is reportedly ready to finalize its move to join the Abraham Accords as an Israeli delegation headed by Minister of Foreign Affairs Eli Cohen met with the country’s ruler Abdel Fattah al-Burhan in Khartoum on Thursday, according to Hebrew and Arab media.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry would not confirm that Cohen was in Sudan, only issuing a statement that he was heading an Israeli delegation and would hold a press conference upon his return from a “historic state trip” at Ben-Gurion Airport on Thursday evening.

However, Reuters reported that an Israeli delegation arrived in the Sudanese capital to discuss the normalization of ties between the two countries, citing two Sudanese government sources.

Sudanese news outlets also reported that the country intends to take a “significant step” regarding relations with Israel.

Sudan was the fourth Muslim state to join the Abraham Accords, signing the agreement to normalize ties with Israel in January 2021.

The United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco have also signed onto the accords.

Sudan first agreed to normalize relations with Israel in October 2020 on the condition of being removed from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism. Then-U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to that stipulation. The process was completed last month, Reuters reported.

In January 2021, Cohen, then-intelligence minister, visited Sudan, where he met with Sudanese leaders, including al-Burhan.

“I am confident that this visit has laid the foundations for many important collaborations, which will help both Israel and Sudan, and security stability in the region, deepen our ties with Africa and lead to further agreements with countries in the region,” said Cohen at the time.

“The dehumanization of Jews in rhetoric, through the use of violence, attacking Jews at synagogue or yeshiva—too many people think it’s okay,” said Rep. Mike Lawler.
CENTCOM stated that the strikes are “in response to Iran’s unwarranted and continued aggression.”
“The graduating student’s display included imagery that many people associate with antisemitism and that caused pain and concern,” a university spokesman told JNS.
“If CAIR does not meet the criteria for designation, it is difficult to understand why specially designated global terrorist sanctions exist,” stated the groups led by the Middle East Forum.
Haji Najibullah, who led Taliban fighters in Afghanistan’s Wardak Province, admitted to helping kidnap a New York Times reporter and supporting attacks that killed three American soldiers.
A unanimous ruling found that kidnapping does not qualify as a “violent felony” under Michigan’s anti-terrorism law, ordering a new trial for Wolverine Watchmen member Joseph Morrison.