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Showing posts with label Wahabism At Work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wahabism At Work. Show all posts

Friday, November 2, 2018

The Tragedy of Saudi Arabia’s War on Yemen


The Tragedy of Saudi Arabia’s War on Yemen

Chest heaving and eyes fluttering, the 3-year-old boy lay silently on a hospital bed in the highland town of Hajjah, a bag of bones fighting for breath.
His father, Ali al-Hajaji, stood anxiously over him. Mr. Hajaji had already lost one son three weeks earlier to the epidemic of hunger sweeping across Yemen. Now he feared that a second was slipping away.
It wasn’t for a lack of food in the area: The stores outside the hospital gate were filled with goods and the markets were bustling. But Mr. Hajaji couldn’t afford any of it because prices were rising too fast.
“I can barely buy a piece of stale bread,” he said. “That’s why my children are dying before my eyes.”
The devastating war in Yemen has gotten more attention recently as outrage over the killing of a Saudi dissident in Istanbul has turned a spotlight on Saudi actions elsewhere. The harshest criticism of the Saudi-led war has focused on the airstrikes that have killed thousands of civilians at weddings, funerals and on school buses, aided by American-supplied bombs and intelligence.
But aid experts and United Nations officials say a more insidious form of warfare is also being waged in Yemen, an economic war that is exacting a far greater toll on civilians and now risks tipping the country into a famine of catastrophic proportions.
Under the leadership of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi-led coalition and its Yemeni allies have imposed a raft of punitive economic measures aimed at undercutting the Ansarullah revolutionaries. But these actions — including periodic blockades, stringent import restrictions and withholding the salaries of about a million civil servants — have landed on the backs of civilians, laying the economy to waste and driving millions deeper into poverty.
Those measures have inflicted a slow-burn toll: infrastructure destroyed, jobs lost, a weakening currency and soaring prices. But in recent weeks the economic collapse has gathered pace at alarming speed, causing top United Nations officials to revise their predictions of famine.
“There is now a clear and present danger of an imminent and great, big famine engulfing Yemen,” Mark Lowcock, the undersecretary for humanitarian affairs, told the Security Council on Tuesday. Eight million Yemenis already depend on emergency food aid to survive, he said, a figure that could soon rise to 14 million, or half Yemen’s population.
“People think famine is just a lack of food,” said Alex de Waal, author of “Mass Starvation” which analyzes recent man-made famines. “But in Yemen it’s about a war on the economy.”
The signs are everywhere, cutting across boundaries of class, tribe and region. Unpaid university professors issue desperate appeals for help on social media. Doctors and teachers are forced to sell their gold, land or cars to feed their families. On the streets of the capital, Sana, an elderly woman begs for alms with a loudspeaker.
“Help me,” the woman, Zahra Bajali, calls out. “I have a sick husband. I have a house for rent. Help.”
And in the hushed hunger wards, ailing infants hover between life and death. Of nearly two million malnourished children in Yemen, 400,000 are considered critically ill — a figure projected to rise by one quarter in the coming months.
“We are being crushed,” said Dr. Mekkia Mahdi at the health clinic in Aslam, an impoverished northwestern town that has been swamped with refugees fleeing the fighting in Hudaydah, an embattled port city 90 miles to the south.
Flitting between the beds at her spartan clinic, she cajoled mothers, dispensed orders to medics and spoon-fed milk to sickly infants. For some it was too late: the night before, an 11-month old boy had died. He weighed five and a half pounds.
Looking around her, Dr. Mahdi could not fathom the Western obsession with the Saudi killing of Jamal Khashoggi in Istanbul.
“We’re surprised the Khashoggi case is getting so much attention while millions of Yemeni children are suffering,” she said. “Nobody gives a damn about them.”
She tugged on the flaccid skin of a drowsy 7-year-old girl with stick-like arms. “Look,” she said. “No meat. Only bones.”
The embassy of Saudi Arabia in Washington did not respond to questions about the country’s policies in Yemen. But Saudi officials have defended their actions, citing rockets fired across their border by the Ansarullah…
The Saudis point out that they, along with the United Arab Emirates, are among the most “generous donors” to Yemen’s humanitarian relief effort. Last spring, the two allies pledged $1 billion in aid to Yemen. In January, Saudi Arabia deposited $2 billion in Yemen’s central bank to prop up its currency.
But those efforts have been overshadowed by the coalition’s attacks on Yemen’s economy, including the denial of salaries to civil servants, a partial blockade that has driven up food prices, and the printing of vast amounts of bank notes, which caused the currency to plunge.
And the offensive to capture Hudaydah, which started in June, has endangered the main lifeline for imports to northern Yemen, displaced 570,000 people and edged many more closer to starvation.
A famine here, Mr. Lowcock warned, would be “much bigger than anything any professional in this field has seen during their working lives.”
When Ali Hajaji’s son fell ill with diarrhea and vomiting, the desperate father turned to extreme measures. Following the advice of village elders, he pushed the red-hot tip of a burning stick into Shaher’s chest, a folk remedy to drain the “black blood” from his son.
“People said burn him in the body and it will be OK,” Mr. Hajaji said. “When you have no money, and your son is sick, you’ll believe anything.”
The burns were a mark of the rudimentary nature of life in Juberia, a cluster of mud-walled houses perched on a rocky ridge. To reach it, you cross a landscape of sandy pastures, camels and beehives, strewn with giant, rust-colored boulders, where women in black cloaks and yellow straw boaters toil in the fields.
