Los Angeles Times

BIDEN GOES EASY ON SAUDI PRINCE

Mohammed escapes sanction despite U.S. report that he OKd Khashoggi’s killing.

- By Chris Megerian and Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion Friday sanctioned Saudi officials, but not the kingdom’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, for the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, after releasing an intelligen­ce report concluding he was responsibl­e for the grisly murder.

The restrained response to a crime that caused worldwide outrage suggested the limits to how far President Biden will go to reshape relations with Saudi Arabia, a long-standing ally with a dismal human rights record and conflictin­g goals in the Middle East.

Khashoggi, a Saudi dissident who was living in the United States and writing for the Washington Post, was murdered more than two years ago in Turkey. The operation to “capture or kill” him was approved by the crown prince, the heir to the Saudi throne and the kingdom’s de facto ruler, according to the declassifi­ed intelligen­ce assessment, which the Trump administra­tion had withheld.

The report “shines a bright light” on Khashoggi’s murder, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said, but the administra­tion’s response was not intended to break ties with Saudi Arabia.

“The relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia is an important one,” Blinken said. “But we also want to make sure, and this is what the president has said from the outset, that the relationsh­ip better reflects our interest and our values. And so what we’ve done by the actions that we’ve taken is really not to rupture the relationsh­ip, but to recalibrat­e.”

In addition to sanctions

targeting the financial assets of top Saudi officials, the State Department announced that it would implement what it called the “Khashoggi Ban” to limit travel visas for people who threaten or harm journalist­s and activists on behalf of foreign government­s. Seventy-six Saudis were immediatel­y subjected to the new restrictio­ns.

Although U.S. officials did not penalize the crown prince, the decision to declassify and release the report and to sanction his underlings for Khashoggi’s murder represente­d a shift from former President Trump, who publicly cast doubt on the findings of U.S. intelligen­ce agencies and continued to embrace Mohammed.

Biden has distanced himself from the Saudis since taking office just over one month ago. He slashed U.S. support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen, which has caused devastatin­g civilian casualties, and he’s attempting to resuscitat­e the multilater­al Iran nuclear agreement, which the Saudis oppose.

Khashoggi was last seen entering the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2, 2018, to obtain paperwork he needed to marry. Once inside, he was killed and dismembere­d with a bone saw; his remains were never recovered.

No one other than the crown prince could have directed the operation, the brief report concluded. He has had “absolute control” of the kingdom’s security forces for years, it said, and instilled a level of fear in his subordinat­es that made them unlikely to “undertake sensitive actions without his consent.”

The 15-member team that traveled to Istanbul to target Khashoggi included seven members of Mohammed’s “elite personal protective detail,” which “exists to defend the crown prince, answers only to him, and had directly participat­ed in earlier dissident suppressio­n operations,” the report said.

Mohammed was known for supporting “violent measures to silence dissidents abroad,” the report said, but it was not clear when the Saudis chose to kill Khashoggi.

“We do not know how far in advance Saudi officials decided to harm him,” the report said. But there was no question that Mohammed “viewed Khashoggi as a threat to the Kingdom and broadly supported using violent measures if necessary to silence him.”

The Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it “completely rejects the negative, false and unacceptab­le assessment pertaining to the Kingdom’s leadership.”

Rep. Adam B. Schiff (DBurbank) said in an interview he was glad “the administra­tion pulled no punches” with the report’s release. However, he said the administra­tion should go further to directly punish the crown prince.

“It’s discordant, to say the least, to sanction those who were ordered to capture or kill an American resident and journalist but to give a pass to the one who did the ordering,” he said.

Fred Ryan, publisher and chief executive of the Washington Post, also suggested more should be done to hold the crown prince “fully accountabl­e.”

“More than two years has gone by since Jamal’s unthinkabl­e death — it is time the United States and freedom-loving nations around the world ensure there is justice for Jamal,” he said in a statement.

For years, Khashoggi was friendly with the Saudi monarchy and often sympatheti­c to its policies. But after moving to the United States, his writing became increasing­ly critical as the crown prince was consolidat­ing power and using brutal tactics.

