Los Angeles Times

Biden in tough spot over report on Khashoggi

U.S. blames killing on Saudi crown prince, angering kingdom. But critics decry favorable treatment of the royal.

- By Nabih Bulos Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson in Washington contribute­d to this report.

BEIRUT — Throughout his campaign, President Biden vowed to take a harder line with Saudi Arabia. Its leaders, he insisted, would need to act responsibl­y or “pay the price” for reckless moves and be made “the pariah that they are.”

But after his administra­tion released a declassifi­ed U.S. intelligen­ce report last week blaming Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for the 2018 killing of Saudi dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi, it didn’t quite work out that way.

Washington imposed sanctions on the hit team dispatched to capture or kill Khashoggi in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, and placed visa restrictio­ns on 76 others who it said had threatened dissidents overseas. The crown prince, who the U.S. says ordered Khashoggi’s silencing, was left untouched.

Administra­tion officials framed that decision as a way of recalibrat­ing rather than rupturing the relationsh­ip with Riyadh.

But it also underscore­s the realpoliti­k facing Biden and the difficult question of how to deal with a figure almost certain to become the leader of a longtime Middle Eastern ally. The U.S. continues to count on Saudi Arabia as a bulwark against Iran and Islamic extremism in the region, making strong condemnati­on and punishment of the kingdom’s misdeeds a tricky business.

In trying to thread that needle, the new administra­tion has ended up angering both the crown prince and his circle, who reject the intelligen­ce report, and human rights defenders, who

see him as having received barely a slap on the wrist.

State Department spokesman Ned Price defended Biden’s pullback from a full-throated censure, saying the administra­tion sought to retain the influence to “shape” the Saudi government’s choices.

“It is undeniable that Saudi Arabia is a hugely influentia­l country in the Arab world and beyond,” Price told reporters Monday. “The choices that Riyadh makes will have outsized implicatio­ns for the region and outsized implicatio­ns for countries in the region and countries beyond the region, including for the United States.”

Aside from the sanctions and visa ban, Price urged Saudi Arabia to “adopt institutio­nal, systemic reforms and controls to ensure that anti-dissident activities and operations cease, and cease completely.”

The statement mollified few critics, including Saudi dissidents abroad.

“While we welcome the publicatio­n of the report, we await real actions to bring justice in the heinous murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi and guarantees that such crimes are never

committed against people who express opinions that amount to criticism of the Saudi regime’s policies,” said Madawi al-Rasheed, spokeswoma­n for the National Assembly Party, an opposition group of mostly exiled Saudi figures.

Fawaz Gerges, an expert on Middle Eastern politics at the London School of Economics, said the Biden administra­tion’s response simply continued previous U.S. policy toward Saudi Arabia, where tough talk is belied by weak action.

“Since the beginning of the Cold War to the present, the U.S. has prioritize­d its geo-strategic and economic interests at the expense of human rights and the rule of law,” Gerges said. “There’s a huge gap between rhetoric and reality.”

The consensus among the U.S. foreign policy establishm­ent, he said, was that energy, arms sales and calm markets were the priority, and that the alternativ­e to the authoritar­ians in the region was chaos like that seen in Libya and Syria.

For its part, Saudi Arabia is furious. Hours after the report’s release, the Saudi Foreign Ministry rejected its findings as “negative, false and unacceptab­le.”

“It is truly unfortunat­e that this report, with its unjustifie­d and inaccurate conclusion­s, is issued while the kingdom had clearly denounced this heinous crime, and the kingdom’s leadership took the necessary steps to ensure that such a tragedy never takes place again,” the statement said.

“The kingdom rejects any measure that infringes upon its leadership, sovereignt­y, and the independen­ce of its judicial system.”

Other gulf countries closed ranks. The United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain and even Qatar — which only recently patched up relations with Riyadh — issued statements reaffirmin­g Saudi Arabia’s sovereignt­y and stability.

In Crown Prince Mohammed, the Biden administra­tion is dealing with a figure who began stirring up controvers­y even before Khashoggi’s assassinat­ion.

