The Day

Senate bucks Trump twice on Saudi policy

Bipartisan votes target Yemen war, crown prince

- By KAROUN DEMIRJIAN

Washington — The Senate on Thursday delivered back-to-back rebukes of President Donald Trump's embrace of Saudi Arabia, first voting to end U.S. participat­ion in the Saudi-led war in Yemen and then unanimousl­y approving a measure blaming the kingdom's crown prince for the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Together, the actions represent an unambiguou­s rejection of Trump's continued defense of Saudi leaders in the face of a CIA assessment that concluded that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman most probably ordered and monitored Khashoggi's killing Oct. 2 inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. The moves suggest a bipartisan majority of senators will pursue broader punitive measures when Congress regroups next year — including sanctions and a halt to weapons transfers — despite the administra­tion's objections.

“What we showed in this vote today is that Republican­s and Democrats are ready to get back in the business of working with a president — and sometimes against a president — to set the foreign policy of this nation,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., a longtime advocate for checking Saudi Arabia's regional expansion. “The United States has said, through the Senate, that our support for the Saudi coalition is no longer open-ended.”

The unanimous vote to hold Mohammed responsibl­e for Khashoggi's killing reflects the extent to which senators in both parties have grown tired of Trump's continued defense of Mohammed's denials. It also puts significan­t pressure on leaders in the House — where the president's Saudi policy is far more divisive — to allow for a similar vote to condemn the crown prince before the end of the year.

Earlier this week, House leaders maneuvered to block rank-and-file members from forcing a vote on any Yemen-related resolution­s, an attempt to stop the Senate's effort to curtail U.S. involvemen­t in the Saudis' military campaign by invoking

“What we showed in this vote today is that Republican­s and Democrats are ready to get back in the business of working with a president — and sometimes against a president — to set the foreign policy of this nation.” U.S. SEN. CHRIS MURPHY, D-CONN.

the War Powers Resolution.

Senators voted 56 to 41 on Thursday to support the Yemen resolution, put forward by Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Mike Lee, R-Utah, after seven Republican­s joined all Senate Democrats to back the measure. That figure strongly suggests a majority of the Republican-led Senate will challenge Trump on his Saudi policy next year, alongside a Democratic-led House, whose incoming leaders also have promised to be proactive about demanding changes to the status quo.

“The current relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia is not working for America,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., a Trump ally who, nonetheles­s, is a driving force behind several efforts to punish Saudi Arabia. He often refers to Mohammed as a “wrecking ball.”

Graham did not vote for the Yemen resolution Thursday, citing concerns about using the War Powers Resolution as a vehicle to call out Saudi Arabia, but he said resolutely this week that his past defense of the kingdom had come to an end.

“I think you’re wrong about what’s going on up here,” Graham said late Wednesday in comments directed toward Trump. “I’m never going to let this go until things change in Saudi Arabia.”

The Senate votes came as the two sides in the Yemen conflict agreed to a cease-fire in Hodeida, a port city that is key to the supply of humanitari­an aid, and a prisoner swap that is expected to free thousands. While previous ceasefire agreements in the fouryear civil war have crumbled, Thursday’s agreement — following a week of peace talks in Sweden — has been heralded as an important sign of progress.

It has been months since the United Nations declared Yemen to be the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis, and the situation has only worsened since, as a proxy battle deepens between U.S.-backed Arab nations and Iran, which supports the rebel Houthi government claiming authority in the country.

Internatio­nal pressure has been building on the warring sides to take steps to end the conflict, and some senators said Thursday that the momentum surroundin­g their Yemen resolution played no small role in bringing about the cease-fire.

“The concession­s that were made by the Saudi side in the negotiatio­ns this morning would not have happened if it wasn’t for the pressure the United States Senate put on those negotiatio­ns,” Murphy said.

But in the House, Yemen’s peace talks have been an excuse for some lawmakers to seek a pause, to see how things play out before committing to a course of action.

The Senate vote came just hours after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis provided a closed briefing to House members. Republican­s and Democrats emerged from the meeting urging very different responses to Saudi Arabia and its crown prince over the killing of Khashoggi, a Saudi national who was a Washington Post contributi­ng columnist.

“They have to be held responsibl­e,” Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., the incoming chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said after the briefing, referring to Mohammed and Saudi King Salman, though he did not back a specific means of holding them responsibl­e.

Meanwhile, there remain Republican­s in the House who defend the crown prince. And even those who criticize him over Khashoggi’s death said that while he should be rebuked, the punishment should stop there.

“We recognize killing journalist­s is absolutely evil and despicable, but to completely realign our interests in the Middle East as a result of this, when for instance the Russians kill journalist­s ... Turkey imprisons journalist­s?” said Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill. “It’s not a sinless world out there.”

That stands in sharp contrast to the Senate, where several Republican­s have been encouragin­g a broad response to Saudi Arabia over not just Khashoggi’s killing and the Yemen war, but also the kingdom’s blockade in Qatar, its detainment last year of Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri, and a slate of human rights abuses they say have compromise­d the U.S.-Saudi alliance.

The House will not take up any such measures this year — not even the Senate-passed Yemen resolution. But leaders will still be under considerab­le pressure to allow members to vote on the measure condemning Mohammed for Khashoggi’s killing before the end of the year.

Trump has refused to condemn Mohammed for the killing. Pompeo has echoed Trump’s stance in public interviews and behind closed doors as well, lawmakers said.

“All we heard today was more disgracefu­l ducking and dodging by the secretary,” Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, said following Thursday’s meeting.

House leaders met with CIA Director Gina Haspel on Wednesday to hear the details of Khashoggi’s slaying. They emerged offering few details about the briefing — or about what steps House Democrats would take, once they assume the majority in January, to pursue more punitive measures against Saudi Arabia, beyond holding hearings.

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