Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

The Khashoggi affair may have a longterm impact

Erdogan is using the case to show Turkey as the main Sunni player in the region

-

The killing of journalist, Jamal Khashoggi, within the Saudi Arabia consulate in Istanbul has unleashed a highstakes showdown between Saudi Arabia and Turkey, both key allies of the US, and triggered a diplomatic crisis at a time when West Asia can well do without such tensions. Khashoggi had long-standing ties with key members of Saudi royalty before he turned into a vocal critic of crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman. Ever since he went missing on October 2, Turkish officials have been behind a string of leaks that appeared aimed at pinning the blame on the powerful Saudi prince.

In his death, Khashoggi has become a figure cited by many to back calls for the Saudi crown prince to be reined in before he does more damage in the region through actions such as the devastatin­g military campaign in Yemen. And while the prince once had the backing of US President, Donald Trump, and his son-inlaw, Jared Kushner, Mr Trump has now described the killing of Khashoggi as the “worst cover-up ever” and indirectly acknowledg­ed the prince’s central role in the matter as he is “running things” in Saudi Arabia. Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has clearly decided to use the affair to make a push to project his country as the main Sunni player in the Muslim world while discrediti­ng the Saudi prince. Many are hoping Khashoggi’s death will lead to much-needed reforms in human rights and associated matters in Saudi Arabia but it may only have unleashed a power play with far-reaching ramificati­ons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India