‘Remember Abu Ghraib,’ MBS Tells Biden When Pressed on Khashoggi: Report
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman reportedly told President Joe Biden during their meeting in Jeddah Friday that while the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi is “regrettable,” U.S. hands are not clean and other journalists are killed with impunity.
Bin Salman specifically mentioned the torture scandal at the U.S. military prison at Abu Ghraib, Iraq, and the killing of Palestinian-American Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Akleh by Israeli forces in May, according to Al Arabiya, which is owned by the Saudi government.
The de facto Saudi ruler also said that the CIA—which along with other American intelligence agencies concluded that Khashoggi’s gruesome 2018 murder was likely ordered by bin Salman—makes mistakes, as it did when it falsely claimed Iraq had active weapons of mass destruction program prior to the 2003 U.S.-led invasion and occupation.
“Bin Salman’s smarmy reply underlines the way in which the U.S. government’s lawlessness in misadventures like invading Iraq and its weird commitment to Israeli apartheid practices against the Palestinians undermines its moral standing to argue for ‘a rules-based global order,'” Informed Comment publisher Juan Cole observed. “Almost no one in the U.S. dares say this, but for the rest of the world it is a commonplace insight.”
Biden has come under fire from progressives for his willingness to sideline Saudi Arabia’s abysmal human rights record and war crimes in Yemen in service of U.S. strategic and energy interests.
Appearing Sunday on ABC‘s “This Week,” Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)—who is co-sponsoring a new resolution to end U.S. involvement in the Saudi-led war in Yemen—said he did not think Biden should have visited Saudi Arabia.
“You have a leader of that country who was involved in the murder of a Washington Post journalist,” Sanders said. “I don’t think that that type of government should be rewarded with a visit by the president of the United States.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Brett Wilkins.