There aren’t a lot issues that Democrats and Republicans agree on these days, but one area where they must work together is on Sudan. With Senators Sam Brownback (R-KS) and Russ Feingold (D-WI) set to leave the United States Senate in January finding common ground won’t be any easier, but that doesn’t make it any less important.
Earlier this afternoon, Save Darfur/GI-Net Executive Director Sam Bell wrote an excellent post on The Hill’s Congress Blog about the need for bipartisan action on Sudan as the country approaches the critical January 9th referenda.
Bipartisan effort needed again for Sudan
By Sam Bell – 11/17/10 02:59 PM ET
Now that midterm elections are over, the Obama Administration is turning its attention to foreign policy, where President Obama is less constrained by Congress. He won’t have a free hand – already, Republicans are opposing the New START treaty and are likely to push back on troop withdrawals from Afghanistan and the foreign ops budget. On Sudan, which is experiencing one of the most perilous moments in its history, Republicans and Democrats have an opportunity to work together to re-balance and bolster President Obama’s carrots-and-sticks strategy. In September, President Obama announced a sequenced strategy that offers the genocidal regime in Khartoum incentives in exchange for specific progress on key issues such as allowing referenda for Southern Sudan independence and the tense border region of Abyei scheduled for January and resolving the crisis in Darfur. Broad statements hint at severe penalties should Khartoum not make progress in these areas, however, for a strategy that is marketed as a balance between incentives and pressures, there has been far more emphasis on the former.
Senator Kerry was dispatched by President Obama to Sudan earlier this month to offer an amendment to the September strategy that would allow Khartoum to come off the State Sponsors of Terrorism List (SSTL) before fully implementing the landmark Comprehensive Peace Agreement (which guaranteed the referenda) or resolving the crisis in Darfur. The administration explained that this de-listing, which could happen as soon as July 2011, would not trigger the lifting of sanctions.
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Enough Project co-founder and Save Darfur Coalition board member John Prendergast recently returned from a trip to Sudan with actor and activist George Clooney. The pair visited Southern Sudan and the contested border region of Abyei with NBC’s Ann Curry to draw attention to the potential for a return to war in the lead up to the January 9th referendum on Southern independence.










