Oman, Chad, and now Sudan: Israel and the wider MidEast puzzle

This was the first power change in Sudan since 1989. But even Omar al-Bashir, the former leader had considered a change in relationship with Israel.

By SETH J. FRANTZMAN, JPOST

PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets Sultan Qaboos bin Said in Oman. (photo credit: GPO/REUTERS)

PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets Sultan Qaboos bin Said in Oman. (photo credit: GPO/REUTERS)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared to pull another diplomatic milestone out of his hat on Monday when he met Sudanese leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan in Uganda. This is an important achievement that dovetails with other diplomatic successes in recent years. For instance Netanyahu went to Oman on a surprise visit in October 2018 and Israel renewed ties with Chad in January 2019. The Sudan meeting could be a trial balloon for further Israeli openings in the Middle East, or it could help Sudan with its own relationships with Washington and other countries.

The Sudanese meeting was likely made possible by a change in government in Sudan in August 2019 when al-Burhan came to power as part of a council that is supposed to run the country for a transitional period. This was the first power change in Sudan since 1989. But even Omar al-Bashir, the former leader had considered a change in relationship with Israel.

Sudan has had other connections to Israeli history. Ethiopian Jews fled to Israel via Sudan in the 1980s. According to the Associated Press in 1985 former Sudanese leader Gaafar Nimeiry met Ariel Sharon, then Defense Minister to discuss the  airlift of Ethiopian Jews at that time. An Egyptian journalist claimed that the meeting was “arranged by Saudi  Arabian multimillionaire Adnan  Khashoggi.”

In the last decade foreign media reports blamed Israel for airstrikes in Sudan. The New York Times  alleged an airstrike in 2009 and Reuters in 2012. In 2015 foreign media claimed Sudan downed an Israeli drone. Sudan is an important country because it is part of the Arab League and because it has been at the center of Riyadh-Ankara rivalry. Turkey had hoped to invest more in  Sudan and had leased an island there. Saudi Arabia, which broke ties with Turkish ally Qatar in 2017, has welcomed change in Khartoum.

Israel’s outreach to Chad is important in the Sudanese context. In January 2019 Netanyahu and Chad President Idriss Deby met to renew relations at the Presidential Palace in Ndjamena. The resumption of relations came after decades and heralds greater Israeli involvement in Africa. Netanyahu has pushed for more engagement in Africa as had former defense minister Avigdor Lieberman. That has meant more historic visits and also new envoys posted to Israel.

Sudan is a bit different than some of the other sub-Saharan Africa countries because it has a foot in both Africa and the Arab and Islamic worlds. This makes it a kind of lynchpin, like Senegal in  West Africa. Senegal is an important diplomatic post for Israel.

Sudan also brings up memories of the Oman trip and other Israeli high profile trips to the UAE as well as relatively positive comments coming out of Bahrain. The picture is one of Israel upgrading, quietly, relations with a coterie of states. Netanyahu has openly discussed how Israel is growing its relations with this Arab and Islamic world in recent years. But officially there is not much to show for it in terms of normalization.

The recent “Deal of the Century,” in which  envoys from three Arab states were present at the rollout, looked like it might help turn a corner. But the Arab League has said it does not support US President Donald Trump’s plan.

This leaves a mixed message. Formally the Arab countries are still beholden to the Arab peace initiative of 2002. There won’t be more normalization without some Israeli gesture on the Palestinian issue. But on the other hand the Iranian threat, differences between Saudi Arabia and Qatar and differing views between Egypt and Turkey on Libya and a host of other issues bring Israel and some other states closer due to common interests.

Sudan could be a trial balloon for more relations with the Arab world. The irony of the high profile meetings with Oman, and now Sudan, is that Israel rarely has high profile meetings with Egypt and Jordan, the two states it has peace with. Israel and Turkey have diplomatic relations but Turkey is one of  the harshest critics of Israel in the region and regularly hosts Hamas delegations.