In the past, the men of the village worked as migrant laborers in Saudi Arabia, whose border is 80 miles away. They were often treated with disdain by their wealthy Saudi employers but they earned a wage. Mr. Hajaji worked on a suburban construction site in Mecca, the holy city visited by millions of Muslim pilgrims every year.
When the war broke out in 2015, the border closed.
The fighting never reached Juberia, but it still took a toll there.
Last year a young woman died of cholera, part of an epidemic that infected 1.1 million Yemenis. In April, a coalition airstrike hit a wedding party in the district, killing 33 people, including the bride. A local boy who went to fight for the Houthis was killed in an airstrike.
But for Mr. Hajaji, who had five sons under age 7, the deadliest blow was economic.
He watched in dismay as the riyal lost half its value in the past year, causing prices to soar. Suddenly, groceries cost twice as much as they had before the war. Other villagers sold their assets, such as camels or land, to get money for food.
But Mr. Hajaji, whose family lived in a one-room, mud-walled hut, had nothing to sell.
At first he relied on the generosity of neighbors. Then he pared back the family diet, until it consisted only of bread, tea and halas, a vine leaf that had always been a source of food but now occupied a central place in every meal.
Soon his first son to fall ill, Shaadi, was vomiting and had diarrhea, classic symptoms of malnutrition. Mr. Hajaji wanted to take the ailing 4-year-old to the hospital, but that was out of the question: fuel prices had risen by 50 percent over the previous year.
One morning in late September, Mr. Hajaji walked into his house to find Shaadi silent and immobile, with a yellow tinge to his skin. “I knew he was gone,” he said. He kissed his son on the forehead, bundled him up in his arms, and walked along a winding hill path to the village mosque.
That evening, after prayers, the village gathered to bury Shaadi. His grave, marked by a single broken rock, stood under a grove of Sidr trees that, in better times, were famous for their honey.
Shaadi was the first in the village to die from hunger.
A few weeks later, when Shaher took ill, Mr. Hajaji was determined to do something. When burning didn’t work, he carried his son down the stony path to a health clinic, which was ill-equipped for the task. Half of Yemen’s health facilities are closed because of the war.
So his family borrowed $16 for the journey to the hospital in Hajjah.
“All the big countries say they are fighting each other in Yemen,” Mr. Hajaji said. “But it feels to us like they are fighting the poor people.”
Yemen’s economic crisis was not some unfortunate but unavoidable side effect of the fighting…
At the Sabeen hospital in Sana, Dr. Huda Rajumi treats the country’s most severely malnourished children. But her own family is suffering, too, as she falls out of Yemen’s vanishing middle class.
In the past year, she has received only a single month’s salary. Her husband, a retired soldier, is no longer getting his pension, and Dr. Rajumi has started to skimp on everyday pleasures, like fruit, meat and taxi rides, to make ends meet.
“We get by because people help each other out,” she said. “But it’s getting hard.”
Economic warfare takes other forms, too. In a recent paper, Martha Mundy, a lecturer at the London School of Economics, analyzed coalition airstrikes in Yemen, finding that their attacks on bridges, factories, fishing boats and even fields suggested that they aimed to destroy food production and distribution in Ansarullah-controlled areas.
Saudi Arabia’s tight control over all air and sea movements into northern Yemen has effectively made the area a prison for those who live there. In September, the World Health Organization brokered the establishment of a humanitarian air bridge to allow the sickest Yemenis — cancer patients and others with life-threatening conditions — to fly to Egypt.
Among those on the waiting list is Maimoona Naji, a 16-year-old girl with a melon-size tumor on her left leg. At a hostel in Sana, her father, Ali Naji, said they had obtained visas and money to travel to India for emergency treatment. Their hopes soared in September when his daughter was told she would be on the first plane out of Sana once the airlift started.
But the agreement has stalled, blocked by the Yemeni government, according to the senior Western official. Maimoona and dozens of other patients have been left stranded, the clock ticking on their illnesses.
“First they told us ‘next week, next week,’” said Mr. Naji, shuffling through reams of documents as tears welled up in his eyes. “Then they said no. Where is the humanity in that? What did we do to deserve this?”
Only two famines have been officially declared by the United Nations in the past 20 years, in Somalia and South Sudan. A United Nations-led assessment due in mid-November will determine how close Yemen is to becoming the third.
To stave it off, aid workers are not appealing for shipments of relief aid but for urgent measures to rescue the battered economy.
“This is an income famine,” said Lise Grande, the United Nations humanitarian coordinator for Yemen. “The key to stopping it is to ensure that people have enough money to buy what they need to survive.”
The priority should be to stabilize the falling currency, she said, and to ensure that traders and shipping companies can import the food that Yemenis need.
Above all, she added, “the fighting has to stop.”
One hope for Yemenis is that the international fallout from the death of the Saudi dissident, Jamal Khashoggi, which has damaged Prince Mohammed’s international standing, might force him to relent in his unyielding prosecution of the war.
Peter Salisbury, a Yemen specialist at Chatham House, said that was unlikely.
“I think the Saudis have learned what they can get away with in Yemen — that western tolerance for pretty bad behavior is quite high,” he said. “If the Khashoggi murder tells us anything, it’s just how reluctant people are to rein the Saudis in.”
Source: NYT, Edited by website team

