Intelligence report: Saudi prince 'approved' operation that killed Jamal Khashoggi

Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, meets with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at Al Salam Palace in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, Monday, June 24, 2019. (Jacquelyn Martin/ Pool via AP)
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, in 2019. (Jacquelyn Martin/Pool/AP) (AP)

The Biden administration on Friday afternoon released an intelligence report that concludes Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman approved an operation to capture or kill Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi inside his country’s consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2, 2018.

The disclosure of the brief four-page declassified report, based on a CIA assessment, comes after more than two years of controversy about Khashoggi’s death that has upended relations with one of America’s oldest allies in the Mideast. The release by President Biden’s director of national intelligence, Avril Haines, also comes after a congressional requirement in 2019 that the agency’s conclusions about the murder be made publicly available — a step the Trump administration refused to follow but which Biden pledged to comply with during the presidential campaign.

The report provides little new information about what actually happened to Khashoggi and leaves out damning but classified details about the Saudi operation that was briefed to Congress in 2018. But it reaches the conclusion that the crown prince, Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler and the son of 85-year-old King Salman, was directly involved based on the agency’s assessment that he had “absolute control of the Kingdom’s security and intelligence organizations, making it highly unlikely that Saudi officials would have carried out an operation of this nature without” his authorization.

The report also notes that a 15-member Saudi hit team that carried out Khashoggi’s murder included seven members of the Crown Prince’s “elite personal protective detail, known as the Rapid Intervention Force.” It also included officials with the Saudi Center for Studies and Media Affairs that was led by Saud Al-Qahtani, a close advisor to the Crown Prince who has been described as his right hand man. The report says the CIA has “high confidence” that Qahtani — along with other members of the hit team— “participated in, ordered or were otherwise complicit in or responsible for the death of Khashoggi on behalf of Mohammad bin Salman.”

Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi speaks during a press conference in Manama, Bahrain in 2014. (Hasan Jamali/AP)
Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi speaks during a press conference in Manama, Bahrain in 2014. (Hasan Jamali/AP) (AP)

Khashoggi’s killing was widely condemned by governments and human rights advocates around the world as a shocking act against an independent journalist who had dared to criticize bin Salman.

It was even more stunning given Khashoggi’s prominence. He was his country’s best known journalist and a frequent commentator about Mideast affairs on television shows and at think tank conferences around the world. He also had previously served as a Saudi government spokesman in Washington and London.

But with the rise of bin Salman as the most powerful figure in the Kingdom, Khashoggi’s sharp critiques of the authoritarian crackdowns inside his country drove the journalist into exile in the United States where he wrote opinion columns for The Washington Post.

Khashoggi, 60, had entered the consulate that day in hopes of obtaining documents proving he was divorced from his wife in Saudi Arabia so that he could marry his Turkish fiance Hatice Cengiz. But when Khashoggi failed to come out, Turkish authorities leaked that they had audio recordings from inside the consulate that captured the efforts by a Saudi hit team to kill him and dismember his body.

Among those recordings— later quoted in a report by a United Nations special rapporteur— was a conversation that a leader of the Saudi hit team, Maher Mutreb, an intelligence officer, had with a forensic doctor, Dr. Mohammed Tubaigy, just moments before Khashoggi entered the consulate

Mutreb asked the doctor whether it would be “possible to put the trunk in a bag” to which Tubaigy replied: “Joints will be separated. It is not a problem.”

A still image taken from CCTV video obtained by the Turkish newspaper Hurriyet claiming to show Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey on Oct. 2, 2018. (CCTV via Hurriyet via AP)
A still image taken from CCTV video obtained by the Turkish newspaper Hurriyet claiming to show Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey on Oct. 2, 2018. (CCTV via Hurriyet via AP) (AP)

Moments later, when Khashoggi enters the consulate, Tubaigy— according to the Turkish recording— says “the sacrificial animal” has arrived. Once inside, the UN report says, Khashoggi was anesthetized, and suffocated with a plastic bag after which his body was dismembered, purportedly with a bone saw. His body has never been found.

The release of the report comes the day after a phone call between President Biden and Saudi King Salman in which, according to a White House read-out, the president “affirmed the importance the United States places on universal human rights and the rule of law.”

But there was no indication from the White House read-out that the president raised the Khashoggi murder and the Crown Prince’s complicity. At the same time, Biden stopped far short of fundamentally disrupting ties with the Kingdom, long a key U.S. ally in the region. “The President told Salman he would work to make the bilateral relationship as strong and transparent as possible.”

The Saudi government initially denied any involvement in the attack, but bin Salman acknowledged in 2019 that he maintains some responsibility for the killing. “I get all the responsibility because it happened under my watch,” he said to a journalist during a PBS documentary.

Meanwhile, even after receiving a copy of the classified CIA report a few weeks after the murder, President Trump protected the Crown Prince, insisting there was no smoking gun that proved his complicity in the murder. Trump also vetoed a series of bills aiming to block arms sales to Saudi Arabia in July of 2019, frustrating lawmakers who argued the Saudis should also be held responsible for the bombings of civilians in Yemen as well as Khahsoggi’s death.

The Committee to Protect Journalists and other press freedom activists hold a candlelight vigil in front of the Saudi Embassy to mark the anniversary of the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Washington on October 2, 2019. (Sarah Silbiger/Reuters)
The Committee to Protect Journalists and other press freedom activists hold a candlelight vigil in front of the Saudi Embassy to mark the anniversary of the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Washington on October 2, 2019. (Sarah Silbiger/Reuters) (REUTERS)

Bob Woodward’s book, Rage, details a conversation between Woodward and Trump in January 2020, where the former president said, in reference to the Crown Prince, “I saved his ass” after pressure mounted in Congress for answers and accountability.

“I was able to get Congress to leave him alone,” Trump was quoted as telling Woodward. “I was able to stop them.”

Instead, the Trump administration issued sanctions against the 17 Saudi individuals identified as being involved in his murder, al Qahtani among them.

The Biden administration is expected to announce new details about what steps it plans to take in response to Khashoggi’s murder this afternoon. During his presidential campaign, Biden vowed to make the Saudis “pay the price, and make them in fact the pariah that they are.” He also said that there is “very little social redeeming value in the present government in Saudi Arabia.”

The release of the long delayed report is unlikely to satisfy human rights advocates who have called for full disclosure of what the U.S. government knows about Khashoggi’s murder and strong steps to deter the Saudis from other repressive measures. The Friday disclosure “is only a small part of the evidence we’re seeking from the U.S. government about the murder of Khashoggie, including regarding U.S. officials close to MBS who ptoentially faciliated a cover up,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, executive director of Democracy For the Arab World Now (DAWN.) “Biden should move to voluntarily disclose all of this information now.”

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