Saturday, August 24, 2019

S. Sudan Finance Minister Salvatore Garang to explain why the country’s civil servants and soldiers have gone unpaid for nearly six months

Article from and by Radio Tamazuj
Dated 21 June 2019
Parliament rejects debate on budget over unpaid salaries

Radio Tamazuj (Juba, South Sudan) 21 June 2019 - South Sudanese lawmakers on Thursday rejected the finance minister’s presentation of the 2019/2020 fiscal year budget over non-payment of salaries meant for civil servants.

The legislators tasked Finance Minister Salvatore Garang to explain why the country’s civil servants and soldiers have gone unpaid for nearly six months now.

 “There are concerns to be addressed first because people have gone unpaid in this country for nearly six months. They should pay the salaries before they bring the new budget,” said lawmaker Kuany Mayom.

Ahmed Mohamed Musa, another MP, said the finance ministry should ensure all civil servants are paid before the budget is passed.

Meanwhile, Abuk Payiti Ayiik said most cabinet members were absent during Thursday’s sitting, making it difficult for the country’s lawmakers to question why civil servants and soldiers are not getting salaries.

 “Even parliamentarians have gone unpaid for six months, that’s why Parliament is asking because oil production has resumed,” she said.

The deputy chairperson for MPs’ affairs, Mary Nyayom Lual said they are unhappy because civil servants and soldiers have not been paid for several months.

“Why should we pass another budget when our civil servants and soldiers protecting the country are not getting salaries?” she Lual.

“The ministers are busy with trips abroad every year. This is corruption. We want to know how oil revenues are managed in the country,” she added.

Dhoruai Mabor Teny, a legislator representing Western Lakes state said, “Cabinet is trying to joke with the parliament. I don’t know how the executive, headed by the president, thought of bringing the budget before MPs when they have not paid salaries for six months.”

He added, “And our message is very short, the financial bill will never be tabled before us until the arrears are paid.” 

On his part, national assembly speaker, Anthony Lino Makana had to adjourn Thursday’s siting to next week.

Last week, the Council of Minister passed a proposed draft budget of 208.156 billion SSP, with allocation of 57% for capital expenditures.

South Sudan currently pumps about 175,000 barrels per day of crude oil.

Last month, the Commissioner General of South Sudan Revenue Authority revealed that they collect nearly 4 billion SSP every month.

To view the original article at Radio Tamazuj.org click here:

Friday, August 23, 2019

S. Sudan: Torit lawmakers go for three month recess

Article from and by Radio Tamazuj 
Dated 21 June 2019 
Torit lawmakers go for three month recess
(Torit, South Sudan) - The members of Torit state legislative assembly on Wednesday held their final session before going for a three-month recess period.

Since its opening on March 11, the state assembly held 36 sittings.

The assembly’s speaker, Charles Udwar told Radio Tamazuj on Thursday that the lawmakers have gone for a three-month vacation, pointing out that they could not pass the budget and policy statements due to unstated challenges.

“In the third sessions, we were having a lot of expectations, but because of challenges, we could not accomplish what we planned to do. We wanted to deliberate on government policy statements, it was on our agenda. We also wanted to deliberate on the 2018/2019 budget, but again due to challenges, we could not deliberate on them and this remains a challenge to all of us,” said Udwar.

“We hope when we come back, the new budget of 2019/2020 will be ready and we will also be ready to work on it,” he added.

The speaker, while closing the state assembly, tasked lawmakers to disseminate the revitalized peace deal in their constituencies.

“This time is very important for all of us to go to our constituencies and disseminate the peace agreement. Our people don’t still know what is inside the document signed, but they have tested the fruits of this agreement because roads have been reopened and although they have had little services delivered to them, we want to disseminate more so that they own this agreement,” he stressed.  

Flora Iliha, a lawmaker representing Torit County, said it is time to stay with people to know their challenges. She equally admitted that people at the grassroots level are not aware of the content of the peace deal signed in September 2018.

“They know how good peace is, but they don’t know what is in the peace agreement. It is good for us to go to them and share what the agreement is all about, “she said.

On his part, the state governor, Tobiolo Alberio Oromo says his government has engaged the parties to the peace agreement to maintain peace in the state.