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Monday, October 22, 2018

المملكة المريضة


أكتوبر 22, 2018

ناصر قنديل

– ليس خافياً حجم الفضيحة الذي تسبّب به للعالم انكشاف درجة الانتماء العميق للسعودية إلى القرون الوسطى رغم طلاء الحداثة الذي حاولت بمعونة أصدقائها وحلفائها تغطية التخلف والتوحش اللذين تغرق فيهما. فالعالم متلعثم أمام عجزه عن الصمت وعجزه عن الكلام، حيث لا يريد أحد من الكبار أن يترك الغنيمة المالية التي تمثلها السعودية لسواه، بعدما لم يتبقّ فيها سواه، فقضية مقتل جمال الخاشقجي لم تفضح جديداً قديماً معلوماً عن السعودية، قدّمت الحرب على اليمن أمثالاً مضاعفة عنه، بتجويع متعمّد بلا رحمة لملايين اليمنيين، وبقتل منظم للمدنيين بكلّ قسوة ووحشية، لكن العالم أراد أن يغمض عينيه، ويتغاضى. قضية الخاشقجي فضحت حكومات الغرب التي وجدت لسانها مرتبكاً وعاجزاً عن الكلام، فصار ينطق بالتقسيط تحت ضربات الرأي العام المتحفز لطرح معادلة، أيّهما أهمّ مال السعودية لقاء الصمت على الجرائم والوحشية ورعاية الإرهاب أم حماية الأمن وتكريس منظومة قيَم تحكم العالم لحفظه، بعدما صار الجمع صعباً إن لم يكن مع كل يوم يمرّ يبدو مستحيلاً.

– قدّم الرئيس الأميركي دونالد ترامب نموذجاً للجواب عن السؤال بقول علني، كان مرات مهيناً للسعودية ومرات مدافعاً عن رموز حكمها، عنوانه المال السعودي يستحق التضحية بالقيَم وبالمعايير والتعايش مع التوحش والجريمة والفساد، والإرهاب أيضاً طالما أنه قابل للتوظيف في حروب بات الغرب عاجزاً عن خوضها، ومقابل ترامب نهضت حملة عالية السقوف وغير مسبوقة بوجه هذا الدلع الذي تحظى به السعودية، والذي يشبه في غير مواضيع الحقوق الفلسطينية، الدلع الذي تحظى به «إسرائيل». فطالما السعودية لا تستخدم مالها أو المكانة الناجمة عنه والتسهيلات التي تحوزها بسببه لحماية الحقوق الفلسطينية، فهي تستحق دلالاً موازياً لـ «إسرائيل» في الصمت عن جرائمها بحق الفلسطينيين، كيف إذا وقفت السعودية بمالها وتوظيف مكانتها المستمدّة من استضافة الحرمين الشريفين، في ضفة تسويق التطبيع مع «إسرائيل» إلى حدّ إشهار التحالف معها تحت شعار العداء المشترك لإيران؟

– لا يختلف أصحاب الحملة التي تدعو لتقليم الأظافر السعودية مع ترامب في أمرين، الأول مواصلة الحماية المطلقة لـ «إسرائيل»، والثانية الارتياح لتخلي السعودية عن الحقوق الفلسطينية، لكنهم يطرحون من موقع المصلحة الأميركية العليا أسئلة جوهرية حول فاعلية وقيمة هذه الحماية للسعودية لدرجة الحديث عن تحوّلها عبئاً على المصالح والسياسات الغربية عموماً والأميركية خصوصاً، واعتبار قضية مقتل الخاشقجي فرصة لتدفيعها ثمن الفشل في الملفات التي تعهّدتها وفي طليعتها، الدفع بالصلح مع «إسرائيل» وفقاً لشرط التخلي عن القدس وحق العودة للاجئين الفلسطينيين بتقديم الشريك الفلسطيني في صفقة القرن، ومثلها تعهّدها الإمساك بصاحب القرار في باكستان كدولة إسلامية كبرى ومحورية ونووية، ومثلهما الفشل في العراق وسورية، بصورة بات كل المشروع الغربي والأميركي خصوصاً في المواجهة مع روسيا والصين وإيران مهدداً بالفشل، وصار ثمن التسويات وضع حدّ للدلع الذي تحظى به السعودية.

