Tag: mohammed bin salman

  • Khashoggi murder: CIA chief Haspel ‘to brief Congress’ Khashoggi killing timeline

    Gina Haspel Image copyright Reuters Symbol caption Gina Haspel is reportedly offended over the leak of CIA findings

    the top of the CIA will now brief Congress on Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s murder, US media say.

    Gina Haspel is reportedly check with Senate leaders leaders on Tuesday.

    She was absent from final week’s briefing by means of the secretaries of state and defence, angering some in Congress.

    Khashoggi was once killed in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October. US media have said that the CIA has concluded Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman “almost definitely ordered” the killing.

    The Saudis have charged 11 people however deny that the crown prince used to be concerned.

    Symbol copyright Getty Photographs Symbol caption Jamal Khashoggi had gone to Istanbul to acquire a marriage report

    for many years he used to be with reference to the Saudi royal circle of relatives and in addition served as an adviser to the government.

    But he fell out of favour and went into self-imposed exile within the US last year. From there, he wrote a per month column in the Washington Publish through which he criticised the insurance policies of Mohammed bin Salman.

    Jamal Khashoggi in his personal phrases

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    Media captionThe BBC’s Frank Gardner seems to be at what could happen to the person referred to as MBS

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  • Recep Tayyip Erdogan says Saudis planned Jamal Khashoggi slaying in advance

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday that Saudi officials started planning to murder writer Jamal Khashoggi days before his death in Saudi Arabia’s Istanbul consulate.

    ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Saudi officials murdered journalist Jamal Khashoggi in their Istanbul consulate after plotting his death for days, Turkey’s president said Tuesday, contradicting Saudi Arabia’s explanation that the writer was accidentally killed. He demanded that the kingdom reveal the identities of all involved, regardless of rank.

    President Recep Tayyip Erdogan also said he wants Saudi Arabia to allow 18 suspects that it detained for the Saudi’s killing to be tried in Turkish courts, setting up further complications with the Saudi government, which has said it is conducting its own investigation and will punish those involved. Saudi Arabia has described the suspects as rogue operators, even though officials linked to Saudi Arabia’s assertive Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman have been implicated in the killing.

    “To blame such an incident on a handful of security and intelligence members would not satisfy us or the international community,” Erdogan said in a speech to ruling party lawmakers in parliament.

    “Saudi Arabia has taken an important step by admitting the murder. As of now we expect of them to openly bring to light those responsible — from the highest ranked to the lowest — and to bring them to justice,” said the Turkish president, who used the word “murder” 15 times in his speech.

    Erdogan’s speech was previously pitched as revealing the “naked truth” about Khashoggi’s slaying. Instead, he merely confirmed information previously reported based on leaks citing anonymous officials in the days since the columnist for The Washington Post walked into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

    Erdogan didn’t mention Prince Mohammed by name in his speech. However, he kept pressure on the kingdom with his demands for Turkish prosecution of the suspects as well as punishment for the plot’s masterminds.

    “All evidence gathered shows that Jamal Khashoggi was the victim of a savage murder. To cover up such a savagery would hurt the human conscience,” he said.

    Erdogan mentioned information that was earlier leaked by Turkish sources, including reports of 15 Saudi officials arriving in private jets shortly before Khashoggi’s death as well as a man, apparently dressed in the writer’s clothes, acting as a possible decoy by walking out of the consulate on the day of the disappearance.

    “Why did these 15 people all with links to the event gather in Istanbul on the day of the murder? We are seeking answers. Who did these people get their orders from to go there? We are seeking answers,” Erdogan said. “When the murder is so clear, why were so many inconsistent statements made? Why is the body of a person who has officially been accepted as killed still not around?”

    International skepticism intensified after Saudi Arabia said on Saturday that Khashoggi died in a brawl. The case has shocked the world and raised suspicions that a Saudi hit squad planned the writer’s killing after he walked into the consulate on Oct. 2, and then attempted to cover it up.

    At a Cabinet meeting Tuesday, King Salman again stressed that Saudi Arabia would hold those responsible for Khashoggi’s slaying “accountable,” according to the state-run Saudi Press Agency.

    Before Erdogan’s announcement, top Turkish officials said Turkey would clarify exactly what happened to Khashoggi as pressure increased on Saudi Arabia, which is hosting a glitzy investment conference this week that many dignitaries have decided to skip because of the scandal.

    “As we all know these are difficult days for us in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih told attendees seated in an ornate hall during the opening of the conference in Riyadh.

    “Nobody in the kingdom can justify it or explain it. From the leadership on down, we’re very upset of what has happened,” Al-Falih said

    Saudi Arabia said it arrested suspects and that several top intelligence officials were fired over Khashoggi’s killing, but critics alleged that the punishment was designed to absolve Prince Mohammed, the heir-apparent of the world’s top oil exporter, of any responsibility. Any major decision must be signed off by the highest powers within its ruling Al Saud family.