He, however, observed that the extension of the pre-transitional period for six months makes it difficult to formulate policy statements.

“On the issue of policy statements, we are all waiting for directives from the national government for the implementation of the revitalized peace agreement,” said Tobiolo.

He added, “So when the head of the opposition asked for extension for another six months, it has made us wait until the sixth month and then get the mandate of how many ministries will be in the state.”

The governor said the state has relatively been peaceful, despite some insecurity incidents.

South Sudan President Salva Kiir, opposition leader Riek Machar and several opposition groups Kiir signed a revitalized peace deal last year but failed to form a new government as stipulated in the agreement by May 12.

The formation of the unity government was extended by six months to November after the parties failed to implement key provisions such as creating a unified army and determining the number of states.

To view the original article at Radio Tamazuj.org click here: 

UK US Norway support Sudan civilian-led transitional govt as it investigates violence against protestors

PRESS RELEASE
Dated Thursday 22 August 2019
Troika Statement on the Appointment of Dr. Abdalla Hamdok as Prime Minister of Sudan
The appointment of a civilian-led government presents an opportunity to rebuild a stable economy and create a government that respects human rights and personal freedoms

WASHINGTON D.C., United States of America, August 22, 2019/APO Group/ -- The Troika countries (United Kingdom, United States and Norway) congratulate Dr. Abdalla Hamdok on his appointment as prime minister by the Sovereign Council and welcome the extensive professional experience he brings to the role. We welcome this step in creating a civilian-led government. As Prime Minister Hamdok begins the process of selecting ministers and identifying the government’s priorities, we look forward to working with Sudan’s new institutions.

At this historic moment, Sudan has a unique opportunity to establish peace within its borders, draft a constitution that enshrines human rights protections and empowers all Sudanese, including women and youth, and create the infrastructure for free and fair elections. We encourage all sides to engage in good faith to deliver these goals, in particular urging the armed movements to engage constructively with the new Government to achieve peace.

We will continue to support Sudan’s civilian-led transitional government as it conducts an investigation of the violence perpetrated against peaceful demonstrators and holds those responsible to account.

The appointment of a civilian-led government presents an opportunity to rebuild a stable economy and create a government that respects human rights and personal freedoms. Prime Minister Hamdok will have the Troika’s support in achieving these objectives.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Africa Regional Media Hub.

Thursday, August 22, 2019

South Sudan cabinet reacts to chaos in parliament, non-payment of salaries for civil servants and soldiers for 6 months

Note from Sudan Watch Editor: I do not envy this man's job. He is the Information minister for South Sudan. Yellow highlighting is mine for future reference. These news reports are important. How were soldiers, civil servants and students managing to live without pay for six months? How much will they be paid? News is coming through showing Sudanese refugees returning to South Sudan from other countries.
Photo: South Sudan's Information minister Michael Makuei. (Credit Radio Tamazuj)

South Sudan cabinet reacts to chaos in parliament
From Radio Tamazuj 21 June 2019 (Juba, South Sudan) -  South Sudan’s cabinet on Friday reacted strongly to the parliament’s unexpected move, saying the finance minister should be allowed to present the new budget.

When Finance Minister Salvatore Garang tried to present the 2019/2020 fiscal year budget on Thursday, he was barred by MPs in protest over non-payment of salaries for civil servants and soldiers for six months.

There was chaos in the parliament as lawmakers protested, forcing speaker Anthony Lino Makana to suspend debate on the new budget.

Speaking to reporters after the cabinet meeting on Friday, Information Minister Michael Makuei said the parliament should not block the finance minister from presenting the budget.

“The minister had his own plans but was not even given the opportunity to respond as to how he is planning to pay the arrears,” he said.

“But it seems there are other issues involved because people decided to go beyond this situation which is not required,” he added.

When asked about the government’s position on what happened in the parliament, Makuei said: “The position of the government is that the budget will be presented and the minister of finance should be given the opportunity to respond.”

“How will the government operate without the budget? This is what I am failing to understand, so it is the parliamentarians to give us the way forward,” he added.

Last week, the Council of Minister passed a proposed draft budget of 208.156 billion SSP, with allocation of 57% for capital expenditures.

Students in Zimbabwe

Minister Michael Makuei says they are still working to pay the outstanding tuition fees demanded from South Sudan students on scholarship in Zimbabwe.