– المواجهة مستمرة وفقاً لحسابات لا ينتمي أي منها للخير والحق، أو للدفاع عن حقوق الإنسان والشعوب، بل بالتحديد للإجابة عن سؤال: هل ينبغي الآن وللمصلحة الغربية العليا، والأميركية خصوصاً، تقديم الحماية لولي العهد السعودي محمد بن سلمان، أم السير بتدفيعه ثمن مقتل الخاشقجي كعلامة على فتح ملف تقاسم صفقة القرن الكبرى، الدولة المريضة، كما سُمّيت في نهاية عمرها «الإمبراطورية العثمانية» بالرجل المريض؟

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«براءة» ابن سلمان في يد إردوغان


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مع فشل السعودية في تسويق روايتها بشأن مقتل الصحافي جمال خاشقجي، انفتحت القضية على مسارات جديدة لا يزال احتمال «اللفلفة» قائماً من بينها. حتى الآن، وباستثناء التصريحات الصادرة عن بعض وجوه حزب «العدالة والتنمية» الحاكم في تركيا، لا مؤشرات تركية أو أميركية تحمل على استبعاد خيار التسوية التي تحفظ ماء وجه الرياض، بل إن دونالد ترامب ذهب إلى أبعد من ذلك بدفاعه عن بقاء محمد بن سلمان على رأس ولاية العهد. هذه التصريحات التطمينية لابن سلمان عزّزت دلالاتها عودة عادل الجبير إلى المشهد بـ«نبض قوي»، ليقول إن «السعودية هي التي تقرّر من يقودها».

الرواية السعودية لا تُصدَّق: «زر الحقيقة» في يد أردوغان

الرواية السعودية لا تُصدَّق: «زر الحقيقة» في يد أردوغان

مع فشل السعودية في تسويق روايتها بشأن مقتل الصحافي جمال خاشقجي، انفتحت القضية على مسارات جديدة لا يزال احتمال «اللفلفة» قائماً من بينها. حتى الآن، وباستثناء التصريحات الصادرة عن بعض وجوه حزب «العدالة…

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سعود القحطاني: «دُليْم» حتى آخر نفس!

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كثيرة هي المفارقات التي حملتها الرواية الرسمية السعودية لمقتل جمال خاشقجي. لكن أهمّها هو تلبيس الجريمة لعدة شخصيات من بينها سعود القحطاني، الذي قال يوماً إنه «لا يقدح من رأسه». عبارة تجلّي متانة…

دعاء سويدان

إقالة العسيري «خبر سيء لإسرائيل»

ليس صدفة التزام إسرائيل الصمت إزاء اغتيال الصحافي السعودي جمال خاشقجي في قنصلية بلاده في إسطنبول. صمت ينسحب على كافة أعضاء المجلس الوزاري المصغر وكل القيادات السياسية، ويعود إلى الإحراج الذي تسبّبت…

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مقاربات غربية للعلاقة الأميركية ــ السعودية: التمنّي شيء والواقع شيء آخر

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حتى الآن، من غير الواضح كيف يمكن أن تتعامل الإدارة الأميركية مع الرياض، على رغم الأصوات المنادية بمعاقبتها، بسبب تورّطها المحتمل في مقتل جمال خاشقجي. خبراء عديدون حاولوا مقاربة التطوّرات المستجدّة…

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الحرب السعودية الخفية

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تدخل مركبة عسكرية عبر بوابات فيلا فخمة حوّلتها الحرب إلى مستشفى ميداني مزدحم على شواطئ البحر الأحمر في اليمن. ينقل مقاتلون عائدون من الميدان جريحاً تتدفق من وجهه الدماء إلى قسم الطوارئ.للعام الثالث…

الدولة السعودية وقضية خاشقجي: انكسار المصداقية

منذ انتشار خبر اختفاء جمال خاشقحي، الصحافي السعودي المقرب من الاستخبارات سابقاً، داخل قنصلية بلاده في إسطنبول، في الـ2 من تشرين الأول/ أكتوبر الجاري، استنفر الذباب الإلكتروني السعودي، بقيادة المستشار…

غالب بن لؤي

الخاشقجي – غيت القشة التي قصمت ظهر البعير


أكتوبر 22, 2018

محمد صادق الحسيني

تتدحرج كرة الثلج وتكبر أكثر فأكثر كلما مرّت الساعات على قضية الكاتب الصحافي جمال الخاشقجي، خاصة ونحن نقترب من الانتخابات النصفية الأميركية، والتي توظف فيها هذه القضية أميركياً بما يتماهى مع قضية ووتر- غيت الشهيرة…!

آخر ما صدر من تعليقات مهمة من مسؤول أميركي كبير قول مسؤول العلاقات الخارجية في الكونغرس الأميركي بوب كوركر: إبن سلمان هو مَن يقف وراء اغتيال الخاشقجي ولا نريده في الحكم…

ما يعني انّ ابن سلمان باتت أيامه معدودة إما أن يرحل اغتيالاً أو يُعزل أو يصبح مطلوباً لمحكمة دولية…!

Image result for ‫إبن سلمان وترامب‬‎
وثمّة مَن يذهب الى أبعد من ذلك فيقول: يبدو أنّ الخاشقجي- غيت ستطيح بكلّ من إبن سلمان وترامب، وأنّ العدّ العكسي لسقوط الصنمين قد يبدأ في ايّ لحظة…!

