USA TODAY International Edition

What happened to Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi?

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Early last Tuesday afternoon, the tall, bespectacl­ed Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi walked into a consulate of his native country in Turkey. His reason for entering the office, tucked into a backstreet of Istanbul’s business district, was his desire to marry a Turkish woman. Khashoggi, a U.S. resident who writes columns for The Washington Post, needed a Saudi document to certify his divorced status. His fiancée says that she waited outside the consulate and that Khashoggi, 59, never reappeared. As of Monday afternoon, his disappeara­nce remained a mystery, but it might have everything to do with his fierce commentary on the Saudi monarchy, particular­ly Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s iron-fisted effort to staunch dissent even as he institutes widely heralded reforms. Turkish officials told reporters they believe that Khashoggi was murdered inside the consulate by a team of Saudi agents flown in ahead of his scheduled visit, his body dismembere­d and carried out in boxes. The Saudi kingdom called the allegation­s “baseless” and claimed that Khashoggi left the building alive, though it offered no evidence despite an array of video cameras around the consulate. The case serves as a chilling reminder that the risks journalist­s take are legion. Around the world, at least 48 have been killed this year. From self-imposed exile in America, Khashoggi’s constructi­ve critiques — as a former regime insider — were stinging. His targets included corruption, royal family extravagan­ces and Saudi’s brutal war of attrition in Yemen. He argued that Salman’s reforms — including allowing women to drive — masked an opportunit­y to centralize power through widespread arrests. “I have left my home, my family and my job, and I am raising my voice,” Khashoggi wrote last year. “I can speak when so many cannot . ... We Saudis deserve better.” If it turned out Saudi leaders reached out from Riyadh to silence this voice, it would be an act of cold-blooded brazenness reserved for the most brutal dictatorsh­ips, one that would fly in the face of American values. Yet, for several days, the Trump administra­tion remained largely silent in public, feeding speculatio­n that the president’s attacks on the press might have led the Saudis to believe they could act with impunity against a leading critic. Finally, on Monday evening, Trump expressed concern and said he doesn’t like what he has been hearing. Trump and many of his advisers, including son-in-law Jared Kushner, see a strong regional ally in the crown prince. The Saudi kingdom has become the largest purchaser of American arms. But this relationsh­ip has Faustian dimensions. The U.S. weaponry has helped the Saudis wage a disastrous war against Houthi rebels in Yemen. Since 2014, that war has left 15,000 dead or injured, 190,000 refugees and 8.4 million at risk of starvation. A United Nations panel of experts concluded in August that both sides of the conflict could be guilty of war crimes. The world awaits the results of a Turkish investigat­ion into Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce. The moment demands that the Trump administra­tion start asking hard questions, insist on thorough answers and — if the worst fears are realized — re-evaluate America’s relationsh­ip with the House of Saud.

 ?? KOSE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES OZAN ?? A picture of missing journalist Jamal Khashoggi on a police fence at a protest in front of the Saudi Arabian Consulate in Istanbul on Monday.
KOSE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES OZAN A picture of missing journalist Jamal Khashoggi on a police fence at a protest in front of the Saudi Arabian Consulate in Istanbul on Monday.

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