On Tuesday, angry students occupied the South Sudanese embassy in the capital, Harare to protest at government failure to pay outstanding fee balances.

“The government is concerned about those who went on government scholarship, and the minister of higher education is following up on this with the ministry of finance,” Makuei said.

The minister expressed optimism that the government would settle unpaid fees for students in Zimbabwe soon.

To view the original article at Radio Tamazuj.org click here: 

Sudan, South Sudan: Scheme in Uganda partner dogs with war survivors to help overcome trauma & PTSD

Note from Sudan Watch Editor:  Please stop and watch this short powerful BBC film about Ugandan war survivors being partnered with comfort dogs. 

I have spent a lifetime seeking and promoting practical ways to help people suffering poverty, homelessness and trauma.  More here below.  Here is the film.

Ugandan war survivors partnered with therapy dogs

'If it wasn't for him, I'd be dead'

A scheme in Uganda partner dogs with war survivors to help them overcome trauma and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).



Filda was abducted as a child and forced into the LRA rebel army in Uganda, where she witnessed terrible atrocities.  

As part of a scheme called The Comfort Dog Project, Filda has been partnered with a dog who was abandoned as a puppy.

The two are now helping each other heal, along with many others like them.

Uganda’s Comfort Dog Project
  • The Comfort Dog Project, an NGO, helps transform the region's stray and unwanted dogs into healing therapy animals for former child soldiers and survivors of war struggling with PTSD, trauma and depression
  • A dog that has suffered should be able to help someone who has gone through trauma
  • Dogs can help people rehabilitate their psychological condition
  • So that they have the company, gain confidence and also overcome depression
  • Francis, the founder of the project trained as a psychologist and set up The Comfort Dog Project in 2015 to help people recover from mental health conditions
  • During the 5 month therapy programme the Comfort Dog Guardians learn to train and care for their dogs
  • The group also undergoes extensive trauma counselling to help them process their past experiences
  • But it is still a challenge for the project to gain acceptance
  • In Northern Uganda people use dogs for hunting, guarding homes and also they look at dogs as useless 
  • Even though Uganda's Ministry of Health estimates about 70% of people in Northern Uganda have been traumatically affected by the war there's still stigma around mental health services
  • People think the moment you go to mental health you are already mentally disorientated, you cannot be helped
  • But attitudes in the community are starting to change, as part of her recovery Filda is with veterinary outreach and educates people on dog training, animal rights and welfare 

Note from Sudan Watch Editor:  In addition to being a lifelong anti-poverty campaigner, I have spent the past 20 years researching cannabinoid therapy to help people, particularly peacekeepers, military personnel, former child soldiers and other survivors of war struggling with PTSD, trauma and depression.

Certain cannabinoids could help people with PTSD. Better still, such a therapy could be partnered with comfort dogs.  If anyone reading this can think of the best ways I could help Sudanese and Ugandan people with PTSD to be partnered with a therapy dog please contact me at ingridj.jones@btinternet.com.  Thanks.

THE COMFORT DOG PROJECT
http://thebigfixuganda.org/the-comfort-dog-project.html
Give a War Trauma Survivor a Comfort Dog
$500 sponsors a dog placement
$25 sponsors a weekly training class for the Comfort Dog Project

COMFORT DOG
Dogs have a profound effect on our ability to heal from emotional trauma.  The Comfort Dog Project pairs formerly homeless/neglected dogs with war survivors suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.  Psycho-social counseling is coupled with dog companionship and training to create a supportive bond.  For $500, you can help to rehabilitate a dog, place that dog with a war survivor, and enable them to go through our 5 month training program to receive certification as a Comfort Dog.

Livestock, birds die after mining resumes in Sudan - Health and environmental hazards of gold mining

Note from Sudan Watch Editor: This is terribly sad news. Some gold mining companies in several areas of Sudan are polluting the region with mercury and cyanide. Locals have protested against some gold extraction plants, environmentalists have been warning of the use of mercury and cyanide for years. The disgusting human beings responsible for such dreadful pollution ought to be found and jailed.