لن نضيف جديداً إذا ما قلنا إنّ كلّ المعلومات والقرائن تؤكد أنّ محمد بن سلمان هو مَن أصدر أمر ارتكاب هذه الجريمة شخصياً، وأنه أشرف على كلّ تفاصيلها، منذ لحظة ولادة فكرة اغتيال الخاشقجي، في دماغه الإجرامي المريض، وحتى عودة فرقة الموت على متن طائرتين خاصتين سعوديتين أقلعتا من الرياض بأمر شخصي منه وعادتا الى هناك بالأمر نفسه…!

أما العنصر الذي يمكن إضافته الى قضية جريمة قتل الخاشقجي وتقطيع أوصاله وهو على قيد الحياة فهو أنّ الخناق قد بدأ يضيق ليس فقط على محمد بن سلمان وإنما على سيد البيت الأبيض الأميركي الذي يقدّم له الحماية والغطاء السياسي والأمني والعسكري منذ أن سطع نجمه في السعودية بعد تولي والده عرش مملكة آل سعود.

ذلك القابع في البيت الأبيض هو الذي وفر الغطاء السياسي لمحمد بن سلمان ليرتكب من المجازر في اليمن ما لم يرتكبه أحد في التاريخ، وتحت حجة واهية يدّعي فيها ترامب أنه يقدّم دعماً لوجستياً واستخبارياً فقط لقوات العدوان السعودي على اليمن.

لكنه اليوم، وبعد تزايد التأكيدات والمعلومات الاستخبارية لدى أجهزة الاستخبارات الأميركية، المتعلقة بجريمة قتل الخاشقجي، في القنصلية السعودية في اسطنبول بتاريخ 2/10/2018، وبعد المعلومات التي تسلمها من وزير خارجيته، وهو مدير سابق للمخابرات المركزية الأميركية، فإنّ ساكن البيت الأبيض، وفِي معرض إجابته على أسئلة صحيفة «نيويورك تايمز»، في مقابلة أجرتها معه في المكتب البيضاوي في البيت الأبيض، وجد نفسه مضطراً للاعتراف بما يلي:

ـ عن اعتقاده بأنّ الخاشقجي قد قتل.

ـ عن ثقته بالتقارير الاستخبارية المتوفرة لديه والتي تؤكد وجود دور سعودي على مستوى عالٍ في ذلك.

وهذا ما اضطره الى القول، رداً على سؤال حول ما يمكن ان ينشأ عن ذلك من تداعيات، بأنّ العواقب ستكون وخيمة جداً.

والأهمّ من ذلك انّ الرئيس ترامب سيجد نفسه مضطراً لاتخاذ إجراءات قاسية ضدّ إبن سلمان ومملكة آل سعود بشكل عام، وعلى الرغم من الجهود الحثيثة التي يبذلها صهره، جاريد كوشنر، لإقناعه بعدم رفع الغطاء عن محمد بن سلمان، وذلك خوفاً من تدحرج الأمور وصولاً إلى مطالبة جهات أميركية بعينها، بتشكيل تحالف قوى ديمقراطية سياسية وإعلامية في الولايات المتحدة نفسها للمطالبة بتشكيل محكمة دولية لمحاكمة محمد بن سلمان على هذه الجريمة، وما يمكن أن يترتب على ذلك من أضرار قد تلحق بالمصالح والعلاقات الاستراتيجية الأميركية مع مملكة آل سعود، حسب جاريد كوشنر الذي سافر الى الرياض والتقى إبن سلمان على مدى يومين وتدارس معه وسائل محتملة لحمايته ابن سلمان من الملاحقة القانونية دولياً.

بينما انضمّ وزير الخارجية الأميركي إلى هذه الجوقة، بعد عودته من زيارة الرياض وأنقرة، إذ قام بتذكير الصحافيين بالعلاقة الاستراتيجية مع مملكة آل سعود والتي تعود جذورها إلى العام 1932، وتأكيده أنّ المملكة هي حليف مهمّ في محاربة الإرهاب، حسب تعبيره.

لكن ما هو ممكن في السعودية غير ممكن في واشنطن، إذ إنّ الرئيس ليس هو الطرف الوحيد الذي يمكن ان يقرّر سياسة الولايات المتحدة في قضية دولية بهذا الحجم وهذه الخطورة، خاصة أن ترامب نفسه قد اعترف، في المقابلة نفسها مع «نيويورك تايمز»، يوم الخميس 18/10/2018، بأنّ قضية الخاشقجي تشكل له حالياً تحدياً أكبر من كلّ المواضيع الأخرى، وذلك لاستحواذها على اهتمام أكبر بكثير من المفترض.

وهذا ما دفع دان كوتس، في إحدى جلساته الخاصة، للتعبير عن قلقه العميق، من احتمال تزويد الرئيس الأميركي بتقارير وتقييمات تهدف الى حشر الرئيس في اتجاه معيّن، والتأثير على قراره باتجاه الحفاظ على علاقات وثيقة مع السعودية.

