Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Shifting Saudi account of writer’s death confirms key parts

- By Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON >> Facing global outrage over the killing of Jamal Khashoggi, Saudi officials are now acknowledg­ing that the journalist was targeted inside the kingdom’s consulate in Turkey and a body double was on hand to aid in a cover-up — the latest twist in the kingdom’s evolving efforts to explain Khashoggi’s death.

This new version of events — which was described to The Associated Press by two Saudi officials — comes three weeks after the kingdom said Khashoggi left the consulate on his own and insisted Turkish claims he was killed by an assassinat­ion squad were unfounded.

Now Saudi officials tell the AP they did in fact send a team to Turkey that included a forensics expert and a member whose job was to dress in the 59-yearold writer’s clothes and pretend to be him — though they still insist that his death was an accident.

This account attempts to distance Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman from the killing, even though officials linked to the 33-yearold ruler have been implicated. But the fact that the Saudis are acknowledg­ing some aspects of the account provided by Turkish authoritie­s suggests that the kingdom is feeling intense global pressure, including from President Donald Trump and members of Congress, some of whom have called for cutting off arms shipments and imposing sanctions.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity, citing the sensitivit­y of the matter and the ongoing investigat­ion into Khashoggi’s death.

There was no way to corroborat­e the Saudi account, which paints the suspects as rogue operators. It also contradict­s many observers who believe the complex scheme that led to Khashoggi’s death could not have occurred without the knowledge of the crown prince, who controls all major levers of power in the kingdom with the blessing of his father, King Salman.

“It would have likely had the approval of the Saudi government,” said Robert Jordan, a former U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia during President George W. Bush’s administra­tion.

Pro-government media in Turkey have reported that a Saudi hit squad of 15 people traveled to Turkey to kill Khashoggi, who wrote columns critical of the crown prince’s rule while living in self-imposed exile in the U.S. The team left the country hours later in private jets, Turkish media reports said.

Khashoggi was in Turkey for a scheduled visit to obtain documents for his upcoming marriage to a Turkish woman.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called Tuesday for the 18 suspects detained in Saudi Arabia by authoritie­s there to be tried in Turkish courts and rejected the idea that the men acted on their own. “To blame such an incident on a handful of security and intelligen­ce members would not satisfy us or the internatio­nal community,” Erdogan said in a speech to ruling party lawmakers in parliament. The Saudi officials who spoke to the AP acknowledg­ed that the kingdom sent a team to Turkey, but said the men were acting on a directive issued by King Salman’s predecesso­r, King Abdullah, to bring Saudi dissidents abroad back to the kingdom — ostensibly to take part in a “national dialogue” over the country’s future.

They acknowledg­ed the plan allowed for removing Khashoggi from the consulate and questionin­g him at a “safe house.”

Asked why such a team would include a forensics expert and a body double, the Saudi officials said had the safe house option been used, the plan was for the forensic expert to wipe clean evidence that Khashoggi had been at the consulate and for the body double to leave the facility to give the false impression that Khashoggi had left on his own.

Instead, the two officials said, the operation with Khashoggi turned violent. They said that the team included a former Khashoggi colleague who advised him to return to the kingdom. When that failed, the writer, by their account, asked if he was going to be kidnapped. Told he was going to be taken to a safe house, they say he started to yell for help. That’s when an unidentifi­ed person on the team applied a chokehold, which the officials said was intended only to keep Khashoggi quiet but ended up killing him instead.

The officials said the nine members of the 15-strong team who were inside the consulate at the time then panicked and made plans with a local Turkish “collaborat­or” to remove the body. One official said the body was rolled up in some sort of material and taken from the consulate by the collaborat­or.

 ?? EMRAH GUREL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Turkish police crime scene investigat­ors, looking for possible clues into the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, work in an undergroun­d car park, where authoritie­s Monday found a vehicle belonging to the Saudi consulate, in Istanbul, Tuesday. Saudi officials murdered Khashoggi in their Istanbul consulate after plotting his death for days, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday, contradict­ing Saudi Arabia’s explanatio­n that the writer was accidental­ly killed.
EMRAH GUREL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Turkish police crime scene investigat­ors, looking for possible clues into the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, work in an undergroun­d car park, where authoritie­s Monday found a vehicle belonging to the Saudi consulate, in Istanbul, Tuesday. Saudi officials murdered Khashoggi in their Istanbul consulate after plotting his death for days, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday, contradict­ing Saudi Arabia’s explanatio­n that the writer was accidental­ly killed.

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