Article from Radio Dabanga
Date: 28 July 2019 - South Kordofan
Livestock, birds die after mining resumes in southern Sudan
Environmentalists collect dead birds in Wakara, South Kordofan, July 24, 2019 (RD)

Environmentalists reported the death of a large number of livestock and birds in Rashad and El Tadamon in South Kordofan, following the resumption of mining in the area according to a decision of the acting governor of the state.

On Thursday, residents of Wakara in El Tadamon gave the mining company in the area 72 hours to leave after large numbers of livestock and birds died since the company resumed its activities earlier this month.

Ahmed Mukhtar, Secretary-General of the National Committee for Environmental Advocacy, told Radio Dabanga that a vigil was held in front of the mosque of Wakara on Thursday, protesting the mining company’s presence in the area.

Notables and activists held a meeting with the locality’s executive director, in which they called for the immediate suspension of the company’s activities and an investigation into the deaths of the animals.

The National Committee for Environmental Advocacy supports their demands. In a statement on Thursday, the committee announced its “categorical rejection” of the governor’s decision to allow mining companies to resume their work in the region, and called on him to immediately cancel the measure.

The committee said it is closely following-up the work of the mining companies and is taking legal actions in case the rights of the people living in mining areas are violated.

Health hazards of gold mining

South Kordofan is one the states in Sudan richest in gold. While the work of many companies is regulated by laws and policies on large and medium-sized enterprises, artisan mining, using mercury and the highly toxic cyanide to extract gold from ore, is also widespread.

Environmentalists have been warning of the health and environmental hazards of the use of mercury and cyanide for years. In January 2018, a medical team led by the Health Minister of South Kordofan investigated the increase in miscarriages, the birth of deformed children, and cases of kidney failure in the area of El Tadamon.

A report published in November 2018 by the Sudan Democracy First Group (SDFG) entitled Cyanide Plants in South Kordofan State: Human Life is a Price for Gold Extraction, highlighted the human and environmental costs of traditonal gold mining in the region.

Protests against gold extraction plants in several parts of Sudan increased over recent years. People in Northern State, North Kordofan, and North Darfur as well took to the streets in fear for their health.

Israeli-owned company with gold mining interests in South Sudan obtained a non-diplomatic exemption of import tax from the GoSS

HERE is an odd story. Not sure what it all means. Sounds complicated.
  • Misnak International, in line with the terms of a contract with Israeli firm 4MB Mining Ltd, raised invoices from time to time which 4MB Mining met
  • 4MB Mining told a court that after a consignment landed at the port of Mombasa on March 4, 2018, Misnak raised “exorbitant invoices” which RMB Mining rejected  
  • In turn, Misnak detained the consignments through Total Link Logistics, Union Link Logistics and Freight Forwarders (K) Ltd, who acted as its agents to exercise lien over the goods on account of non-payment
Article from The East African
By PHILIP MUYANGA
Dated Sunday 11 August 2019
Israeli, UK firms tussle over mining activities in South Sudan

In Summary
  • According to the contract between 4MB Mining Ltd and Misnak International the consignments were to be transported from Thailand through the port of Mombasa and arrive at the agreed destination before March 1, 2018.
  • 4MB Mining indicated that the agreed timeline was of essence since it had obtained a non-diplomatic exemption of import tax on the consignments from the Government of South Sudan.
Photo: Containers await clearance within the port of Mombasa, in Kenya's coast. A court is hearing a case in which a logistics firm's agents held consignments at the Mombasa Port in Kenya on account of non-payment. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP 

An Israeli-owned company with goldmining interests in South Sudan was dealt a blow after Court of Appeal in Kenya said the High Court had no jurisdiction to hear a suit it filed against a UK logistics firm.

The Court of Appeal has upheld a preliminary objection to the suit by Misnak International (UK) Ltd contracted by 4MB Mining, the Israeli firm, to source, purchase and transport large consignments of mining materials to South Sudan saying the High Court had not assumed jurisdiction over it.

The South Sudan government awarded 4MB Mining a contract to undertake mining activities in Juba and Luri areas.

According to the appellate court, the manner in which jurisdiction is assumed is that those who file a case have to seek leave of the court to serve summons to the sued party outside the court’s jurisdiction to notify them of the existence of the suit. Appellate judges Daniel Musinga, Gatembu Kairu and Agnes Murgor said that it is upon service of the summons that a court assumes jurisdiction over a foreign defendant.

