Jamal Khashoggi: US To Release Report On Saudi Journalist Murder
The US is
set to release a report widely expected to implicate Saudi Arabia's crown
prince in the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018.
President
Joe Biden has read the intelligence report and is due to speak to the Saudi
king soon.
Mr Biden
wants to "recalibrate" ties with Saudi Arabia, which became closer
under President Donald Trump.
Khashoggi
was brutally killed in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey. The crown
prince denied involvement.
Saudi
authorities say his death was the result of a "rogue operation" by a
team of agents sent to return him to the kingdom.
Five
individuals were given death sentences for the murder by a Saudi court but
these were commuted to 20 years in prison last September.
The report,
which is expected to be released later on Thursday, will say that Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman approved "and likely ordered" Khashoggi's
killing, four US officials told Reuters news agency.
They said
the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) - the US overseas spy agency - was the
main contributor to the report.
The Saudi
public prosecution and Prince Mohammed insist he did not have any knowledge of
the murder but in 2019 he said he took "full responsibility as a leader in
Saudi Arabia, especially since it was committed by individuals working for the
Saudi government".
NBC News
reports that the intelligence assessment is not new and is based on work by the
CIA which was widely reported back in 2018 - and later denied by
then-President Donald Trump.
According to
that reported assessment, there was no "smoking gun" but US officials
thought such an operation would have required the prince's approval.
The
Washington Post, which Khashoggi worked for, said at the time that the CIA
assessment had been based partly on a phone call made by the crown prince's
brother, Prince Khalid bin Salman, who was the then Saudi ambassador to the US.
Prince
Khalid, who is now deputy defence minister, allegedly called Khashoggi at the
direction of his brother and gave him assurances that he would be safe to go to
the consulate in Istanbul. Prince Khalid has denied any communication with the
journalist.
In 2019, UN
special rapporteur Agnes Callamard accused the Saudi state of the
"deliberate, premeditated execution" of Khashoggi and dismissed the
Saudi trial as an "antithesis of justice".
The
publication of the report is part of Joe Biden's policy to realign ties with
Saudi Arabia and take a much tougher stance than his predecessor Mr Trump on
certain Saudi positions.
The Trump
administration had previously rejected a legal requirement to release a
declassified version of the report, focusing instead on improved co-operation
with the Saudis.
White House
spokeswoman Jen Psaki said on Wednesday that Mr Biden would communicate with
King Salman, and not directly with the crown prince, who is his son and is
considered the de facto ruler in Saudi Arabia.
She said the
president was due to speak to the 85-year-old king for the first time since
taking office "soon", without giving a specific time for the call.
"We've
made clear from the beginning that we are going to recalibrate our relationship
with Saudi Arabia," she told reporters.
The new
administration has already made some major policy changes in that regard,
with President Biden ending US support for offensive operations by the
Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen, and freezing arms sales to the kingdom.
There has
been what looks like a concerted online effort ahead of the US report to bury
it under Twitter posts supporting the Saudi government.
While some
posts, largely from exiled Saudis, look forward to Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman (MBS) being named in the US report, others seem to be trying to deflect
blame away from him.
Several
hashtags relating to Jamal Khashoggi trended on Twitter using various spellings
of his name, such as "khasxoggi", "Jamal" and
"shooggi". It's been suggested that this is an attempt to dilute the
trend and limit criticism of MBS.
These tags
accompany tweets deflecting attention away from the report by questioning
America's own human rights record. Some mention the deaths of people of colour
at the hands of police, and others in Abu Ghraib prison following the Iraq war.
But it is
hard to tell if there is any official campaign to bury the news on social
media. This is largely because Saudi-based Twitter users are intensely
patriotic, seeing any criticism of MBS as a slight on their nation, and will
engage with any issue they see as attacking the kingdom.
The
59-year-old journalist was last seen entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul
on 2 October 2018 to obtain papers that would allow him to marry his Turkish
fiancée.
According to
the Saudi public prosecution, Khashoggi was forcibly restrained after a
struggle and injected with a large amount of a drug, resulting in an overdose
that led to his death. His body was then dismembered and handed over to a local
"collaborator" outside the consulate, the prosecution said. The
remains were never found.
Grim details
were revealed in transcripts of purported audio recordings of the killing obtained
by Turkish intelligence.
Khashoggi
was once an adviser to the Saudi government and close to the royal family, but
fell out of favour and went into self-imposed exile in the US in 2017.
From there,
he wrote a monthly column in the Washington Post in which he criticised the
policies of Prince Mohammed.
In his first
column for the newspaper, Khashoggi said he feared being arrested in an
apparent crackdown on dissent overseen by the prince.
In his last
column, he criticised Saudi involvement in the Yemen conflict.
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