The Sudanese interim government has been reportedly been “sharply divided” over possible normalization of ties with Israel, according to the Associated Press on Sunday, even amid pressure from the United States to do so.
The push by the Trump administration for official diplomatic ties between Israel and Sudan comes in the aftermath of the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain normalizing ties with Israel.
Sudan cannot receive foreign aid until it is removed from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism.
The Sudanese military overthrew the 10-year dictatorship of former leader Omar al-Bashir in April 2019. A mixed military-civilian government currently rules the country until possible elections in 2022.
“Israel is developed. The entire world works with Israel,” he said. “For development, for agriculture—we need Israel.”
However, Daglo said that ties with Israel would stop short of normalization in a show of solidarity with the Palestinians.
“We’re not scared of anyone. But these will be relations, not normalization. Relations, not normalization,” he said. “Okay? We’re following this line.”
Sudan, an Arab-Muslim-majority country that borders Egypt to the south, has long been viewed as a hostile nation towards the Jewish state.
Its prime minister, Abdalla Hamdok, has argued that the transitional government doesn’t have the mandate to decide whether Sudan should normalize ties with Israel.
“It needs a deep discussion within our society,” he told reporters earlier this week.
At least three Sudanese political groups have called for normalizing ties with Israel: the Umma Party, the Sudan Liberation Movement-the Second Revolution and the Eastern Front.
Last month, talks between Sudan and the United States in the United Arab Emirates ended without agreement.