Weekend Herald

Saudi prince shores up support in overhaul

Allies of Mohammed bin Salman were elevated to key posts

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Kareem Fahim

Saudi Arabia replaced its foreign minister and shuffled other key government posts as its leaders continue to grapple with the backlash to the killing by Saudi agents of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

The government overhaul, announced in a string of decrees by the Saudi leader, King Salman, elevated allies of the King’s son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, to head a critical security agency and other posts, in moves seen as aiding the Prince’s ongoing consolidat­ion of power. No women were named to senior Cabinet positions.

Adel al-Jubeir, a veteran diplomat who is well known in Washington and served as ambassador there for eight years before being appointed foreign minister in 2015, was replaced by Ibrahim al-Assaf, a former finance minister. Jubeir was named minister of state for foreign affairs, with responsibi­lities that remain unclear.

In the past few months, Jubeir had served as the public face of the kingdom’s laboured efforts to explain the death of Khashoggi, a Washington Post contributi­ng columnist and critic of his country’s leadership who was killed in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on October 2.

Saudi Arabia faced a torrent of criticism after denying any knowledge of Khashoggi’s fate for weeks after his disappeara­nce. Turkish officials said that a team of Saudi agents, acting on orders from highrankin­g officials, had been dispatched to Istanbul to carry out what Turkey said was a premeditat­ed murder.

Khashoggi’s body, which was dismembere­d, according to Turkish and Saudi officials, has not been found.

The Saudi Government belatedly acknowledg­ed the involvemen­t of its operatives but insisted they had disobeyed instructio­ns to bring Khashoggi back to Saudi Arabia alive.

Even as Saudi officials have insisted that Mohammed — the kingdom’s effective leader — knew nothing of the plot, the episode has led to greater scrutiny of his policies, including his decision to involve the Saudi military in a war in Yemen and his crackdown on domestic critics and rivals, including a group of prominent women’s rights activists.

The Saudi Government has publicly reacted to the criticism with defiance — for example, condemning a recent US Senate resolution that blamed the Crown Prince for Khashoggi’s killing. But Saudi officials have privately signalled their concern about the internatio­nal fallout. Some had predicted that the response would include a government shakeup that might provide more seasoned counsel to the 33-year-old Crown Prince.

Yet the changes did not challenge Mohammed’s nearly absolute control of the kingdom’s foreign and domestic policy, and he retained his powerful post as defence minister.

Assaf has served as finance minister, a member of the board of Saudi Aramco, the state oil company, and as a governor of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

He was also detained for several months last year during a round-up of hundreds of business executives, princes and government ministers in what Saudi authoritie­s called an “anticorrup­tion” sweep.

Musaed al-Aiban, a longtime government minister who most recently headed a national cybersecur­ity authority, was named national security adviser.

His appointmen­t ended, for now, speculatio­n that the post would be filled by Prince Khalid bin Salman, a younger brother of the Crown Prince who serves as the Saudi ambassador to the US and has faced criticism for his early denials about a Saudi role in Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce.

Another appointee, Prince Abdullah bin Bandar, a young royal seen as close to the Crown Prince, was named head of the Saudi National Guard, a powerful security agency whose role has been to protect the royal family.

 ?? Photo / AP file ?? Prince Mohammed bin Salman and King Salman.
Photo / AP file Prince Mohammed bin Salman and King Salman.

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