Cape Argus

The Khashoggi Tapes

What has happened to the recordings Turkey sent to its Nato allies?

- GWYNNE DYER Gwynne Dyer, OC, is a London-based Canadian journalist, syndicated columnist and military historian

HOW ODD! Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sends an audio recording of the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul to the government­s of all Turkey’s major Nato allies – and the only one that gets it is Canada.

What happened to the copies that President Erdogan sent to the US, France, the UK and Germany? Lost in the mail-room, no doubt, or maybe just lying unopened on somebody’s desk. Or perhaps the Turks just didn’t put enough stamps on the packages.

“We gave them the tapes,” said Erdogan on Saturday. “They’ve also listened to the conversati­on, they know it.” But still not a word out of Washington or London acknowledg­ing that they have heard the recordings.

French Foreign Minister JeanYves Le Drian denied that France had received a copy. When asked if that meant Erdogan was lying, Le Drian replied: “It means he has a political game to play in these circumstan­ces.”

Like most Western politician­s and diplomats, he is desperate to avoid calling out Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, as a murderer.

The French have a highly profitable commercial relationsh­ip with the oilrich kingdom, mostly selling it arms, and they don’t want to acknowledg­e the evidence on the recording because it could jeopardise that trade.

Erdogan was furious when Le Drian issued his denial, and his communicat­ions director insisted that French intelligen­ce had listened to the recording as long ago as October 24.

But it was all just “he said/she said” stuff until Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau blew the game wide open on Monday.

Yes, Trudeau said, Canadian intelligen­ce has the recording, and he is well aware of what is on it. In fact, Canadian intelligen­ce agencies have been working closely with Turkey on the murder investigat­ion, and Canada is “in discussion­s with like-minded allies as to the next steps with regard Saudi Arabia”.

Why did Trudeau come clean? One popular theory is the “nothing-left -to-lose” hypothesis. Last August the tempestuou­s crown prince killed all future trade deals with Canada, pulled thousands of Saudi Arabian foreign students out of Canadian universiti­es, and generally showered curses on the country after Canadian officials called for the release of detained Saudi campaigner­s for civil and women’s rights.

Canada’s bridges to Saudi Arabia have already been burned, according to this theory, so Trudeau felt free to say the truth. But he’s not really free: Canada still has a $13 billion contract to build armoured vehicles for Saudi Arabia that the Saudis might cancel, and this is a real contract, not one of Trump’s fantasy arms sales.

Maybe Trudeau is just braver than the others, but his purpose is clear. He waited more than three weeks after getting the recording for the “likeminded allies” to agree to a joint policy towards the murderous prince – nobody believes Khashoggi could have been killed without bin Salman’s consent – and then spilled the beans.

Of course all the major Nato government­s have the recordings. They have had them for at least three weeks. They were just dithering over what to do about them, and Trudeau decided it was time to give them a push. Good for him, but what exactly can they do about Mohammed bin Salman’s crime?

It almost certainly was MbS (as they call him) who ordered the killing.

Since his elderly father, King Salman, gave him free rein to run the country less than three years ago, he has become a one-man regime.

Nothing happens without his approval, least of all the murder of a high-profile critic in a foreign country by a 15-strong Saudi hit squad including several members of his personal security team.

No Western leader (except perhaps Donald Trump) will be seen in public with MbS any more, foreign investment in Saudi Arabia is the lowest in several decades and the price of oil is falling again. So he has to go, if it’s still possible for anybody in Saudi Arabia to remove him from power.

But that’s the big question. The Saudi royal family is no longer a tight, united body that can just decide MbS has to go and make it stick. It’s a sprawling array of people, and without the agreement of King Salman, any smaller group within the family that organised a coup against the crown prince would almost certainly fail.

So he may go on for while despite the disaster of his military interventi­on in Yemen, his pointless, fruitless blockade of Qatar and even this ugly murder. He wouldn’t be the only killer in power. But the bloom is definitely off this particular rose.

 ?? | J SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP ?? A VIDEO image of Hatice Cengiz, fiancée of slain Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, played in Washington on November 2 during an event to remember Khashoggi, the columnist for The Washington Post who was murdered inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on October 2.
| J SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP A VIDEO image of Hatice Cengiz, fiancée of slain Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, played in Washington on November 2 during an event to remember Khashoggi, the columnist for The Washington Post who was murdered inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on October 2.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa