The Borneo Post

US alarmed as Saudi lawsuits threaten to expose secrets

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RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA: Two lawsuits pitting Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler against a former intelligen­ce czar threaten to expose highly sensitive US government secrets, prompting Washington to consider a rare judicial interventi­on, documents show.

The cases in US and Canadian courts centre on corruption allegation­s levelled by stateowned Saudi companies against Saad Aljabri, a former spymaster who long worked closely with American officials on covert counter-terrorism operations.

That marks the latest twist in a long-running feud between Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) and Aljabri.

Aljabri’s patron, Prince Mohammed bin Nayef (MBN is currently in Saudi detention after being deposed as heir to the throne in a 2017 palace coup.

The legal drama sheds light on Shakespear­ean rivalries in the top echelons of the Saudi royal family, but Washington fears that a bitter courtroom showdown risks exposing sensitive informatio­n related to its covert operations.

A rare US Justice Department filing in a Massachuse­tts court in April noted Aljabri’s intention to “describe informatio­n concerning alleged national security activities”.

“The (US) government is considerin­g whether and how to participat­e in this action, including if necessary and applicable, through an assertion of appropriat­e government­al privileges,” the filing said, without elaboratin­g.

In a second filing a month later, the Justice Department asked the court for more time as national security matters require “’delicate’ and ‘complex’ judgements by senior officials”.

The filing said the government was prepared to “provide further informatio­n” to the court in secret. Legal experts have said Washington could invoke the ‘state secrets privilege’, which would allow it to resist a courtorder­ed disclosure of informatio­n deemed harmful to US national security.

The CIA declined to comment to AFP. The Justice Department, which experts say only rarely intervenes in civil lawsuits, did not respond to a request for comment.

Last year, Aljabri alleged in another lawsuit that MBS sent ‘Tiger Squad’ assassins to kill him in Canada, where he lives in exile, while detaining two of his children to pressure him to return home.

The feud took a new turn this March when state-run company Sakab Saudi Holding accused Aljabri of embezzling US$3.47 billion while working at the Ministry of Interior under MBN.

It urged the Massachuse­tts court to freeze his US$29 million Boston property assets. This came weeks after multiple stateowned companies sued Aljabri in Toronto on similar allegation­s. A Canadian court subsequent­ly announced a worldwide freeze of Aljabri’s assets.

While denying any financial wrongdoing, Aljabri’s legal team says he is caught in the rivalry between MBS and MBN, who has not been publicly seen since his detention in March 2020.

State-run Sakab, which court filings say was establishe­d in 2008 by MBN, was part of a network of front companies to provide cover for clandestin­e security operations with the United States. In order to prove his innocence, the court would need to probe Sakab’s finances, including how they were used to ‘finance sensitive programmes’ operated in partnershi­p with the CIA, the US National Security Agency and the US Defense Department, said a filing by Aljabri.

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