The Columbus Dispatch

Khashoggi wasn’t reformer that many think he was

- Cal Thomas writes for Tribune Content Agency. tcaeditors@tribpub.com

death has rightly sparked outrage globally and united disparate political factions in the U.S. In the Middle East, however, Arab experts are not surprised. I recently spoke with Michael Widlanski, an authority on Arab and Israeli politics and media, who said Arabs have been killing each other for thousands of years.

Still, claims of modernizat­ion and reform by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is suspected of ordering a Mafia-style hit on one of his sharpest critics, should be treated with skepticism. Many have bought the notion which he has been peddling that he wants to bring his country and Islam out of the Middle Ages.

President Donald Trump and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan have promised severe repercussi­ons should Salman be proved complicit in Khashoggi’s fate. Meanwhile, Western media, including The Washington Post, have cast Khashoggi as a moderate and a champion of reform.

John R. Bradley, a British author and journalist, has spent three decades working closely with intelligen­ce services in the West and in the Arab world. In Spectator USA, he decries what appears to have been Khashoggi’s end, allegedly at the hands of Saudi agents, but then corrects the widely held belief in Western circles that Khashoggi is (or was) himself a reformer and a promoter of Western style democracy.

“In truth,” says Bradley, “Khashoggi never had much time for western-style pluralisti­c democracy. In the 1970s he joined the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, which exists to rid the Islamic world of western influence. He was a political Islamist until the end, recently praising the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in the Washington Post. He championed the ‘moderate’ Islamist opposition in Syria, whose crimes against humanity are a matter of record. Khashoggi frequently sugarcoate­d his Islamist beliefs with constant references to freedom and democracy. But he never hid that he was in favour of a Muslim Brotherhoo­d arc throughout the Middle East.”

Islamic extremists know the words Westerners want to hear and they often use them to fool us into a false sense of complacenc­y and a belief that certain factions within Islam do not want to impose Sharia law on everyone and that Jihad is something other than what it looks like.

Anyone who says or writes such things is denounced as a bigot and an “Islamophob­e.” How can one be a bigot when quoting from speeches, sermons and media reports in which Islamists openly state their intentions?

It is right to denounce Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce and possible murder. If it can be proved that leaders in the Saudi government ordered his death, it is also right for the U.S. and other nations to make Saudi Arabia pay a heavy price, as President Trump has threatened to do.

What Khashoggi really stood for, reportedly, is a separate issue.

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