“The judge (of the High Court) never addressed her mind to the prayer for leave to serve the summons upon Misnak International outside the court’s jurisdiction,” said the judges.

According to the contract between 4MB Mining Ltd and Misnak International the consignments were to be transported from Thailand through the port of Mombasa and arrive at the agreed destination before March 1, 2018.

4MB Mining indicated that the agreed timeline was of essence since it had obtained a non-diplomatic exemption of import tax on the consignments from the Government of South Sudan and the exemption was conditional on consignments arriving at the Kenyan/Sudan border on or before April 5, 2018.

Misnak, in line with the terms of the contract, raised invoices from time to time which 4MB Mining met. 4MB Mining told the court that after the consignment landed at the port of Mombasa on March 4, 2018, Misnak raised “exorbitant invoices” which it rejected.

In turn, Misnak detained the consignments through Total Link Logistics, Union Link Logistics and Freight Forwarders (K) Ltd, who acted as its agents to exercise lien over the goods on account of non-payment.

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Sudan, South Sudan police sign cooperation deal - Plans underway to reopen border crossings

Article from Middle East Monitor
Dated Monday, 05 August 2019 at 6:00 pm
Sudan, South Sudan police sign cooperation deal

Sudan and South Sudan police chiefs on Monday signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) aimed at expanding cooperation between both sides, Anadolu Agency reports.

Director General of Sudan’s Police Gen. Adil Mohamed and his delegation held meetings with the South Sudan team led by Inspector General of Police Gen. Majak Akec Malok in Juba.

Speaking to reporters after the signing, Malok said both sides signed a bilateral agreement after thorough discussions.

He pointed out that plans are underway to reopen border crossings between Sudan and South Sudan.

“There is a good cooperation between us and our doors are open for all Sudanese who are living with us here. In conclusion, the visit of the Sudanese police is successful,” Malok said.

Mohamed noted that the MoU encompasses all aspects of cooperation.
“Also, we signed a matrix for training and joint issues that will be looked into.

“The most important issue is the customs point between the two countries. We also looked at the issue of training and capacity building of the police in South Sudan. We talked about the need to help the police here using the available resources in Khartoum,” he said.

Why Sudan and South Sudan are a US CIA favourite

Note from Sudan Watch Editor: Copied here below is an astonishing article. Since 2004 I have lost count of the number of times that the US promised to remove Sudan from the state sponsors of terror list and lift sanctions in exchange for action that included behaviour.  

The more intelligence that the US wanted to squeeze from Sudan in pursuit of Al Qaeda, Bin Laden et al, the more it dangled a carrot. The US never followed through. Who can blame Sudan for feeling stung. 

Also, the article explains how the US was behind splitting Sudan apart. It makes me feel sick to read what went on behind the scenes while millions of Sudanese were terrorised, displaced, maimed, starved, killed.

Hat tip to Justin Lynch for such candid reporting. Note the date of report. Yellow highlighting is mine.

Article from The Daily Beast
Written by JUSTIN LYNCH
Dated 09 January 2019 4:50AM ET
Why is Sudan’s Genocidal Regime a CIA Favorite?

Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/Reuters

One of the most respected American diplomats to work in Africa, Princeton Lyman, was set to meet in September 2012 with members of a Sudanese plot to overthrow President Omar al-Bashir, who is accused of genocide in Darfur.

For hours Lyman waited in an opulent hotel overlooking the Nile River in Cairo for Salah Gosh, Sudan’s former director of national security and at one time a CIA collaborator, who was a participant in the plan.

As the State Department’s special envoy for Sudan and South Sudan, Lyman had tentatively exchanged messages with the plot’s members for months. Lyman described the group to me as military men who felt “they had been professionally betrayed” by Bashir’s leadership. The Sudanese men reached out to Lyman in early 2012 as discontent was growing inside the military. Accused of genocide, funding terrorism, and waging war against South Sudan, Khartoum was seen as a problem-child of a global order. No longer, said the army officials, who wanted to see if the Americans would recognize a military takeover in Sudan, even though under U.S. law such recognition was illegal.
“I was very conscious of the fact that you could not have the United States policy for the overthrow of even an indicted [leader],” Lyman told me. But he believed that the United States should engage with anyone seeking reform in Sudan, especially if the change could come with a minimum of chaos and carnage.