Because of his status as a onetime insider, Khashoggi and his rebukes were less easy to dismiss than attacks from Western critics and human rights organizati­ons, which consider Saudi Arabia one of the world’s most repressive regimes.

Furthermor­e, Khashoggi had a prominent platform as a contributo­r to the Post’s opinion pages, which he used to advocate for democratic reforms. In one of his last columns, Khashoggi wrote that “what the Arab world needs most is free expression.”

Saudi Arabia first falsely claimed that Khashoggi had left the consulate but later admitted that he had been killed. The crown prince vaguely took responsibi­lity for Khashoggi’s fate — “it happened under my watch,” he told PBS in 2019 — but never acknowledg­ed ordering the operation.

Biden spoke with Saudi King Salman for the first time as president on Thursday. In an interview Friday with Univision, Biden said he “made it clear to him that the rules are changing” and suggested the administra­tion could announce further steps after the weekend.

“We are going to hold them accountabl­e for human rights abuses,” Biden said, and criticized his predecesso­r for refusing to release the intelligen­ce assessment. “It is outrageous what happened.”

Trump fawned over Saudi’s royal leaders and ignored the outcry over Khashoggi’s murder to push through arms sales to the kingdom, in defiance of Congress. The former president accepted the crown prince’s explanatio­n that he had nothing to do with the killing. “Maybe he did and maybe he didn’t,” Trump said in a statement one month after Khashoggi’s death.

Although Trump was especially eager to please the kingdom’s leaders, the diplomatic, economic and security ties between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia are deep and stretch back decades. A swift, dramatic change in the relationsh­ip is unlikely, said Rajan Menon, a political scientist at the City College of New York and Columbia University who specialize­s in war, peace and ethics.

“Any fundamenta­l changes in relations that are so long-standing, so entrenched and with deep support from both political parties can’t be made suddenly,” Menon said in an interview. “It’s like an oil tanker; you can’t just turn it around.”

Still, he said, both the disastrous war in Yemen and now the Khashoggi report present an “opportunit­y” to take stock of the relationsh­ip.

One of Biden’s first actions in office was to end American participat­ion in offensive military operations in Yemen, where until now the U.S. was assisting Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in increasing­ly deadly airstrikes. He has suspended arms sales to both countries pending review.

The U.S. joined the Saudi-led coalition fighting Iran-supported Houthi rebels in Yemen with the stated goals of reining in Tehran and launching counter-terrorism measures against Al Qaeda offshoots active in the Arabian Peninsula. But the campaign unleashed the worst humanitari­an crisis on the planet, with widespread death, destructio­n and hunger, while doing little to diminish Iran’s role and allowing jihadist militias to proliferat­e.

Ilan Goldenberg, a Middle East expert at the Center for a New American Security and a former State Department official, said that “to some extent” the Biden administra­tion is returning to traditiona­l diplomacy with the kingdom after “four years of green lights for everything” for the Saudis under Trump.

“The view in D.C. is we are not going to walk away from Saudi Arabia, and if Saudi Arabia demonstrat­es a new seriousnes­s and checks some of these bad habits and problemati­c behaviors that are against our interests, there will be a relationsh­ip,” Goldenberg said. “If it doesn’t, and it continues on the current track, then the U.S. is really going to step back.”

Goldenberg noted that the Saudis, known to have an extensive and sophistica­ted army of lobbyists in Washington, are plotting how to “stay in the good graces” of the new U.S. government.

‘It’s discordant, to say the least, to sanction those who were ordered to capture or kill an American resident and journalist but to give a pass to the one who did the ordering.’ — Rep. Adam B.

Schiff (D-Burbank)

 ?? Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images ?? SAUDI CROWN PRINCE Mohammed bin Salman met in 2018 with President Trump, who refused to release a U.S. intelligen­ce report linking Mohammed to the murder later that year of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images SAUDI CROWN PRINCE Mohammed bin Salman met in 2018 with President Trump, who refused to release a U.S. intelligen­ce report linking Mohammed to the murder later that year of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

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