When Bashir was still in charge in Sudan he made the first trip by an Arab leader to Damascus since the civil war in Syria broke out. That trip in December 2018 could have been a trial balloon for other states, such as the UAE or Egypt to open discussions with Damascus. There is interest in bringing Damascus back into the fold after years of war.

Here in lies the riddle with the complexities of the Middle East. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt and Bahrain form a solid block of states. Turkey and Qatar are another block. Then there  are the divided states. Iraq’s Shi’ite parties are close to Iran and also to the Assad regime, Hezbollah and the Houthis. Qatar and Turkey are linked to the Tripoli-based government in Libya.

The Haftar government of Eastern Libya is linked to Egypt and the UAE and Greece. Jordan and Kuwait are somehow close to the Gulf but more neutral on the Qatar issue. The Syrian rebels in northern Syria are linked to Turkey and the Tripoli government. Oman likes to be friends with everyone. Yemen’s government works with the UAE and Saudis against its Houthi rebels. Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria, far-away in northwest Africa, try to be a bit neutral, holding meetings with Turkey and others.

Into this mix is Israel and its complex role. Insofar as the Sudan meeting is historic it will  be interesting to see if something more comes of it. The Oman meeting was important but it was unclear if anything was built on it. Oman had positive things to say about Israel at meetings in Bahrain and in Jordan in 2018-2019. But  then things seemed to go cold. Oman is now working often with Iran and with the US to discuss US-Iran tensions. Similarly there hasn’t been major developments in the UAE or Bahrain, also overshadowed by tensions with Iran and the US role in the Gulf.

February 4, 2020 | 1 Comment »

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  1. From Today’s Arutz Sheva. To anyone familiar with the history of the Sudan , this is a truly amazing story. I have the feeling it is March and the ice is beginning to break up, the streams are flowing and the first small flowers have become to appear(in my native notheast United States).

    Sudanese army supports leader’s meeting with Netanyahu
    Military says meeting between General al-Burhan and Netanyahu in Uganda was “in the interest of Sudan’s security.”

    General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan
    Sudan’s military said Wednesday it backed a surprise meeting between the country’s leader and Israel’s prime minister in Uganda this week, saying the opening would help boost national security.

    General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, chairman of Sudan’s ruling sovereign council, met Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu met in Entebbe on Monday in a previously unannounced meeting.

    Israel remains technically at war with Sudan, which supported hardline Islamists including Al-Qaeda during the three-decade rule of autocrat Omaral-Bashir, ousted amid mass protests last year.

    On Tuesday, Burhan briefed the sovereign council and top ministers about his meeting, saying he took the step to meet Netanyahu “to protect the national security of Sudan”.

    The vote of support for Burhan from the military came after top officers met at army headquarters in Khartoum.

    “There was a meeting at the army headquarters today, and those present in the meeting were briefed about the visit of the army’s commander to Uganda an its impact on Sudan’s national security,” military spokesman Brigadier Amir Mohamed Al-Hassan told AFP.

    “The army is in favor of this (Burhan-Netanyahu) meeting as it is in the interest of Sudan’s national security.”

    Soon after the meeting Netanyahu’s office put out a statement saying that said he believed that post-Bashir Sudan was headed “in a positive direction”.

    It said he and Burhan had “agreed to start cooperating leading to normalization of the relationship between the two countries”.

    Sudan under Bashir was part of the decades-long Arab boycott of Israel.

    In the wake of the Six-Day War of 1967, Arab leaders held a historic meeting in Khartoum to announce what became known as the ‘three nos’ — no peace, no recognition, no negotiations with Israel.

    The Palestine Liberation Organization called Burhan and Netanyahu’s meeting “a stab in the back of the Palestinian people”.

    In a statement carried on official news agency WAFA, Palestinian Authority chief negotiator Saeb Erekat accused Netanyahu and his US allies of “trying to liquidate the Palestinian cause”.