Weeks earlier, Lyman gave a speech including language for the plotters that laid out what a new relationship would look like. It was a diplomatic high-wire act that did not explicitly support the coup, but embraced change if it came.

“The government would show itself to be accountable, committed to democracy, to respect for human rights,” Lyman said Aug. 1, 2012, according to his prepared remarks. “I can imagine a Sudan Armed Forces no longer as one in violation of international norms but one taking its place as a highly regarded professional military.”

Lyman ended with a flourish. “If it comes to pass, the United States will respond.”

As diplomatic signals go, few are more blunt.

Back in Cairo a few weeks later on the September day at the hotel, Lyman waited to meet Gosh. And waited. Lyman told me that Gosh was pulled into the plot at the late stages to give it a political face and he did not hatch the plan himself. But Gosh never appeared for the meeting. Lyman returned home dejected, and did not communicate again with the group.

Bashir uncovered the plot. Gosh was detained. But the American involvement has never been revealed until now.

The United States offered no military, financial or any other form of support to the plan—only a promise that the American government would engage with the new leaders if the plot took place. Yet the fact Lyman met with participants in a plot already set in motion is a sign of the intimate American relationship that exists with top Sudanese military and political figures.

Lyman told The Daily Beast these details days before he passed away in August last year. He shared the story, he said, because he thought it showed the importance of meeting with anyone who pursued reform in Sudan and demonstrated the risks diplomats should take, and do take, in the name of peace. His account was confirmed and expanded on by Colin Thomas-Jensen, Lyman’s special adviser at the time, and others who are familiar with the events.

Today, new protests in Sudan are approaching a new boiling point, and Lyman’s story is history. But it suggests the still very relevant and largely untold story of the relationship between Sudan and the United States—ties largely based on the clout of the powerful intelligence services in both the Trump and Obama administrations.

This article is based in part on interviews and documents from 13 current and former American officials serving in the State Department, Pentagon, CIA, and other areas of the U.S. government.

The CIA declined to comment. The White House referred questions to the State Department. The State Department is under furlough, but in a January 8 joint press release with other countries said that it was “appalled by reports of deaths and serious injury to those exercising their legitimate right to protest,” adding that its future engagement will depend on the government’s “actions and decisions.”

The current mass protests, which began in December, have spread across Sudan and threaten to topple the three-decade rule of Bashir. Demonstrators have adopted the chorus of "the people demand the fall of the regime," a slogan from the 2011 Arab Spring protests. Security forces have killed at least 37 protesters, according to a December 24 release by Amnesty International. Citing the Sudanese interior minister, the Associated Press reported that 816 people have been arrested.

“These protests are as serious as can be,” said Alex De Waal, professor at Tufts University and author of seven books on Sudan. “Any next steps involve one of two things. Either it is for Bashir to step down gracefully and be assured his safety by a regional body, or it would be through a takeover from a coalition of military and army officials.”

Gosh, who is now head of Sudan’s intelligence service, is seen under the circumstances as a potential king-maker. His relationship with the CIA and other intelligence services is well known. He was chauffeured to Washington on a private jet in 2005 to discuss intelligence cooperation and the situation in Darfur which then-Secretary of State Colin Powell had acknowledged as a “genocide“ in September 2004.

Even after some details of the half-baked plot of 2012 were uncovered, Gosh managed to climb back into Bashir’s inner circle in 2018 with support from the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

“The extent to which the U.S. is conveying any messages that are shaping thinking in Khartoum is likely entirely dependent on what the CIA is saying to Salah Gosh,” said a former U.S. official familiar with the situation.
Although Sudan has been listed as a state sponsor of terror since 1993 and the U.S. has accused al-Bashir more than once of genocide for his government’s actions in Darfur, cooperation between the two countries has been close on particular issues that Washington sees as a priority, particularly the fight against terrorist jihadis.

After the September 11, 2001, attacks on the U.S., Sudan—which had sheltered Osama bin Laden in the 1990s—cooperated closely in the hunt for al Qaeda operatives. Afraid they might be next on the list of countries targeted as an “axis of evil,” Sudanese forces conducted counter-terrorism missions to stop the flow of militants from West Africa to Iraq, where some tried to join the jihad against U.S. forces on the ground there.

