Trump says US will work to end war in Sudan at Saudi’s request
Author:RhondaPublished:November 20, 2025
Trump told the gathering, which included bin Salman and his delegation, that his administration began working on the issue 30 minutes after the crown prince requested it on Tuesday.
Displaced girls from El Fasher sit on the ground with toys in their hands, in a displacement camp in Al-Dabbah, Sudan, November 15, 2025.(photo credit: REUTERS/EL TAYEB SIDDIG)ByREUTERSUS President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he would work to help end the war in Sudan after Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman asked him to get involved in the matter.
“We’ve already started working on that,” Trump said at a Saudi investment conference a day after he met with Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler at the White House.
Trump told the gathering, which included bin Salman and his delegation, that his administration began working on the issue half an hour after the crown prince made the request during Tuesday’s meeting.
The Sudan conflict erupted in 2023 amid a power struggle between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces ahead of a planned transition to civilian rule. It has caused ethnically charged bloodletting, widespread destruction, and mass displacement, drawing in foreign powers and threatening to split Sudan.
Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman shakes hands with U.S. President Donald Trump as he arrives for a dinner hosted at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 18, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/TOM BRENNER)
The Saudi crown prince believes Trump’s direct pressure is needed to break a logjam in talks to end more than two and a half years of war, pointing to his work to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza last month, five people familiar with the matter said.
MBS asks Trump to ‘view himself as a peacemaker’
The Saudi ruler appeared to appeal to the US president’s view of himself as a peacemaker, according to Trump’s account.
“He mentioned Sudan yesterday, and he said, ‘Sir, you’re talking about a lot of wars, but there’s a place on Earth called Sudan, and it’s horrible what’s happening,'” Trump said.
For Saudi Arabia, a resolution to the conflict is linked to national security, given hundreds of miles of Sudanese coastline lying opposite the kingdom’s Red Sea coast.
“Tremendous atrocities are taking place in Sudan,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post. “It has become the most violent place on Earth and, likewise, the single biggest Humanitarian Crisis. Food, doctors, and everything else are desperately needed.”