    On Monday, leaked surveillance video showed a man strolling out of the diplomatic post hours after Khashoggi disappeared into the consulate, apparently wearing the columnist’s clothes as part of a macabre deception to sow confusion over his fate.

    The new video broadcast by CNN, as well as a pro-government Turkish newspaper’s report that a member of Prince Mohammed’s entourage made four calls to the royal’s office from the consulate around the same time, put more pressure on the kingdom. Meanwhile, Turkish crime-scene investigators swarmed a garage Monday night in Istanbul where a Saudi consular vehicle had been parked.

    Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister, meanwhile, said Tuesday the investigation into the killing of Khashoggi would produce the truth about what happened and that his country was committed to ensuring “that the investigation is thorough and complete and that the truth is revealed and that those responsible will be held to account.”

    Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir, in Indonesia, also pledged that mechanisms will be put in place so that “something like this can never happen again.”

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    Associated Press writers Aya Batrawy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and Jon Gambrell in Dubai, United Arab Em

  • Jamal Khashoggi killing sparked by Muslim Brotherhood ties

    The prevailing narrative about the bizarre case of U.S.-based Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi is that Saudi Arabia’s hard-charging young crown prince ordered him kidnapped and perhaps killed in order

    The prevailing narrative about the bizarre case of U.S.-based Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi is that Saudi Arabia’s hard-charging young crown prince ordered him kidnapped and perhaps killed in order to silence a particularly effective critic who wrote widely read, disparaging columns about the royal family and the crown prince’s own ambitious reform agenda.

    But Middle East insiders say some deeper subplots played into Mr. Khashoggi’s disappearance — stemming from his long career of political activism, ties to Saudi intelligence and Mr. Khashoggi’s past relationship with the Islamist group the Muslim Brotherhood.

    Mr. Khashoggi, who was 59 when he disappeared at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2, is said to have withdrawn years ago from any formal affiliation with the Brotherhood, but his past ties to the transnational Islamist group are believed to have been a source of distrust for Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

    The 33-year-old prince branded the Brotherhood a terrorist organization, and one of his signature moves as heir to the Saudi throne was to cut off all ties with the rival Gulf nation of Qatar. The prince blames Doha for financing the Muslim Brotherhood to foment unrest against the powers that be across the Arab world, in particular Saudi Arabia.

    Since leaving Saudi Arabia for self-imposed exile in the U.S. last year, Mr. Khashoggi has worked to create an advocacy group called Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN) to promote Arab Spring-style freedom movements across the Middle East.

    Some say Mohammed, who has a reputation for quickly identifying and crushing any threats to his authority, was well aware of Mr. Khashoggi’s political activities and likely more concerned about them than his journalistic efforts as a columnist for The Washington Post.

    Longtime regional analyst and former Wall Street Journal publisher Karen Elliott House said in the newspaper this week: “Those who watch the crown prince closely say he is determined to pre-empt any hint of possible disruption before it can materialize.

    “So Mr. Khashoggi’s decision to register in the U.S. a new political organization, perhaps funded by Saudi regional rivals, might have triggered this action,” wrote Ms. House, who is also the author of an influential 2012 book on Saudi Arabia.

    The New York Times, citing interviews with longtime friends of Mr. Khashoggi, reported that he was in the midst of raising money for DAWN when he disappeared in Turkey, whose own government is a rival to Saudi Arabia in the Muslim world and has close ties to Qatar and to the Muslim Brotherhood.

    Qatar has not commented on claims by Turkish officials that Mr. Khashoggi was killed by a Saudi “hit squad.” The crown prince, meanwhile, has denied any knowledge of what happened and has pledged to support a transparent investigation into the journalist’s disappearance.

    Meeting bin Laden

    Mr. Khashoggi had a long and varied career in Saudi affairs before he became a U.S.-based opinion writer, including working on and off for the Saudi government.

    The Khashoggi name was well-known in U.S. government circles long before Jamal Khashoggi came onto the scene. His uncle Adnan Khashoggi was a noted global arms dealer implicated in the Reagan administration’s Iran-Contra scandal.

    Jamal Khashoggi reportedly engaged in occasional work for Saudi intelligence during the era of Prince Turki al-Faisal, who headed Riyadh’s spy agencies from 1979 until just before the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

    As a younger man in Saudi Arabia, Mr. Khashoggi considered himself a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, which analysts often describe as a foundational group behind the emergence of al Qaeda.

    In his 30s, Mr. Khashoggi drew international attention for interviewing Osama bin Laden. According to the 2007 book “The Looming Tower: Al Qaeda and the Road to 9/11,” Mr. Khashoggi met with the emerging terrorist leader in Sudan in 1995 and pressured him to disavow violence.