Although his secretary of state had accused Bashir of genocide in Darfur, where his regime which anywhere from 200,000 to 300,000 people, former President George W. Bush was secretly in contact with the Sudanese leader, according to a Bush White House official. That included a phone call in January 2005, when the intelligence community learned that Bashir was wavering over whether he should sign a deal to give South Sudan independence. Bush eventually convinced Bashir to sign the agreement.

The relationship gained an added dimension after the 2011 civil war in Libya created a constellation of militant groups. With its strategic location nestled on the southern border of Libya, Sudan’s counter-terrorism ties with America blossomed. Talks were held repeatedly to reform the political relationship with Sudan.

Although the United States promised to remove Sudan from the state sponsors of terror list and lift sanctions in exchange for actions that included good behavior, the Americans never followed through. The Sudanese felt suckered by the Americans, according to Lyman and current and former U.S. officials involved in the talks.

An inflection point in the American-Sudanese intelligence relationship came in 2015 when Sudan dramatically reduced its counterterrorism collaboration with the Americans.

Then-CIA director John Brennan was one of the biggest advocates for reform of the American-Sudanese relationship. Sudan “cut their C.T. cooperation, and then Brennan calls whoever and says ‘What the fuck, why aren’t these guys cooperating with me?’ I think they have a sense of how to create a little tension inside the U.S. government,” a former Obama administration official said. “There was a scream from across the river [at the CIA]: ‘We need this relationship, isn’t there anything we can do?’”

For the CIA and the Pentagon, clandestine access to Libya and information regarding al-Shabaab leaders who were educated in Khartoum was considered highly valuable.

Under then-National Security Adviser Susan Rice, the White House began a process to restore relations with Sudan. As one of the last acts of the Obama administration in January 2017, the United States began a five-track process to restore relations that depend on humanitarian access, stopping violence and counter-terrorism collaboration.  

That process has expanded under the Trump administration, and in late-October the United States entered a second re-engagement with Sudan.


That normalized relations with Sudan is a foreign policy goal with rare bipartisan support of both the Obama and Trump administrations is in no small part due to the former CIA officials serving in both the Obama and Trump White Houses who value the counter-terrorism and intelligence sharing benefits of closer diplomatic engagement, according to current and former officials involved in internal deliberations of both administrations.

State Department officials said that normalized relations with Sudan depend on the fulfillment of conditions laid out in its agreement, which include human rights and humanitarian access.

However, those inside the U.S. government opposed to the plan doubt the Sudanese are offering substantial intelligence cooperation. These American officials argue it sends a bad signal that a genocidal regime can be welcomed back into the international community. And they say normalized relations unfairly reward Khartoum as it still supports some terrorist actors or and continues to wage war against its own people.

A decision to fully restore relations may be on the horizon, nonetheless. The Trump administration agreed with Sudanese officials to end the second phase of the re-engagement plan in August 2019, although that timeline could shift based on Khartoum’s compliance, according to a current official and another former official familiar with the matter.

But Congress, which has the ability to block the action, has not yet been informed of the timeline, according to a Senate aide.

A fully restored relationship with Sudan would be a sign of how influential the CIA has become with the Arab state.

“Contrary to conventional wisdom, having the intelligence community play the preponderant role in shaping and executing policy toward Sudan has actually been the exception rather than the rule in the post-9/11 period, and only became the case in the last two years of the Obama administration and now under President Trump,” said the former American official who discussed the CIA’s potential communications with Gosh.

For the Sudanese government, restored relations would be cause for celebration.

As midterm election results rolled in on the night of Nov. 6, Sudanese foreign minister Dirdeiry Mohamed Ahmed held court in the Fairmont Hotel in the Georgetown District of Washington D.C. He had just met with the State Department to discuss restoring relations. But Dirdeiry, as American officials call him, barely touched the glass of water in front of him as he jabbered at two reporters.

“The United States is definitely a very important state in the world, and we would like to have good relations with it,” Dirdeiry said. “The level of cooperation that Sudan is having with the United States in particular and also there in the region at large in countering terrorism is exemplary.”