في هذا الوقت تأكد تماماً وجود توجهات مختلفة لدى جهات صنع القرار الأميركية بشأن اتهام إبن سلمان بارتكاب الجريمة، وكذلك بخصوص ما يجب على الولايات المتحدة اتخاذه ضدّهما من إجراءات. ومن الواضح انّ الكفة بدأت تميل لصالح القوى الأميركية، الرسمية وغير الرسمية، التي تدعو الى التعامل مع الموضوع بحزم شديد، وذلك حفاظاً على القيم الأميركية والتي يعتبرون الحفاظ عليها هو أساس الحفاظ على مصالح الولايات المتحدة في السعودية وفِي العالم. وقد تجلّى ذلك في إلغاء كبريات الشركات والمؤسسات الأميركية وعلى رأسها وزير الخزانة مشاركتهم في ما يسمّى دافوس الصحراء المقرّر عقده في الرياض هذا الأسبوع.

أيّ انّ إجراءات عزل إبن سلمان قد بدأت فعلاً، وذلك عبر تقويض ما أطلق عليه مشروع إبن سلمان 2030 الذي يهدف، نظرياً، لتطوير الاقتصاد السعودي وتنويعه، بالإضافة إلى الأزمة المتصاعدة والصراع الشديد اللذين تعيشهما العائلة المالكة السعودية في إطار الصراع المستمرّ على الحكم ووصول الصراع إلى درجة مطالبة العديد من أفراد العائلة بتنحية ابن سلمان عن ولاية العهد، وذلك لإنقاذ السعودية من الدمار والانهيار إذا استمرّ هذا الشخص في السيطرة على الحكم، الأمر الذي سيؤدي الى عزلة السعودية وفرض عقوبات مالية واقتصادية ضدّها من قبل الولايات المتحدة والدول الأوروبية.

علماً انّ أوساطاً استخبارية دبلوماسية متابعة لهذه القضية قد أكدت أنّ على السعودية ان تسرع في إنجاز تحقيقاتها الكاملة والنهائية في الموضوع، وذلك لانّ كلّ تأخير سيؤدّي الى قيام تركيا بالإفراج عن المزيد من المعلومات والحقائق التي تدين السعودية وتزيد مهمة طرحها لتفسير أو تصوّر مقبول دولياً لتوصيف الجريمة التي حدثت، وذلك في ضوء انّ الدولة التركية لن تتقاعس في الكشف عن كافة تفاصيل الجريمة ومتابعة الإجراءات القانونية ضدّ المعنيين حسب الأصول.

وها هو أردوغان يصرّح بأنه سيعلن عن كلّ التفاصيل يوم الثلاثاء غداً . بينما ذهبت صحيفة «الغارديان» البريطانية، في عددها الصادر الخميس 18/10/2018 إلى أبعد من ذلك بكثير، حيث أكدت الصحيفة بأنّ القمع الوحشي للمعارضة يؤدّي دائماً إلى تراكم السخط الشعبي الذي ينتج عنه دائماً نتائج كارثية، والملك سلمان كبير بمعنى عاقل بما فيه الكفاية ليتذكّر ما حصل مع شاه ايران. وعليه أن يُطلع ابنه المدلل على ذكرياته أو يشاركه فيها .

إذن فإنّ الخيارات السعودية باتت محصورة في خيارين لا ثالث لهما مهما بدّلوا من رواياتهم لمسرح الجريمة واللاعبين فيه أو فيها:

ـ إما الاعتراف بقيام محمد بن سلمان بارتكاب هذه الجريمة، التي لا مثيل لها في تاريخ البشرية، وتقديمه لمحكمة دولية توقع بحقه العقاب الذي يستحقه.

ـ أو الاستمرار في المكابرة والكذب والنكران والمراوغة وصولاً الى سقوط حكم آل سعود إثر تحوّلات داخلية كبرى تطيح بالعائلة وتجعلها هائمة تبحث عن تأشيرة دخول الى دولة تقبل بإيواء كلّ أفرادها، تماماً كما حصل مع شاه ايران.

هذا ما نصحتهم به الصحيفة البريطانية المذكورة أعلاه، وما يعنيه ذلك من تسليط الضوء على حماقات ومغامرات إبن سلمان الإجرامية، في سورية وليبيا واليمن، وعنجهياته الفارغة التي أطلقها قبل عام تقريباً وأعلن فيها نيته نقل المعركة الى العمق الإيراني. وها نحن نجد أنفسنا نعيش النتائج الكارثية لحماقات هذا الداشر ونرى أنه وبحماقته قد نقل المعركة الى عمق عائلة آل سعود وليس إلى أيّ مكان آخر. الأمر الذي سيعجّل في صدور مذكرة اعتقال دولية ضدّه وجلبه إلى لاهاي ليمثل أمام المحكمة الدولية التي ستحاكمه على كلّ ما ارتكب في اليمن إلى جانب جريمة قتل الخاشقجي.

Image result for ‫محكمة دولية‬‎

وسيعلم الذين ظلموا أيّ منقلب ينقلبون.