    “I was aware of Jamal for many years, during his tenure as a reporter and editor,” Warren David, the founder of the U.S.-based media organization Arab America, wrote on the organization’s website Wednesday.

    Mr. David described Mr. Khashoggi as a “man of principle and integrity” who believed in the promotion of democracy in the Arab world and as someone steeped in the challenges of navigating the tumultuous media scene in Saudi Arabia and across the Middle East.

    “Jamal could speak from experience. He was the editor-in-chief of the Al-Arab News Channel, owned by Saudi prince and philanthropist, Al Waleed bin Talal Abdulaziz al Saud,” Mr. David wrote. “After the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011, Prince Waleed founded the channel which would focus on freedom of speech and democratic media.

    “In February of 2015, Al-Arab News Channel debuted in Bahrain under the leadership of Jamal Khashoggi. On the first day of broadcast, the opposition leader of Bahrain’s uprisings was interviewed,” wrote Mr. David. “Shockingly, within a couple of hours, the channel’s closure was announced. After searching for a new location, and securing a home for the network in Qatar, Jamal was ready to initiate broadcasting with the new network but was informed by Prince Al Waleed in February 2017 that the channel would never open.”

    ‘Putin-style’ whacking?

    While Mr. Khashoggi often and ironically expressed support for the crown prince’s social and economic reforms, he made no secret of his disgust with Mohammed’s crackdown of perceived critics.

    “With young Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s rise to power, he … spoke of making our country more open and tolerant,” Mr. Khashoggi wrote in September 2017. “But all I see now is the recent wave of arrests. … The arrested are accused of being recipients of Qatari money and part of a grand Qatari-backed conspiracy.”

    Although the columns were often critical, analysts are at a loss to explain why the Saudi leadership would risk geopolitical blowback and the strains on U.S.-Saudi ties that would result from an operation to kidnap or kill him. Many say Crown Prince Mohammed simply underestimated the reaction the mission would spark.

    Mr. Khashoggi’s “ties to the Muslim Brotherhood do not seem to have involved any links to extremism,” said Anthony Cordesman, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “His criticisms of the Saudi government seem to have been limited to the kinds of reforms the kingdom will eventually have to make.

    “In fact, a more enlightened and pragmatic Saudi crown prince might have seen them as actually helping in the near term by acting as a counterweight to the hard-line Saudi conservatives that challenge every [reform],” Mr. Cordesman wrote this week.

    But others say Mr. Khashoggi crossed a line in his columns for The Post.

    David Ottaway, a Middle East fellow at the Wilson Center who knew Mr. Khashoggi for more than 20 years, wrote in The Post on Wednesday that “Khashoggi’s unpardonable sin was to call for debate not about the crown prince’s social reforms, which he wholeheartedly supported, but about the crown prince’s stifling intolerance for anyone who cast even a speck of dirt on his highly polished image as the kingdom’s long-awaited savior.”

    But sources close to the Saudi government insist the crown prince would never go so far as to order an assassination.

    “Saudi policy toward a critic like this is always to buy people off, try to bring them back into the fold,” one source told The Washington Times. “An act like this is totally out of character for the royal family. If it happened, it would be because it was a total [mistake] by some people and there will be consequences.”

    Still others say the prince is a new kind of leader for the tradition-bound, hierarchical kingdom, one who drew global attention last year by engineering a nearly three-month-long house arrest of dozens of fellow princes and leading business figure, including several older relatives within the royal family.

    Joshua Landis, who heads the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, said the prince has ushered in a sharp shift in the way Riyadh conducts itself on the world stage.

    “The Saudis may have used money, not force, for decades to get their way with bribes, but that all changed with Mohammed bin Salman,” Mr. Landis said. “Frankly, I don’t put it past him to have put out an order for [Mr. Khashoggi] to be whacked in the same way [Russian President Vladimir] Putin is whacking opponents overseas, because it sends a message and intimidates critics.

    “Every Saudi who might be thinking about speaking up,” he added, “is [now] going to be quiet.”

  • Profile: Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman

    Saudi Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman waves in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (11 April 2017)Image copyright Reuters Symbol caption Mohammed bin Salman already wielded large energy prior to he was once named crown prince

    Few people outdoor Saudi Arabia had heard of Prince Mohammed bin Salman earlier than his father changed into king in 2015. However for the reason that then, the 31-12 months-vintage has turn out to be the most influential determine within the world’s top oil exporter.

    He has now been increased to the position of crown prince, replacing his cousin Mohammed bin Nayef – a transfer that had been extensively anticipated and could shape the path of the rustic for decades.

    Mohammed bin Salman used to be born on 31 August 1985, the eldest son of then-Prince Salman bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud’s third wife, Fahdah bint Falah bin Sultan.

    After gaining a bachelor’s degree in law at King Saud University in the capital Riyadh, he worked for several state our bodies. In 2009, he was appointed different adviser to his father, who was once serving as governor of Riyadh on the time.

