The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Saudis use coordinate­d social media campaign to tamp down dissent

- Katie Benner, Mark Mazzetti, Ben Hubbard and Mike Isaac

Each morning, Jamal Khashoggi would check his phone to discover what fresh hell had been unleashed while he was sleeping.

He would see the work of an army of Twitter trolls, ordered to attack him and other influentia­l Saudis who had criticized the kingdom’s leaders. He sometimes took the attacks personally, so friends made a point of calling frequently to check on his mental state.

“The mornings were the worst for him because he would wake up to the equivalent of sustained gunfire online,” said Maggie Mitchell Salem, a friend of Khashoggi’s for more than 15 years.

Khashoggi’s online attackers were part of a broad effort dictated by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and his close advisers to silence critics both inside Saudi Arabia and abroad. Hundreds of people work at a so-called troll farm in Riyadh to smother the voices of dissidents like Khashoggi. The vigorous push also appears to include the grooming — not previously reported — of a Saudi employee at Twitter whom Western intelligen­ce officials suspected of spying on user accounts to help the Saudi leadership.

The killing by Saudi agents of Khashoggi, a columnist for The Washington Post, has focused the world’s attention on the kingdom’s intimidati­on campaign against influentia­l voices raising questions about the darker side of the crown prince. The young royal has tightened his grip on the kingdom while presenting himself in Western capitals as the man to reform the hidebound Saudi state.

This portrait of the kingdom’s image management crusade is based on interviews with seven people involved in those efforts or briefed on them; activists and experts who have studied them; and U.S. and Saudi officials, along with messages seen by The New York Times that described the inner workings of the troll farm.

Saudi operatives have mobilized to harass critics on Twitter, a wildly popular platform for news in the kingdom since the Arab Spring uprisings began in 2010. Saud al-Qahtani, a top adviser to Crown Prince Mohammed who was fired Saturday in the fallout from Khashoggi’s killing, was the strategist behind the operation, according to U.S. and Saudi officials, as well as activist organizati­ons.

Many Saudis had hoped that Twitter would democratiz­e discourse by giving everyday citizens a voice, but Saudi Arabia has instead become an illustrati­on of how authoritar­ian government­s can manipulate social media to silence or drown out critical voices while spreading its own version of reality.

Before his death, Khashoggi was launching projects to combat online abuse and to try to reveal that Crown Prince Mohammed was mismanagin­g the country. In September, Khashoggi wired $5,000 to Omar Abdulaziz, a Saudi dissident living in Canada, who was creating a volunteer army to combat the government trolls on Twitter. The volunteers called themselves the “Electronic Bees.”

Eleven days before Khashoggi died in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, he wrote on Twitter that the Bees were coming.

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