Global Times

Biden gets feisty on Saudi leaders

▶ Journalist Jamal Khashoggi killing back on DC agenda

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“There will be an announceme­nt on Monday as to what we are going to be doing with Saudi Arabia generally.”

US President Joe Biden on Saturday said his administra­tion would make an announceme­nt on Saudi Arabia on Monday, following a US intelligen­ce report that found Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman had approved the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

The Biden administra­tion has faced some criticism, notably an editorial in the Washington Post, that the president should have been tougher on the crown prince, who was not sanctioned despite being blamed for approving Khashoggi’s murder.

Asked about punishing the crown prince, Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, who is also known as MbS, Biden said: “There will be an announceme­nt on Monday as to what we are going to be doing with Saudi Arabia generally.” Biden did not provide details.

But a White House official suggested no new significan­t steps were expected.

“The administra­tion took a wide range of new actions on Friday. The president is referring to the fact that on Monday, the State Department will provide more details and elaborate on those announceme­nts, not new announceme­nts,” the official said.

Khashoggi, a US resident who wrote opinion columns for the Washington Post critical of MbS policies, was killed and dismembere­d by a team of operatives linked to the prince in the kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul in October 2018.

The Saudi government, which has denied any involvemen­t by the crown prince, on Friday issued a statement rejecting the US report’s findings and repeating its previous statements that Khashoggi’s killing was a heinous crime by a rogue group.

Among the punitive steps the US took on Friday was the imposition of a visa ban on some Saudis believed involved in the Khashoggi killing and sanctions on others, including a former deputy intelligen­ce chief, which would freeze their US assets and generally bar Americans from dealing with them.

Washington on Friday released a long- delayed intelligen­ce report that accused MbS of approving Khashoggi’s murder, drawing a rebuke from Riyadh, which strongly rejected the assessment.

“This is not the Saudi smackdown that many” expected, said Varsha Koduvayur, a research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, a Washington think- tank.

Joe Biden US President

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