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Sudan cutting trade and military ties to North Korea, says US

The move comes in response to the “critical threat” posed by the North’s nuclear programme.

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un

The United States has said that Sudan will cut all military and trade ties to North Korea.

State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said Sudan is taking the step due to the “critical threat” posed by the North’s nuclear programme.

She said the United States welcomed the decision, which was announced after a visit to Khartoum by Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan. That visit came as the US and Sudan, encouraged by Israel and Saudi Arabia, moved to improve ties after decades of hostility.

“Isolating the North Korean regime is a top priority for the United States, and is a key element to maintaining peace and stability worldwide,” Ms Nauert said in a statement.

“The United States is grateful for Sudan’s commitment to take these important steps in light of the critical threat posed by” North Korea.

The Trump administration has been pushing foreign countries to reduce economic, diplomatic and other ties to Pyongyang in an effort to further isolate the country and bring it back to the negotiating table.

In recent weeks, the administration has been targeting African and South Asian nations and several have agreed. Sudan has been a particular focus of the effort as part of an attempt to improve ties between Washington and Khartoum that has led to a lifting of some US sanctions against Sudan.

Thursday’s announcement came ahead of a decision expected soon for the US to re-list North Korea as a “state sponsor of terrorism,” a designation that President George W Bush’s administration removed in 2008 as it sought a diplomatic agreement to halt Pyongyang’s atomic weapons programme.

White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters on Thursday she expected a decision on North Korea’s status to be made early next week. The administration had missed an early November congressional deadline to make a decision on the designation but said it would make a determination after the conclusion of President Donald Trump’s just-concluded visit to Asia.

A North Korean military guard outpost, seen from Paju, South Korea
A North Korean military guard outpost, seen from Paju, South Korea (Lee Jin-man/AP)

Sudan is one of only three countries – the others are Iran and Syria – that are currently designated state sponsor of terrorisms by the State Department, a label that carries economic and financial sanctions. The announcement of Sudan cutting ties with North Korea will likely help its case to be removed from the list.

However, a senior State Department official said the potential changes to Sudan’s and North Korea’s designations are not directly related and that reviews of both countries are proceeding independently.

The official said a determination on Sudan would likely depend on how well it implements its pledge to cut ties with North Korea.

Nauert’s statement said the US “will continue engagement on this issue to ensure that this commitment is fully implemented”.

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