The Phnom Penh Post

After killing, Saudi Arabia’s PR machine shows cracks

- Shaun Tandon

WHEN the US was attacked on September 11, 2001 by 19 hijackers – 15 of them from Saudi Arabia – the kingdom switched into lobbying overdrive, determined to preserve a critical relationsh­ip.

After devoting well over $100 million to influencin­g Washington, the oil-rich state is facing a public relations crisis it didn’t see coming – US lawmakers who once eagerly hobnobbed with Saudi princes, and institutio­ns that were once only too happy to accept Riyadh’s money, are looking to distance themselves.

The killing of exiled Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi has led to outrage at a level unseen in years against the kingdom.

Lawmakers have proposed onceunthin­kable actions such as suspending arms sales to Saudi Arabia, the largest buyer of US weapons, and expelling the kingdom’s ambassador, although major repercussi­ons look unlikely for now as President Donald Trump has called for preserving ties.

The Saudis had earlier looked confident of their lobbying might in Washington. In March, the Senate narrowly defeated a proposal to end US support for the Saudi-led campaign against rebels in Yemen, which according to the UN has killed thousands of civilians.

Soon afterward, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, a 33-year-old who had billed himself as a reformer, triumphant­ly visited the US where he met figures ranging from Trump to talk show queen Oprah Winfrey.

Wooing powerful

“A lot of Americans don’t rea lly know much about Saudi Arabia. It’s not a big destinatio­n for t ravel, for a lot of reasons, and it was easy for public relations firms to fill t hat role,” said Ben Freeman, director of the Foreign Influence Transparen­cy Initiative at t he Center for Internat iona l Policy.

“I think what happened is that this case really brought it home,” he said. “Jamal Khashoggi was living here and I think a lot of journalist­s took this personally in that one of their own was attacked.”

Even if the values of the austere Muslim state would seem alien to most Americans, Saudi Arabia has penetrated Washington’s power centres by opening its checkbook to influentia­l think tanks, wooing journalist­s and hiring former senior politician­s who stand to earn more money as lobbyists.

Among those former lawmakers, according to legally required filings with the Justice Department, are Norm Coleman, a former Republican senator from Minnesota, who signed a $125,000-a-month deal this year to represent the Saudi embassy, and Buck McKeon, until 2015 the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, whose firm is paid $50,000 a month by Riyadh.

CNN’s chief Washington correspond­ent Jake Tapper, one of the most visible US television journalist­s, tweeted that the Saudi embassy contacted him after his favorite football team, the Philadelph­ia Eagles, qualified for this year’s Super Bowl and offered to fly him to see the championsh­ip game as its guest. He said he declined, “But I wondered: who said yes?”

Since Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce, at least four lobbying firms have said that they will no longer represent Saudi Arabia. Among those terminatin­g involvemen­t is leading lawyer Theodore Olson, who argued for former president George W. Bush before the Supreme Court and whose firm would have pocketed at least $250,000.

Washington think tanks have quietly backed away from Saudi Arabia. The Middle East Institute, which has long partnered with Riyadh, voiced “shock and outrage” over the death of Khashoggi, who frequently participat­ed in the group’s panels, and cut back ties.

Among two of the most prestigiou­s think tanks, the Brookings Institutio­n ended a Saudi contract while the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies said only that it was reassessin­g its relationsh­ip with Riyadh.

Saudi Arabia spent more than $18 million last year and $6 million so far in 2018 either through its government or affiliates to seek influence in Washington, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, which compiles data.

An even bigger spender has been Saudi ally the United Arab Emirates, although the top-paying are South Korea and Japan, which largely focus on trade promotion.

While US law forbids foreign agents from funding US candidates, Freeman said his research spotted a grey area.

Firms that represent Saudi clients gave nearly $400,000 to congressio­nal candidates last year, sometimes donating after raising Riyadh’s concern with lawmakers, he said.

The Saudis boosted spending with Trump’s election after rocky relations with his predecesso­r Barack Obama, who eased tensions with the kingdom’s regional rival Iran.

Obama, however, sided with the Saudis on one of the kingdom’s biggest legislativ­e defeats – a bill that lets families of September 11 victims sue Saudi Arabia, a move Obama argued could trigger lawsuits abroad against the United States.

 ?? FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP ?? A portrait of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is displayed in the capital Riyadh on Monday, one day ahead of the the Future Investment Initiative conference.
FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP A portrait of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is displayed in the capital Riyadh on Monday, one day ahead of the the Future Investment Initiative conference.

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