Monday, April 1, 2019

David Ignatius on Kashoggi and Some Disturbing Details

From this article by Washington Post columnist, David Ignatius:

WASHINGTON -- "It has been nearly six months since Jamal Khashoggi was brutally murdered inside Saudi Arabia's consulate in Istanbul, but the aftershocks continue. The U.S.-Saudi defense and intelligence partnership has been rocked. The future of the relationship is on hold, pending answers from Riyadh."
"...The bottom line is that unless the crown prince takes ownership of this issue and accepts blame for murderous deeds done in his name, his relationship with the United States will remain broken."

David Ignatius says in his article that the issue is personal for him, having been a friend and colleague of Jamal Kashoggi for over 15 years.

"...Saudi officials claim that Mohammed bin Salman, or MBS as he is known, has made changes, firing Saud al-Qahtani, his former covert-operations coordinator. But the Saudi machine of repression remains intact, run by many of the same people who worked for Qahtani."
"MBS took a small step toward placating critics Thursday when the kingdom released three female human-rights activists from prison, while they await trial. Eight other women who campaigned for women to drive and other issues remain in detention."
Unfortunately, I am pretty sure that this is as close to an apology from MBS that we are going to get.  We are not going to get a "Through my fault, through my most grievous fault" from him.  What is more disturbing are these previously undisclosed findings, from Ignatius' article:
 " Some members of the Saudi strike team that was sent to Istanbul received training in the United States, according to U.S. and Saudi sources. The CIA has cautioned other government agencies that some of this special-operations training might have been conducted by Tier 1 Group, an Arkansas-based company, under a State Department license."
" A U.S. plan to train and modernize the Saudi intelligence service is also on hold, pending State Department approval of a license. This project was developed by Culpeper National Security Solutions, a unit of DynCorp, with help from some prominent former CIA officials. No work on the project has been done."
"Michael Morell, former acting director of the CIA, was publicly identified as Culpeper's chairman of the board in 2017, but he no longer holds that position. A source said Morell withdrew within days of Khashoggi's murder because of his concern about the direction Saudi Arabia was heading. Morell declined to comment."
"Tier 1 Group and DynCorp are both owned by affiliates of Cerberus Capital Management, based in New York. The company wouldn't confirm or deny whether any of the 17 perpetrators of the Khashoggi killing who were sanctioned by the Treasury Department had been trained under the Tier 1 contract."

"NSO Group, an Israeli-founded company that provides sophisticated tools for hacking cellphones, has reviewed and modified its relationship with Saudi Arabia, according to a Saudi source, because of concerns that its technology might have been misused. The company wouldn't confirm or deny this account."
So it appears (unless I am misreading?) that those responsible for Kashoggi's death received their training from American corporations which were contracted by the US government. If that isn't disturbing, it should be.






4 comments:

  1. Ignatius has done a terrific job of pointing out the role of both U.S. and Israeli companies in supplying and supporting Saudi Intelligence (and perhaps we could add the torture units described in the NYTimes).

    It is not just Saudi policy that requires scrutiny, but private corporations filled with former government officials. And it is not just the Khashoggi hacking murder that needs scrutiny.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It could be that these private companies did work for the Saudis as part of fulfilling their contracts with our federal government. Or it could be that they are contracting directly with the Saudis. The latter sounds even worse to me, because it would mean that US federal contractors are profiting by doing work that is contrary to US policy.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Friends, remember that during the 1980s (those halcyon years when nuns with Moscow-made rosaries needed to be "taken out"), most of the military thugs (on "our side," but committing human rights violations anyway, if you can believe it) were trained at Fort Benning Georgia. Remember Roy Bourgeois, John Dear, Larry Rosebaugh, and scores of modest Sisters and layfolk who did jail time for pointing out that we were training a new generation of obedient unterfuhrers for Latin America.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Through virtually my entire life and presumably before, with an interim of a decade or so following the collapse of the Soviet Union, it seems the main driver of our foreign policy has been, "If we don't get involved, the Russians will". And the Russians doing the same. It's reportedly happening now in Venezuela, with the Russians lining up behind Maduro as we've lined up behind his rival Guiado. Superpower rivalry, even when there is only one superpower, unleashes a lot of collateral effects and unintended consequences in the world, few of them apparently any good.

    ReplyDelete