Marysville Appeal-Democrat

No sign of breakthrou­gh after Pompeo meets with Saudi rulers over missing journalist

Trump says answers ‘will be forthcomin­g shortly’

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

Protestors demonstrat­e at the entrance of Saudi Arabia consulate over the disappeara­nce of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, on Oct. 9, in Istanbul.

WASHINGTON – Scrambling to defuse a growing diplomatic crisis, Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo held hastily arranged talks Tuesday with the rulers of Saudi Arabia but they failed to ease growing suspicions that a Virginia-based Saudi journalist was brutally killed on their orders.

Pompeo did not report any breakthrou­gh following his meetings in Riyadh with Saudi King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the country’s de facto ruler. President Donald Trump later tweeted that he also spoke with the crown prince by phone and that answers “will be forthcomin­g shortly,” but he provided no details.

Trump later compared the accusation­s over the suspected killing and dismemberm­ent of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Saudi Arabia’s own consulate to the sexual assault allegation­s that sparked a bitter national debate and nearly derailed confirmati­on of his Supreme Court nominee.

“Here we go again with, you know, you’re guilty until proven innocent,” Trump told the Associated Press in an interview. “I don’t like that. We just went through that with Justice Kavanaugh and he was innocent all the way as far as I’m concerned. So we have to find out what happened.”

Trump’s pushback came as America’s closest strategic and military ally in the Arab world continued to deny any knowledge or role in the disappeara­nce of Khashoggi, a prominent critic of the autocratic government, after he entered the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, two weeks ago.

Turkish officials have said they have audio and video evidence that provides grisly details of the journalist’s fate after he walked into the walled compound about 1:15 p.m. on Oct. 2 in an effort to get documents for his planned marriage to a Turkish woman this month.

According to the officials, Khashoggi was asked to wait in the office of the Saudi consul general. Two men then entered the room, a struggle ensued and Khashoggi was dragged into a second room, they said. Khashoggi was interrogat­ed and killed there, the officials said, and his body then was dismembere­d with a saw in a third room.

Later the same afternoon, the officials said, they believe Khashoggi’s body was moved in a diplomatic van to the Saudi consul general’s home, and possibly was buried in the garden there. The Saudi diplomat, Mohammad Otaibi, left Istanbul early Tuesday on a commercial flight for Riyadh as Turkish police made plans to search his home and vehicles.

A Turkish crime scene investigat­ion unit, as well as forensic specialist­s in the anti-terrorism branch, subsequent­ly entered the Saudi Consulate, as well as the consul general’s residence. The Turkish attorney general’s office told reporters that the team found evidence that Khashoggi was killed in the consulate, and that they had taken soil samples from the garden.

Turkish investigat­ors had conducted a nine-hour search of the consulate on Monday night, but they quickly discovered that the building’s interior walls had been painted over since Khashoggi vanished, hampering their ability to collect evidence, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters in Ankara.

“I hope we can get results to allow us to form an opinion as soon as possible, because the investigat­ion is looking into many things, including toxic materials and those materials were removed by painting over them,” Erdogan said.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, who will meet with Pompeo in Ankara on Wednesday, said some Saudi officials may be questioned as part of the investigat­ion.

Trump ordered Pompeo to leave immediatel­y for Saudi Arabia and Turkey on Monday to try to defuse the crisis, which has slammed the brakes on a series of regional initiative­s and plans that are critical to the White House, including cutting off Iran’s oil exports, and searching for an Israeli-palestinia­n peace plan.

Pompeo told reporters Tuesday that he had “direct and candid” conversati­ons with the Saudi king, crown prince and foreign minister. He said he “emphasized the importance of conducting a thorough, transparen­t and timely” investigat­ion by the Saudi public prosecutor.

“The Saudi leadership pledged to deliver precisely on that,” he said.

“My assessment from these meetings is that there is serious commitment to determine all the facts and ensure accountabi­lity, including accountabi­lity for Saudi Arabia’s senior leaders or senior officials,” Pompeo said.

Publicly, Pompeo and his hosts looked calm and friendly when they met Tuesday. At one point, as they greeted each other, Prince Mohammed noted the two countries were important allies.

“Absolutely,” said, smiling.

On Monday, Trump suggested that “rogue killers,” not the Saudi royal family, may have carried out the slaying. Critics quickly said that Trump was providing an excuse for the Saudi leaders, and participat­ing in a cover-up.

Saudi officials later floated the idea of claiming that Khashoggi, who was 59 when he disappeare­d, was killed during a “botched” interrogat­ion inside the consulate, an explanatio­n that shielded the crown prince from responsibi­lity.

Analysts who follow the hermetic gulf kingdom have focused their criticism, and their suspicions, on the crown prince. He has sought to portray himself as a political reformer, but he has amassed vast power since 2013 with arrests of hundreds of rivals and dissidents, threatenin­g Saudi domestic stability and its role on the world stage.

But the Trump administra­tion has embraced Mohammed bin Salman since he became the crown prince, drawing up contracts for $110 billion in military arms sales to the kingdom, and providing material and logistical assistance in its disastrous war in neighborin­g Yemen. Pompeo

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