King Salman presents Saudi policies amid renewed calls from US Congress for condemnation over Khashoggi’s murder.
Saudi Arabia‘s King Salman bin Abdulaziz has addressed the kingdom’s Shura Council but failed to mention the case of murdered journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Speaking to the council in a televised address on Monday, the king lauded his country’s judiciary and public prosecution for “carrying out their duty in the service of justice”, without directly invoking the killing of Khashoggi.
Last week, Saudi prosecutors announced they would push for the death penalty for five suspects in connection to the murder of the Saudi journalist, who was killed in the kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul on October 2.
In the highly anticipated speech, the king, reiterated his support for UN efforts to end the war in Yemen and said that the Palestinian issue was a “top priority for the kingdom”. He also said that Riyadh supported a political solution in Syria, ensuring the return of Syrian refugees to their homeland.
Commenting on the address, Marwan Kaballan, director of Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, told Al Jazeera it was a “very short speech”.
“He was trying to bring back the Saudi foreign policies to where it was traditionally; reiterating the traditional Saudi policy on Palestine. He talked about Yemen, saying that Saudi Arabia is seeking a political solution to the Yemen conflict… He talked about Syria and the Syrian refugees. He talked about his country’s role in maintaining stability in the oil market,” Kaballan said.
“At the end of his speech, it was really indicative when he talked about the judicial system of Saudi Arabia. It seemed like an indirect reference to the murder of Jamal Khashoggi.
“I think he wants the whole world to know that he is standing by his son [Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman]. That was clear in two aspects; the economic one, when he talked about the private sector and somehow was referring to the 2030 vision of the crown prince, and when he ended his speech by talking about his trust in the judicial system of Saudi Arabia,” Kaballan added.
US calls for condemnation
The address came after members of the US Congress renewed their calls to condemn the kingdom following a reported assessment by the CIA that the crown prince personally ordered the murder of Khashoggi.
“It is certainly testing the position that the enemy of our enemy is our friend,” said Representative Adam Schiff, a Democrat from California, and a frequent critic of US President Donald Trump.
“The president needs to listen to what our intelligence community has to say.”
But Trump has refused to listen to the audio tapes of the murder because the content is too graphic.
“it’s a suffering tape, it’s a terrible tape. I’ve been fully briefed on it, there’s no reason for me to hear it…” he told “Fox News Sunday”.
President Trump, who considers Saudis vital allies in his Middle East policy, has been buying time on the issue as more evidence piles up in the case.
Meanwhile, divisions at the top of the US Republican party are deepening over the murder of the Saudi journalist.
Senator Lindsey Graham, a Trump ally, called the Saudi crown prince “unhinged” in an interview with NBC news on Sunday.
“They are an important ally, but when it comes to the crown prince, he is irrational, he is unhinged, and I think he has done a lot of damage to the relationship between the United States and Saudi Arabia and I have no intention of working with him ever again,” Graham said on Sunday’s “Meet The Press”.
“I am going to do whatever I can to place blame where I believe it lies: I am going to put it at the feet of the crown prince who has been a destructive force in the Mideast.
“If he is going to be the face of Saudi Arabia going forward, I think the kingdom will have a hard time on the world stage.”
While the US has imposed sanctions on 17 Saudi officials, others in Congress are pushing for much tougher punishment.
“… We need to punish who ordered this. Who’s in charge and really the only thing they understand over there is strength,” said Rand Paul, US Republican Senator.
“I think they will see sanctions as weakness on the part of the president, and if the president wants to act strongly he should cut off the arms sale,” he told CBS’s “Face The Nation” show.