    Mohammed bin Salman’s rise to power began in 2013, when he was named head of the Crown Prince’s Courtroom, with the rank of minister. the previous year, Salman were appointed crown prince after the dying of Nayef bin Abdul Aziz – the daddy of Mohammed bin Nayef.

    Symbol copyright AFP Image caption King Salman made startling changes to the road of succession in 2015

    In January 2015, King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz died and Salman acceded to the throne at the age of 79.

    He instantly made decisions that surprised observers, naming his son minister of defence and Mohammed bin Nayef deputy crown prince. The latter become the first of the grandsons of Ibn Saud, the founding father of the kingdom, to move on to the line of succession.

    One of Mohammed bin Salman’s first acts as defence minister was once to launch an army campaign in Yemen in March 2015 along with different Arab states after President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi was once compelled into exile by the Houthi insurrection movement.

    The campaign has made restricted growth over the prior two years, noticed Saudi Arabia and its allies being accused of human rights violations, and caused a humanitarian crisis in the Arab world’s poorest us of a.

    Symbol copyright AFP Image caption Prince Mohammed unveiled Vision 2030, a large-ranging plan for economic change, last 12 months

    In April 2015, King Salman made extra startling changes to the line of succession, appointing Mohammed bin Nayef as crown prince and his son deputy crown prince, 2nd deputy top minister and president of the Council of economic and Building Affairs.

    Since then, Prince Mohammed bin Salman has unveiled his wide-ranging plan to bring social and financial amendment in the oil-based kingdom, Vision 2030.

    He has also overseen the aid of the rustic’s lavish subsidies and proposed the partial privatisation of the state oil company, Saudi Aramco.

    Mohammed bin Salman has additionally represented King Salman out of the country, travelling to Beijing, Moscow and Washington, the place he met President Donald Trump in March.

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  • Saudi Arabia widens crackdown on women’s rights activists

    File photo showing Saudi women's rights activist Aziza al-Yousef (27 September 2016) Image copyright AFP Symbol caption Aziza al-Yousef is reportedly one in all the women’s rights activists being held

    Saudi Arabia has reportedly arrested three extra ladies’s rights activists in a crackdown introduced simply weeks prior to a ban on girls driving can be lifted.

    Human rights groups said at least 11 other people, most of them women who had lengthy campaigned for the fitting to force, had now been detained considering that last week.

    Officials have said they are suspected of “suspicious contact with international events” and undermining “stability”.

    Other activists have stated the crackdown is “unprecedented” and “surprising”.

    The Us has expressed worry in regards to the detentions and mentioned it is “preserving an in depth eye” on the development of reforms in the Gulf state, which is a key neighborhood ally.

    Image copyright EPA

    Saudi women’s rights activists, together with folks that have been imprisoned for defying the ban, celebrated the decision. However additionally they vowed to continue campaigning for the tip of alternative laws they consider discriminatory.

    Women should adhere to a strict dress code, be separated from unrelated males, and be observed by way of or receive written permission from a male mother or father – usually a father, husband or brother – in the event that they wish to shuttle, work or access healthcare.

    During an interview with CBS News in March prior to a trip to the u.s., the crown prince mentioned: “Saudi women nonetheless have not won their complete rights. There are rights stipulated in Islam that they still should not have. now we have come an excessively great distance and have a short method to cross.”

    But on Friday, it emerged that the Saudi authorities had not too long ago detained seven outstanding activists – five women and males. a statement issued the next day via the Presidency of the State Safety – which experiences on to the king’s place of work – mentioned they faced fees for “suspicious contact with international events” and undermining the “safety and steadiness” of the state.

    Pro-executive newspapers and social media bills branded them “traitors”.

    Human Rights Watch stated the detainees included women’s rights advocates Loujain al-Hathloul, Aziza al-Yousef, and Eman al-Nafjan, in conjunction with Mohammed al-Rabea, an activist, and Ibrahim al-Modaimeegh, a human rights attorney.

    Symbol copyright Reuters Symbol caption The U.s. said it remained supportive of Prince Mohammed’s “total reform time table”

    “The crown prince, who has styled himself as a reformer with Western allies and buyers, must be thanking the activists for their contributions to the Saudi women’s rights motion,” stated Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW’s Middle East director.

    “As An Alternative, the Saudi authorities appear to be punishing those women’s rights champions for selling a objective Mohammed bin Salman alleges to enhance – ending discrimination towards ladies.”

    The 32-12 months-old crown prince has additionally overseen a crackdown on influential clerics and intellectuals on account that being named inheritor to the throne last June.

    He has also spearheaded a sweeping anti-corruption drive which led to dozens of princes, govt ministers and businessmen being detained in November and generated an anticipated $107bn ($80bn) in settlements.