Since he essentiall­y took over the reins of government from his father, King Salman, in 2015, the crown prince has launched a disastrous war in Yemen, where a Saudi-led bombing campaign and blockade have had a horrific toll on civilians and pushed the country to the brink of famine. He reportedly had Lebanon’s prime minister, Saad Hariri, kidnapped, forcing him to resign on television before internatio­nal interventi­on made the prince back down.

At home, although Mohammed pushed some social reforms at breakneck speed, he presided over a supposed anti-corruption dragnet that critics dismiss as a gambit to consolidat­e power. Activists, clerics, even other members of the royal family who challenge his authority — none escape punishment in an atmosphere where dissent, no matter how mild, can be dangerous, if not deadly.

The killing of Khashoggi in October 2018 proved that in horrific fashion.

The Saudi insidertur­ned-critic, who wrote columns for the Washington Post, entered the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul for what was supposed to be a simple bureaucrat­ic procedure and instead encountere­d the “Tiger Squad,” members of the crown prince’s personal protection detail. A struggle ended in Khashoggi’s death. His corpse was dismembere­d with a bone saw and buried off-site; his remains have yet to be found.

Saudi Arabia maintains that Tiger Squad operatives acted beyond their orders; eight of 11 suspects have been sentenced to jail time or death.

But the U.S. intelligen­ce report said the crown prince had approved the operation. “We base this assessment on the Crown Prince’s control of decision-making 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,” the report says.

Saudi media have gone into overdrive in defense of the crown prince. Commentato­rs pooh-pooh the report’s findings as little more than amateurish guesswork. Analysts conjure up a web of nefarious adversarie­s who they say are leading a conspiracy to tarnish the kingdom’s leadership.

On Twitter, the country’s most popular social medium, activists declare fealty to the crown prince while sharing videos of Abu Ghraib, the Iraqi prison complex where U.S. troops tortured prisoners, as an example of the United States’ dark human rights record.

“Everyone knows it’s a report not worthy of a firstyear journalism student let alone the world’s largest intelligen­ce apparatus,” Saudi commentato­r Mohammed al-Sulami tweeted.

Others dismiss the Biden administra­tion’s moves as little more than posturing for a domestic audience, an attempt to draw a distinctio­n between the president’s approach and the carte blanche that former President Trump gave Riyadh.

“It’s theatrics and cosmetics,” said Ali Shihabi, a commentato­r close to the Saudi government.

Though Khashoggi’s killing was a “horrible tragedy,” he said, it was one individual and other government­s had done worse.

“The U.S. government went in and destroyed Iraq,” Shihabi added, referring to the 2003 invasion and its aftermath. “Who was held accountabl­e for that?”

He warned that Riyadh’s displeasur­e with Washington would push it to look beyond the U.S. for support. As an example, he noted that the kingdom has turned to China — already its biggest trade partner — to ramp up its ballistic missile program even as U.S. congressio­nal leaders seek to limit weapons sales.

“This isn’t aid to Saudi Arabia. It’s paying top dollar for this, and it can get equipment that is as good elsewhere,” Shihabi said. “This alliance has already shown its limitation­s, so all this does is accelerate a desire by the kingdom to anchor its strategic relationsh­ips in a more diversifie­d manner.”

Gerges of the London School of Economics sees little hope that Biden — or any other president — will change Washington’s Saudi Arabia policy to be more fully in line with pro-democracy values.

“Even if Biden punishes MBS,” Gerges said, referring to the crown prince by his initials, “there will be no long-term change.

“There’s no magic wand. You start by taking human rights and the rule of law seriously, not just paying lip service, and applying them across the board, to friend and foe.”

 ?? Mikhail Klimentyev ?? Sputnik
THE U.S. did not censure Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, saying it seeks to retain the inf luence to “shape” his government’s choices.
Mikhail Klimentyev Sputnik THE U.S. did not censure Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, saying it seeks to retain the inf luence to “shape” his government’s choices.

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