Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP STANDS UP FOR SAUDI VALUES

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President Donald Trump confirmed the harshest caricature­s drawn by America’s most cynical critics on Tuesday when he portrayed its central objectives in the world as panting after money and narrow self-interest.

Ignoring the findings of the CIA, Trump said in a muddled statement released by the White House that, in effect, no matter how wrong the murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi, no matter where true responsibi­lity lay, he would not stand up to the Saudi regime. He would not take any chance of risking its supplies of money, oil and help in the Middle East by holding the crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, accountabl­e for the killing.

The president made clear his commitment to the use of the exclamatio­n point, if not to truth and justice: “It could very well be that the Crown Prince had knowledge of this tragic event — maybe he did and maybe he didn’t!”

Khashoggi, a resident of Virginia though not an American citizen, was a columnist for an American newspaper, The Washington Post. It did not serve the safety of journalist­s or Americans abroad that Trump could not summon even a modicum of lip service to condemn the abominatio­n of dispatchin­g a hit team equipped with a bone saw to throttle and dismember Khashoggi for daring to criticize the crown prince. The crown prince, who is 33, is an ally and kindred spirit to Trump and his son-inlaw, Jared Kushner.

In simplistic and often inaccurate terms, Trump’s statement reflected hiss view that all relationsh­ips are transactio­nal, and that moral or human rights considerat­ions must be sacrificed to a primitive understand­ing of American national interests — or as he put it, “America first!”

Trump’s first reference to Khashoggi came only after a long riff about Iran, which Trump depicted, remarkably, as solely responsibl­e for the war in Yemen. With disregard for the abundant evidence that Saudi Arabia has waged an indiscrimi­nate air campaign that is responsibl­e for a humanitari­an disaster, he claimed that the Saudis would “gladly” withdraw if Iran did, and would provide humanitari­an assistance. That was followed by a passage on the tens of billions of dollars in arms sales and investment Trump claims he has extracted from Saudi Arabia — claims that are vastly overblown.

When Trump did briefly note Khashoggi’s murder — “a terrible one” — the president repeated Saudi slanders that the journalist was an “enemy of the state” and an Islamist, disingenuo­usly adding that this did not affect his thinking.

In the absence of leadership from the president, it falls to Congress to take action and protect America’s standing in the world. Trump knows he is on a collision course with the legislatur­e: His statement concludes with a challenge to members of Congress who “for political or other reasons, would like to go in a different direction” to go ahead and try.

Trump was referring to a swelling bipartisan demand to use the leverage of arms sales to punish Saudi Arabia. His words are above all a gauntlet cast to Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina., who has vacillated between principled opposition and craven support for Trump.

A few hours after the White House released the president’s statement, Graham issued a rebuke. “I firmly believe there will be strong bipartisan support for serious sanctions against Saudi Arabia, including appropriat­e members of the royal family, for this barbaric act which defied all civilized norms,” he said. “While Saudi Arabia is a strategic ally, the behavior of the crown prince — in multiple ways — has shown disrespect for the relationsh­ip and made him, in my view, beyond toxic.”

The murder of Jamal Khashoggi and the causes of human rights, justice and truth demand that no one in Saudi Arabia, certainly not the crown prince, escape accountabi­lity.

Your move, Senator Graham.

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