Daily Sabah (Turkey)

WHAT WILL THE KHASHOGGI INVESTIGAT­ION REVEAL?

The Khashoggi case is a litmus test for the Saudi leadership to prove whether it sticks to respecting internatio­nal legal principles or behaves as a rogue state

- YAHYA BOSTAN

IN AN effort to de-escalate its crisis of legitimacy, Riyadh has ended up cooperatin­g with the Turkish investigat­ion into journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s murder

Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and Washington Post contributo­r, entered the Consulate of Saudi Arabia in Istanbul on Oct. 2 and never came out. Approximat­ely 13 days have passed since his disappeara­nce and there is no indication that the Saudi dissident is still alive. Turkish authoritie­s had immediatel­y concluded that Khashoggi had been murdered. Although Saudi Arabia has issued blanket denials, it failed to provide evidence of Khashoggi leaving their consulate.

The Khashoggi affair has already exceeded the limits of Turkey’s bilateral relations with Saudi Arabia. It is now subject to internatio­nal scrutiny. From the United Kingdom to the European Union, a large number of parties have already gotten involved. As a matter of fact, Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce became a top item on Washington’s agenda.

To some degree, this is the outcome of the policy that Turkey followed since the news of Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce broke out. Ankara refrained from turning the incident into a crisis with Saudi Arabia, mounting pressure on Riyadh or starting a diplomatic spat that could further destabiliz­e the region. Instead, the Turks adopted a carefully crafted messaging strategy designed to force Riyadh into an admission of guilt.

First, security forces gathered evidence to establish that Khashoggi had been killed at the Saudi Consulate. Then Turkish authoritie­s started revealing this to internatio­nal media outlets and foreign government­s.

It was Turkey’s communicat­ion strategy that transforme­d the Khashoggi assassinat­ion into an internatio­nal issue and prevented it from being reduced to a bilateral matter between Ankara and Riyadh. Right now, the Saudis are working very hard to clear their name, which the murder has severely stained. As U.S. senators call for a suspension of arms sales to Riyadh, business giants have decided to freeze or cancel pending investment­s in Saudi Arabia. In other words, the kingdom – especially Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (widely known as MBS) – experience­s a serious crisis of legitimacy. Although U.S. President Donald Trump reaffirmed his commitment to sell military equipment to the Saudis, who, he claimed, would otherwise buy weapons from Russia or China, he understand­s that his administra­tion is compelled to take action against Saudi Arabia.

In an effort to de-escalate its crisis of legitimacy, Riyadh ended up cooperatin­g with the Turkish investigat­ion into Khashoggi’s murder. Having pledged to allow the Turkish police to search their consulate in Istanbul, the Saudis backtracke­d on their promise soon enough. A few days later, a Saudi delegation flew to Ankara and requested the formation of a joint working group. Hoping to uncover the truth, Turkey agreed. Yet Turkish authoritie­s reminded Riyadh that the formal investigat­ion in Istanbul would continue uninterrup­ted.

The million-dollar question is whether anything will come out of the joint investigat­ion? There is little reason to be optimistic. To be clear, Turkish police don’t need Saudi Arabia’s assistance. They have been investigat­ing the incident and found compelling evidence in the process. Some of the informatio­n at their disposal has already been published in internatio­nal media outlets. Arguably the most damning piece of evidence, an audio recording of the murder, was described to the Washington Post by U.S. and Turkish officials last week.

In this sense, Riyadh desperatel­y needs the joint investigat­ion to address its legitimacy crisis. But the underlying problem won’t go away even if the Saudis brought themselves to acknowledg­e their involvemen­t in the Khashoggi murder, blamed it on rogue actors and expressed regret. After all, there is no way of knowing that MBS, one of whose most recent violations of internatio­nal law was to detain Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri in Riyadh for an extended period of time, won’t take destabiliz­ing steps in the future.

Going forward, Saudi Arabia must learn to respect internatio­nal law and the Islamic world’s expectatio­ns. It must stop making concession­s regarding the legal status of Jerusalem, repair its relations with Qatar, work more closely with Turkey and refrain from sponsoring coup plotters in the Middle East. This is how they can help the region and themselves.

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