بعدنا طيبين، قولوا الله…

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Sunday, October 21, 2018

More Insulting Lies from Saudi Arabia


After lying for more than two weeks about the death of Jamal Khashoggi, the Saudi government has now announced a series of new lies about his murder in ways that insult both Jamal’s memory and our intelligence.
The Saudi government on Friday issued a statement claiming that Jamal was killed when a fistfight went bad in its consulate in Istanbul. Really? This is a fistfight to which the Saudi goons reportedly brought a bone saw so that they could dismember him afterward; by some accounts, they began the dismemberment while he was still alive.
It’s also grotesque for the Saudi authorities to claim that a journalist whose fingers they reportedly amputated as part of their torture somehow managed to engage in a fistfight. Jamal had no fists left.
I had known Jamal for more than 15 years, and I’m appalled by every element of what happened: By what appears to have been his brutal torture-murder, by the cover-up afterward, by President Trump’s downplaying of Jamal’s killing, and now by the effort by the Saudi government to set up scapegoats to take the fall.
Saudi Arabia even announced that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who almost everybody believes must have approved this operation — his initials, MBS, are now said to stand for “Mr. Bone Saw” — will lead an investigation into what happened. That’s like appointing O.J. Simpson to investigate the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson.
These lies are so blatant and implausible that they underscore how out of touch MBS is, and also suggest MBS believes that he will have the backing of the United States in this cover-up. That’s a good bet, since Trump has lately celebrated the assault on a journalist by a Montana congressman and previously suggested that maybe a rogue killer was responsible for killing Jamal.
But MBS has already gotten away with kidnapping Lebanon’s prime minister and starving eight million Yemenis; if he also gets away with murdering Jamal, who was an American resident and Washington Post columnist, as many believe happened, then that’s a green light to him and any other autocrat who wants to make a troublesome journalist disappear. Journalists and democracy activists all over the world will have targets on their backs.
So what we really have now is a test of Trump and of America itself. Will Trump go along with the cover-up, or will he attempt to uphold America’s honor and dignity in this instance? Here’s what he should do:
1. Since this happened in a NATO country, the NATO nations should jointly seek a United Nations-backed international investigation of the murder. This could be ordered by the United Nations Security Council, the General Assembly or the Human Rights Council.
2. The NATO countries should, in coordination, expel all Saudi ambassadors.
3. NATO countries should suspend all weapons sales, including of spare parts for aircraft, to Saudi Arabia. This would put substantial pressure on Saudi Arabia, which depends on the United States for its security.
4. The Trump administration should in the meantime call for the release of political prisoners in Saudi Arabia such as Raif Badawi, a blogger sentenced to 1,000 lashes, and Loujain al-Hathloul, a women’s rights activist. Jamal’s relatives should also be allowed to leave Saudi Arabia.
5. The United States should quietly make clear to the Saudi royal family that the Mad Prince has gone too far — not just with this murder, but also with his war in Yemen, his confrontation with Qatar, his kidnapping of Lebanon’s prime minister — and will forever be tainted. A murderer belongs not at state dinners but in a prison cell. The obvious precedent: In 1964, the Saudi royal family forced King Saud to abdicate and replaced him with the far preferable King Faisal.
I also hope that some country will pursue universal jurisdiction for this murder and be ready to prosecute any killers who can be taken into custody. And Turkey should note that under the 1963 Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, consular officers can be arrested “in the case of a grave crime”; Turkey should consider prosecution.
We could also use some investigation here in the United States. As I’ve previously noted, the Saudis poured money into Trump’s hotel properties after his election. Was this an attempt to buy good will, and did it affect policy? And should the American intelligence community have warned Jamal of the dangers he faced from the Saudis?
In the coming days and weeks, we also face special risks. We should be particularly alert to the risk that MBS will try to divert attention by provoking some incident with Iran in the Gulf, and then trying to get the American military to bail Saudi Arabia out. The White House should make it very clear that we will not let the Saudis drag us into a war with Iran.
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Saturday, October 20, 2018

Saudis now say Khashoggi killed in consulate, after claiming he left alive

Saudis say Khashoggi died after fight broke out between journalist and ‘people who met him’ inside consulate

