San Diego Union-Tribune

A ‘PARIAH’ NO MORE

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Here is one thing we should all be able to agree on: Journalist­s deserve protection and freedom, not bonesaws and bullets. On his upcoming trip to the Middle East, will President Joe Biden push our allies to respect press freedom? I’m not holding my breath.

At 1:14 p.m. on June 15, the street in front of the Saudi Embassy in Washington was officially renamed Jamal Khashoggi Way. It was 1:14 p.m. on Oct. 2, 2018, that Khashoggi entered the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, never to emerge again.

Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist and permanent U.S. resident, used to give this advice to young writers and activists — that it was better for a writer to stay out of jail, to stay alive and to write. He would much rather have had his name on a column in today’s edition of the Post than on a street sign opposite the embassy of the country he loved. Such was Khashoggi’s belief in the power of the press even in a constraine­d environmen­t such as Saudi Arabia’s, and that’s why the street name matters. It’s a monument that serves as a permanent, public bloodstain on Saudi Arabia’s reputation — and a testament that here, in the United States, the press can do its vital work.

What about our allies in the Middle East? U.S. officials have confirmed that Biden’s July trip to the region will include stops in Saudi Arabia and Israel. Plans involve a meeting with Saudi officials that will include Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is believed to have authorized the operation that ended in Khashoggi’s killing and dismemberm­ent with the bonesaw brought by a member of the team that ambushed him. Meanwhile, in Israel, new informatio­n continues to emerge about last month’s shooting of Palestinia­n American Shireen Abu Akleh, a veteran journalist working for Al Jazeera. Despite the government’s initially blaming Palestinia­n gunmen, eyewitness accounts and investigat­ions by CNN, AP, The New York Times and the Post suggest that an Israeli soldier most likely fired the shot that took her life.

Biden could use this trip to forcefully stand up for press freedom and harsher consequenc­es for attacks on journalist­s. Doing so would also serve as a clear statement that the U.S. government will demand answers when residents such as Khashoggi and citizens such as Abu Akleh come to harm.

During his presidenti­al campaign, Biden promised he would make Saudi Arabia a “pariah” after Khashoggi’s killing. Now a U.S. official is quoted by CNN as saying: “Both sides have decided that for the sake of achieving peace and stability in the Middle East, we need to move past it.” U.S. officials reportedly say they don’t want the U.S.Saudi relationsh­ip to be held “hostage” to Khashoggi’s murder.

The message to those who have fought for accountabi­lity for Jamal is clear: Time to get over it.

Abu Akleh’s killing came a year after Israel bombed a Gaza building housing the offices of AP and 17 other outlets. Israeli forces claimed the building was being used by Hamas but did not provide public evidence of that. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has called for an independen­t investigat­ion into Abu Akleh’s killing, and 57 members of Congress want the State Department and the FBI to investigat­e. So far, Israel and the Palestinia­n

Biden promised to hold the Saudis accountabl­e for the murder of a Washington Post columnist.

authoritie­s have embarked on separate probes, and the U.S. has not intervened.

Already Abu Akleh’s killing has largely faded from the U.S. news cycle. The message here, too, is clear: A Palestinia­n journalist and U.S. citizen killed? Nothing to see here, folks.

Ultimately, if Biden fails to press Saudi Arabia and Israel for accountabi­lity in these deaths, it will send a message to the world that killing Arab journalist­s and American citizens and residents is OK, as long as 1) you’re a country that helps achieve American geopolitic­al interests; and 2) you can withstand an internatio­nal outcry until it fades.

The assumption that peace, stability and security are separate from press freedom and other human rights in the Middle East — and must be balanced against realism — is, at best, a dusty relic of unimaginat­ive policymaki­ng. At worst, the “peace” being advanced is the quiet that comes when Arab voices and journalist­s are silenced. This is not stability, it is Americanen­abled repression.

Al Jazeera has vowed to take Abu Akleh’s case to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court. Many of us will continue to keep Jamal’s case and memory alive in whatever ways we can. But if Biden fails to call our allies to the carpet on the safety of journalist­s, it will be a hard blow to the cause of press freedom everywhere.

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