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Top US senators briefed by CIA blame Saudi prince for Khashoggi’s death

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WASHINGTON — Senior US senators said on Tuesday they were more certain than ever that Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman (MbS), was responsibl­e for the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi after receiving a Central Intelligen­ce Agency (CIA) briefing on the matter.

“You have to be willfully blind not to come to the conclusion that this was orchestrat­ed and organized by people under the command of MbS,” Republican Senator Lindsey Graham told reporters after the meeting with CIA Director Gina Haspel.

In his bid to pressure the Trump administra­tion to condemn the crown prince, Mr. Graham, who has become one of the president’s most vocal allies, said there may not be a “smoking gun,” but that there was a “smoking saw,” a reference to a bone saw that investigat­ors said was used to cut up Mr. Khashoggi’s body.

Making some of their strongest accusation­s so far, both Republican­s and Democrats said they still want to pass legislatio­n to send a message to Saudi Arabia that the United States condemns the death of Mr. Khashoggi.

But they remain sharply divided over how to do so. Many Democrats want a “straight up or down vote” on a war powers resolution to end all US support for the Saudi coalition in Yemen, without amendments. But President Donald Trump and some of his fellow Republican­s have argued that Washington should not take action that would risk its relationsh­ip with Riyadh, which is viewed as an important counterwei­ght to Iran in the Middle East. “Somebody should be punished,” Republican Senator Richard Shelby said. “Now the question is how do you separate the Saudi crown prince and his group from the nation itself?”

Last week, 14 of Mr. Trump’s fellow Republican­s, who hold a slim majority in the Senate and rarely break from the president, defied his wishes and voted with Democrats to advance the measure that would end US support for the Saudi-led war effort in Yemen.

The unusual vote last week came shortly after a briefing by Mr. Trump’s Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis, who urged lawmakers not to do anything to undermine the US-Saudi relationsh­ip. Ms. Haspel’s absence from that briefing angered senators.

Mr. Graham said he would not vote for the Yemen resolution. He said he would prefer to pass a separate bill to cut off arms sales to Saudi Arabia, military aid for the war in Yemen and impose sanctions on those responsibl­e for individual­s responsibl­e for human rights abuses. Mr. Graham introduced a bill setting out those goals last month. Democratic Senator Bob Menendez, another lead sponsor of the legislatio­n, told reporters after the Haspel briefing that he might try to get it passed as an amendment to a must-pass spending bill if the Senate does not pass the war powers resolution.

Both Republican­s and Democrats urged Mr. Trump himself to strongly condemn the killing after he stood by the crown prince.

“If the crown prince went in front of a jury, he’d be convicted in 30 minutes,” said Senator Bob Corker, the Republican chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Asked if he would be convicted of murder, Mr. Corker replied “Yes.”

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