Friday’s confirmation marks astounding reversal from earlier statements by Saudi officials (Reuters)
Saudi Arabia confirmed late Friday that Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi was killed inside its consulate in Istanbul.
In a statement on Saudi state television, the country’s chief prosecutor said a fight broke out between Khashoggi and “people who met him” in the consulate. The brawl resulted in Khashoggi’s death, the prosecutor said.
The confirmation marked an astounding reversal from earlier statements by Saudi officials who insisted that Khashoggi had left the consulate alive shortly after entering it on 2 October, when he was last seen publicly.
Saudi Arabia’s powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman insisted earlier this month that Khashoggi had left the consulate. “Yes. He’s not inside,” he said in an interview with Bloomberg published on 5 October. “My understanding is he entered and he got out after a few minutes or one hour.”
Saudi media also reported that Riyadh fired top general Ahmed al-Assiri and a senior adviser to the royal court, Saoud al-Qahtani. Mohammed Bin Saleh Al Rumeih, a pilot and assistant to the intelligence chief, was also dismissed.
‘My understanding is he entered and he got out after a few minutes or one hour’
–Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
Last week, Turkish officials told MEE and US media outlets that Saudi Arabia was preparing to admit Khashoggi was killed in the consulate, but would attempt to absolve bin Salman of any responsibility. The New York Times reported on Thursday that Riyadh was looking to blame Assiri for the murder in an effort to shield the crown prince from blame.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who earlier pledged to “sanction the hell out Saudi Arabia” if it was involved in Khashoggi’s murder, was quick to express his scepticism about the latest Saudi account.
“First, we were told Mr Khashoggi supposedly left the consulate and there was blanket denial of any Saudi involvement,” he wrote on twitter. “Now, a fight breaks out and he’s killed in the consulate, all without knowledge of Crown Prince.”
Democratic representative Adam Schiff tweeted: “The claim that Khashoggi was killed while brawling with 15 men dispatched from Saudi Arabia is not at all credible. If he was fighting with those sent to capture or kill him, it was for his life.”
Still, President Donald Trump said Saudi Arabia’s explanation was credible, Reuters reported. Speaking to reporters after a rally in Glendale, Arizona, Trump said Saudi Arabia’s announcement on the circumstances of Khashoggi’s death was a “good first step.” He also said he prefers that any sanctions against Riyadh not include canceling big defense orders.
Trump’s spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said earlier in a statement: “We are saddened to hear confirmation of Mr Khashoggi’s death, and we offer our deepest condolences to his family, fiancée, and friends.”
A Turkish source who has listened in full to an audio recording of the Saudi journalist’s last moments told Middle East Eye that Khashoggi was tortured and killed in seven minutes inside the building.
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“There was no attempt to interrogate him. They had come to kill him,” the source told MEE.
Salah Muhammad al-Tubaigy, who has been identified as the head of forensic evidence in the Saudi general security department, was one of a 15-member squad who arrived in Ankara earlier that day on a private jet.
Tubaigy began to cut Khashoggi’s body up on a table in the study while he was still alive, the Turkish source said.
On Friday night, a tweet that Qahtani, the dismissed adviser, wrote last year began making the rounds again on social media: “Do you think I rebuke (others) on my own accord without direction? I am an employee and a loyal executer to the orders of my master, the king, and my master, his highness the crown prince,” he wrote at the time.
The Saudi prosecutor added that the investigation was still underway and 18 suspects had been arrested so far.
A Saudi official familiar with the investigation told Reuters that the crown prince “had no knowledge of the specific operation” that resulted in Khashoggi’s death.
“There were no orders for them to kill him or even specifically kidnap him,” said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity and adding that there was a standing order to bring critics of the kingdom back to the country.
“MBS had no knowledge of this specific operation and certainly did not order a kidnapping or murder of anybody. He will have been aware of the general instruction to tell people to come back,” the official said.
Saudi state TV outlet Alekhbariya also reported that King Salman was forming a committee – to be headed by the crown prince – that will be tasked with “reconstructing the leadership of general intelligence, modernising its system and clearly defining its responsibilities”.
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Saudi Arabia’s king spoke by phone late Friday, stressing the importance of maintaining full cooperation between Ankara and Riyadh as they investigate Khashoggi’s disappearance, Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency reported.
The leaders also shared information on the independent investigations being conducted by both countries, Anadolu said.
An unidentified Saudi official said in a statement late Friday that the kingdom expressed its “deep regret” over the incident. He added that discussions with Khashoggi in the consulate “did not go as required and developed in a negative way, leading to a fight” that in turn led to the journalist’s death “and to their attempt to conceal and cover what happened”.

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Recording: Saudis Dismembered Journalist While Still Alive


Pompeo gives Saudis a few more days to finalize report on killing
Turkish media has gained access to an audio recording of the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. The recording reportedly reveals that Khashoggi was dismembered by the Saudi “interrogation team” while he was still alive.
The seven minute execution, per the report, involved the team cutting him up for several minutes until he died. His body was ultimately said to have been dissolved in acid. The consulate was confirmed to have been repainted in the two weeks since the incident.
Among the details in the recording, the Consulate General Mohammed al-Otaibi objected to the dismembering of Khashoggi, telling them to “do this outside, you’ll get me in trouble.” One of the team told him to “shut up if you want to live when you return to Saudi Arabia.”
Turkey has already searched the consulate, and is planning to inspect the consulate general’s residence next. Otaibi won’t be there either way, as he’s reportedly been sacked, and recalled to Saudi Arabia to face accusations of “violations.”
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who is in Turkey now to visit with top officials, has said that the US has agreed to give the Saudis a few more days to finalize their own report. This was expected to claim that Khashoggi was accidentally killed in a “botched interrogation,” and that the royal family didn’t know about it.
The audio recording, however, puts further holes into this narrative, as dismembering the man clearly was going to be lethal and not some surprise mistake. The consulate general’s reaction also throws doubts into this being an operation that happened outside of the purview of top leadership. That he’s also been recalled to Saudi Arabia raises only more concerns about what happened.