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Op-Ed: The Khashoggi case is far more complicated than the news media are making it out to be

Protesters stand outside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, where journalist Jamal Khashoggi is acknowledged to have died on Oct. 2.
Protesters stand outside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, where journalist Jamal Khashoggi is acknowledged to have died on Oct. 2.
(Ozan Kose / AFP/Getty Images)
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The biggest mistake the Trump administration made in the Jamal Khashoggi case occurred while Khashoggi was still alive: letting Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, think he could get away with something so heinous — and so heinously stupid.

But the bell was rung, as it were, and there is no way to unring it.

The Saudis surely made everything worse by lying about it. But the aftermath is such a complicated mess because it illuminates decisions made long before Prince Mohammed’s goons brought a bone saw to Istanbul.

It’s a bit analogous to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian empire. That murder sparked the World War I, yet the war was about far more than the murder of a single official.

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Look at the situation from the Saudi perspective. The U.S. has turned a blind eye to far larger horrors, including the Saudi-led war in Yemen. Prince Mohammed’s forces reportedly target civilian centers and tolerate rape, torture and the conscription of children. The Iranian side is just as guilty.

Saudi Arabia also executes about 150 people a year, mostly by beheading and occasionally by stoning. In recent years, several women were executed for practicing “witchcraft” or “sorcery.” Yet the U.S. doesn’t say boo about that.

Instead, the Saudis have gotten two mutually reinforcing messages from the White House. First, President Trump has repeatedly said that every country has a sovereign right to protect its own distinct culture.

Well, in Saudi Arabia’s distinct culture, rulers can do whatever they can get away with, particularly with regard to their own citizens. From Prince Mohammed’s perspective, Khashoggi — a longtime supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood and an operator in the Saudi court — was an obstacle to reform and a tool of his enemies. That he had a U.S. tourist visa and a column in the Washington Post didn’t change that. It made him a greater threat.

To paraphrase FDR, the man who forged the U.S.-Saudi alliance, the Saudis may be S.O.B.s, but they’re our S.O.B.s.

The second message is that Saudi Arabia is our ally. This isn’t new, but the Trump administration has taken it to new, personalized extremes. So long as Saudi Arabia helps contain Iran, softens on Israel and keeps the oil flowing out (and the weapons in), they can have a free hand.

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To paraphrase FDR, the man who forged the U.S.-Saudi alliance, the Saudis may be S.O.B.s, but they’re our S.O.B.s.

The Saudis are also getting a third message, one that is coming more from the world of NGOs, op-ed pages and Wall Street more than the West Wing: Saudi Arabia needs to reform its economy and culture.

Indeed, Prince Mohammed jumped the line of succession to do precisely that. It’s thanks to him that women are finally allowed to drive in the kingdom.

One of the more cynical talking points among those calling for new leadership in Saudi Arabia is the idea that reformers in backward authoritarian nations don’t do terrible things.

The shahs were reformers, supporting Western-style modernization and women’s rights. They were also brutal dictators.

Mikhail Gorbachev was a reformer. But I would be stunned if he’d never had anyone murdered. Regimes founded on mistaken principles have few nice options when seeking to reform.

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The point isn’t that the ends justify the means, but that when dealing with murderous regimes, the choice is often between the more tolerable of murderers.

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Some of the most outraged American voices in the Khashoggi affair had no problem working with Iran’s brutal regime. The Obama echo chamber made realist arguments about the nature of reform under the mullahs, but are now morally aghast at our realpolitik with the House of Saud.

The Turks are even worse. Along with Iran, Turkey is competing with Saudi Arabia for regional dominance, and Khashoggi’s death is merely a propaganda tool for them. The Turks are brilliantly feeding evidence in drips and drabs to an indignant Western press.

I get the indignation, but has no one followed the mass arrests and periodic assassinations of journalists under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan? Do people really believe the Turkish tyrant and NATO ally — who calls journalists “the gardeners of terrorism” — is sincerely offended? Should we call for Erdogan to step down? Why not?

I have no good idea for what we should do next, because the problem isn’t really the killing of Khashoggi. As outrageous as it is, Khashoggi’s murder is a symptom of a far longer series of mistakes.

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jgoldberg@latimescolumnists.com

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