The Denver Post

Mohammed bin Salman is our Saddam Hussein

- By Jackson Diehl

Once upon a time, there was a brutal and reckless dictator of an oil-rich Arab country who, despite his welldocume­nted excesses, was stroked and supported by the U.S. and other Western government­s. His crimes were terrible, went the rationale, but he was modernizin­g his country and he was holding the line against Islamist jihadism and Iran. Anyway, there was probably no alternativ­e.

The ruler heard that message. He concluded that, as long as he kept supplying oil and opposing Iran, he was free to butcher his opponents and bully neighbors.

His name, of course, was Saddam Hussein. The bet made on him by the United States and its allies directly led to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990, and from there to the “endless wars” in the Middle East that are now almost universall­y bemoaned by the West’s foreign policy establishm­ent.

And yet, 30 years later, those mandarins and the politician­s

they report to are blindly repeating the mistake. They are saying they abhor the blatant crimes of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, including the killing of Washington Post contributi­ng columnist Jamal Khashoggi and the torture and imprisonme­nt of women seeking greater rights. They see his bombing campaign in Yemen as a warcrime-ridden disaster.

Yet, at the summit of the Group of 20 in Osaka, Japan, a week ago, they cheerfully clustered around him. Not just President Donald Trump but also prime ministers and presidents from the big European democracie­s. And not just them but also the leaders of India, South Korea and Japan.

Ask them why, and you get an all-too-familiar response: The crown prince, who is also known as MBS, is the best chance for modernizat­ion in Saudi Arabia. He’s fighting the Islamist extremists, and he’s allied with us and with Israel against Iran. The alternativ­es to him are worse.

The determinat­ion with which politician­s and policymake­rs cling to this blinkered view can be seen in the lonely quest of Agnes Callamard, the U.N. special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial, summary or arbitrary executions. At her own initiative, Callamard conducted a five-month investigat­ion into Khashoggi’s killing and dismemberm­ent inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul last October. On June 19, Callamard released a powerful report making the case that “Khashoggi has been the victim of a deliberate, premeditat­ed execution, an extrajudic­ial killing for which the state of Saudi Arabia responsibl­e” — and that Mohammed bin Salman was almost certainly complicit in the operation and in its cover-up.

Callamard’s report called for a halt to the closed Saudi trial of 11 lower-level operatives blamed for the killing, and for an independen­t investigat­ion by U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres or the FBI. The report also called for sanctions to be imposed on Mohammed bin Salman and his foreign assets.

The official silence that has greeted the report has been deafening. Guterres, who has been a profile in timidity, did not respond to Callamard’s call for an investigat­ion; as of last week, he had yet even to meet with her. Europe, too, has been silent. At the G-20 summit, Trump met Mohammed bin Salman for breakfast and declared he was doing “a spectacula­r job.” Later, the president answered a question about Khashoggi by saying there was no “finger directly” pointing at the crown prince — though both Callamard’s report and a CIA assessment have done just that.

During a visit to Washington last week, Callamard appeared undeterred. “Many government­s have attempted to bury it and say, ‘Let’s move on,’ but that killing is not going to disappear,” she said during an appearance at the Brookings Institutio­n. Trump notwithsta­nding, she is counting on justice to come from the United States.

There is still some hope of that: Legislatio­n pending in the House would require the director of national intelligen­ce to report on those responsibl­e for the Khashoggi killing, and would require a visa ban to be applied to them. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is expected to consider other bills this week. But as long as Trump is president, Mohammed bin Salman is unlikely to face direct U.S. sanction; all the congressio­nal bills either exclude him or grant Trump the power to do so.

Like Saddam Hussein before him, Mohammed bin Salman has concluded that he is immune. Women he ordered tortured are still in prison. His planes are still bombing Yemen. And he is taking the first steps toward acquiring nuclear weapons. Because Western government­s do not stop him now, they will have to do it later — when the cost is likely to be far higher. Justin Mock, Vice President of Finance and CFO; Bill Reynolds, Senior VP, Circulatio­n and Production; Bob Kinney, Vice President, Informatio­n Technology

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