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Date: 2024-04-23 Page is: DBtxt001.php txt00015751

Middle East
The Khashoggi Affair

Jig is up for Riyadh: Khashoggi case reshapes the Middle East

Burgess COMMENTARY

Peter Burgess



Jig is up for Riyadh: Khashoggi case reshapes the Middle East

SINGAPORE – The fate of missing Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, assuming that his disappearance was the work of Saudi security and military officials, threatens to upend the fundaments of fault lines in the Middle East.

At stake is not only the fate of a widely respected journalist and the future of Turkish-Saudi relations.

Khashoggi’s fate, whether he was kidnapped by Saudi agents during a visit to the kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul to obtain proof of his divorce or murdered on its premises, threatens to severely disrupt the U.S.-Saudi alliance that underwrites much of the Middle East’s fault lines.

A U.S. investigation into Khashoggi’s fate mandated by members of the U.S. Congress and an expected meeting between President Donald Trump, and the journalist’s Turkish fiancee, Hatice Cengiz, could result in a U.S. and European embargo on arms sales to Saudi Arabia. Such a move would impact the kingdom’s brutal proxy war with Iran in Yemen.

It also would project Saudi Arabia as a rogue state and call into question U.S. and Saudi allegations that Iran is the Middle East’s main state supporter of terrorism.

The allegations formed a key reason for the United States’ withdrawal with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Israeli backing from the 2015 international agreeAment that curbed Iran’s nuclear program and the re-imposition of crippling economic sanctions.

They also would undermine Saudi and UAE justification of their 15-month old economic and diplomatic boycott of Qatar, which the two Gulf states, alongside Egypt and Bahrain, accuse of supporting terrorism.

Condemnation and sanctioning of Saudi Arabia by the international community would complicate Chinese and Russian efforts to walk a fine line in their attempts to ensure that they are not sucked into the Saudi-Iranian rivalry.

Russia and China would be at a crossroads if Saudi Arabia were proven to be responsible for Khashoggi’s disappearance and the issue of sanctions would be brought to the United Nations Security Council.

Both Russia and China have so far been able to maintain close ties to Saudi Arabia despite their efforts to defeat U.S. sanctions against Iran and Russia’s alliance with the Islamic republic in their support for Syrian President Bashar Assad.

A significantly weakened Saudi Arabia would furthermore undermine Arab cover provided by the kingdom for Trump’s efforts to impose a settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that would favor Israel at the expense of the Palestinians.

Finally, a conclusive determination that Saudi Arabia was responsible for Khashoggi’s fate would likely spark renewed debate about the wisdom of the international community’s support for Arab autocracy that has proven to be unashamedly brutal in its violation of human rights and disregard for international law and conventions.

Meanwhile, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has suffered significant reputational damage. Irrespective of Khashoggi’s fate, this raises the question of his viability if Saudi Arabia were condemned internationally and the stability in the kingdom, a key tenant of U.S., Chinese and Russian Middle East policy.

The reputational damage suffered by Prince Mohammed embarrasses UAE Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed, who together with his aides and representatives in world capitals, worked hard to project his Saudi counterpart as the kingdom’s future.

Saudi Arabia has so far done itself few favours by flatly rejecting any responsibility for Khashoggi’s disappearance with no evidence that the journalist left the consulate at his own volition.

Asserting that claims that it was involved were fabrications by Turkey, Qatar and the Muslim Brotherhood, seeking to defame Khashoggi’s fiance and supporters and refusing to fully cooperate with Turkish investigators, has not helped either.

Saudi reluctance to cooperate as well as the U.S. investigation and Cengiz’s expected meeting with Trump complicate apparent Turkish efforts to find a resolution of the escalating crisis that would allow Saudi Arabia to save face and salvage Turkey’s economic relationship with the kingdom.

Turkey, despite deep policy differences with Saudi Arabia over Qatar, Iran, and the Muslim Brotherhood, has so far refrained from statements that go beyond demanding that Saudi Arabia prove its assertion that Khashoggi left the Istanbul consulate at his own volition and fully cooperate with the Turkish investigation.

Reports by anonymous Turkish officials detailing gruesome details of Khashoggi’s alleged murder by Saudi agents appear designed to pressure Saudi Arabia to comply with the Turkish demands and efforts to manage the crisis.

The fate of the widely acclaimed journalist, irrespective of whether he emerges alive or is proven to have been brutally murdered, is reshaping the political map of the Middle East.

The possibility, if not likelihood, is that he paid a horrendous price for sparking the earthquake that is already rumbling across the region.
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Award-winning journalist James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.
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BY JAMES M. DORSEY ... THE GLOBALIST
OCT 15, 2018
The text being discussed is available at
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion/2018/10/15/commentary/world-commentary/jig-riyadh-khashoggi-case-reshapes-middle-east/#.W8nUQflKiM_
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