Intercepts solidify CIA assessment that Saudi Prince ordered Khashoggi killing
The CIA has evidence
that Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi crown prince, communicated repeatedly with
a key aide around the time that a team believed to have been under the aide’s
command assassinated Jamal Khashoggi, according to former officials familiar
with the intelligence.
The adviser, Saud
al-Qahtani, topped the list of Saudis who were targeted by US sanctions last
month over their suspected involvement in Khashoggi’s killing. US intelligence
agencies have evidence that Crown Prince Mohammed and al-Qahtani had 11
exchanges that roughly coincided with the hit team’s advance into the Saudi
Consulate in Istanbul, where Khashoggi was murdered.
The exchanges are a
key piece of information that helped solidify the CIA’s assessment that the
crown prince ordered the killing of Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist and
Virginia resident who had been critical of the Saudi government. “This is the smoking
gun, or at least the smoking phone call,” said Bruce Riedel, a former CIA
official now at the Brookings Institution. “There is only one thing they could
possibly be talking about. This shows that the crown prince was witting of
premeditated murder.”
The existence of the
intercepts was first reported by The Wall Street Journal, which reviewed a
highly classified document on the CIA assessment of Khashoggi’s killing. The
leak of the secret report, according to officials, infuriated Gina Haspel, the
CIA director. It has also intensified calls by members of Congress to have
Haspel go to Capitol Hill to brief them. Al-Qahtani has been
one of Crown Prince Mohammed’s closest advisers. When the head of the hit team,
Maher Abdulaziz Mutreb, was recorded by Turkish intelligence saying “tell your
boss” that the team had carried out the mission, he was believed by U.S.
intelligence agencies to have been communicating with al-Qahtani.
People briefed on the
intelligence said they believed that the 11 exchanges between Crown Prince
Mohammed and al-Qahtani could have been the time when the aide shared the news. Current and former
officials insisted that while the communications are suggestive and reinforce
the intelligence agency’s conclusions about the culpability of the crown
prince, they are not the kind of definitive, direct evidence President Donald
Trump has suggested would be needed to convince him that Crown Prince Mohammed
ordered the killing... read more:
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