The Day

U.S. report: Saudi crown prince targeted journalist

Trump administra­tion withheld findings on death of Khashoggi

- By CHRIS MEGERIAN and TRACY WILKINSON

Washington — Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, directed the operation that ended with the grisly murder of U.S.-based journalist Jamal Khashoggi, according to an unclassifi­ed U.S. intelligen­ce report released Friday.

The four-page report said the goal of the mission in 2018, which included seven members of the crown prince’s “elite personal protective detail,” was to capture or kill Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and prominent critic of the kingdom’s rulers.

“We base this assessment on the Crown Prince’s control of decisionma­king in the Kingdom, the direct involvemen­t of a key adviser and members of Muhammad bin Salman’s protective detail in the operation, and the Crown Prince’s support for using violent measures to silence dissidents abroad, including Khashog

“We base this assessment on the Crown Prince’s control of decisionma­king in the Kingdom, the direct involvemen­t of a key adviser and members of Muhammad bin Salman’s protective detail in the operation, and the Crown Prince’s support for using violent measures to silence dissidents abroad, including Khashoggi.” EXCERPT FROM THE FOUR-PAGE U.S. INTELLIGEN­CE REPORT

gi,” said the four-page report.

A classified version of the report was completed shortly after Khashoggi was lured into a Saudi Consulate in Turkey and killed by a team of assassins on Oct. 2, 2018. But the Trump administra­tion withheld the findings, reflecting the former president’s embrace of the up-and-coming crown prince as the presumptiv­e heir to the kingdom’s throne even after Khashoggi’s brutal slaying.

The decision to release the report comes as President Joe Biden moves to reshape the relationsh­ip between Washington and Riyadh in ways that will inevitably strain it. Biden also is slashing U.S. support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen, which has caused devastatin­g civilian casualties, and attempting to resuscitat­e the Iran nuclear agreement.

Khashoggi, who had been living in the United States and writing for The Washington Post’s opinion section, was last seen entering the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul to obtain paperwork he needed to remarry. Once inside, he was killed and dismembere­d. His remains have never been recovered, and a United Nations report released in 2019 said the murder had been carefully planned.

Riyadh first falsely claimed that Khashoggi had left the consulate, but later admitted that he had been killed. However, the crown prince, commonly known by his initials MBS, never acknowledg­ed ordering the assassinat­ion.

Biden said Wednesday that he had read the report, although he did not comment further. On Thursday, for the first time as president, Biden spoke by phone with Saudi King Salman, the father of the crown prince, according to the White House. Aides had pointedly said Biden would not be speaking with Mohammed though he is widely seen as the kingdom’s de facto ruler.

The two leaders “affirmed the historic nature” of the U.S.-Saudi relationsh­ip, the White House said, but Biden also raised human rights issues with the king, including the case of a prominent Saudi woman activist imprisoned and allegedly tortured before her recent release.

Biden was expected to use the diplomatic call to prepare Salman for the release of the Khashoggi report.

During four years under President Donald Trump, the United States treated the Saudis with kid gloves. Trump fawned over the royal leaders; his relationsh­ip and that of son-in-law Jared Kushner with Mohammed were especially friendly.

Trump ignored the outcry over Khashoggi’s murder to push through arms sales to Saudi Arabia in defiance of Congress. And, despite the findings of U.S. intelligen­ce officials, he accepted the crown prince’s explanatio­n that the killing of the journalist was a rogue operation in which he played no part.

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 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 United

States was assisting Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in increasing­ly deadly airstrikes. He has suspended arms sales to both countries pending review.

Menon said a telling sign will be if the administra­tion expands or lengthens the moratorium on weapon sales.

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 counterter­rorism measures against al-Qaida 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 a 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 while the Biden administra­tion has already taken a pause, 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.

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