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Missing Saudi journalist once a voice of reform in kingdom

Members of the Turkish-Arab Journalist Assn. hold posters with photos of missing Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi on Monday as they protest near the Saudi Arabian Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey.
(Lefteris Pitarakis / Associated Press)
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Jamal Khashoggi, the Saudi journalist who disappeared last week after a visit to his country’s consulate in Turkey, was once a Saudi insider. A close aide to the kingdom’s former spy chief, he had been a leading voice in the country’s prominent dailies, including the main English newspapers.

Now the 59-year-old journalist and contributor to the Washington Post is feared dead, and Turkish authorities believe he was slain inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, something Saudi officials vehemently deny.

The U.S.-educated Khashoggi was no stranger to controversy.

A graduate of Indiana State University, Khashoggi began his career in the 1980s, covering the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan and the decade-long war that followed for the English-language daily Saudi Gazette. He traveled extensively in the Middle East, covering Algeria’s 1990s war against Islamic militants and the rise of Islamists in Sudan.

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He interviewed Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan before Al Qaeda was formed, then met him in Sudan in 1995. Following Bin Laden’s rise probably helped cement Khashoggi’s ties with the powerful former Saudi spy chief, Turki al Faisal.

Khashoggi rubbed shoulders with the Saudi royal family and supported efforts to nudge the kingdom’s entrenched ultraconservative clerics to accept reforms. He served as an editor for nine years on the Islamist-leaning Al Madina newspaper and was frequently quoted in the Western media as a reformist voice and expert on Islamic radicals.

He was fired from his post as an editor at Al Watan, a liberal paper founded after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, just two months after he took the job in 2003. The country’s ultraconservative clerics had pushed back against his criticism of the powerful religious police and Ibn Taymiyah, a medieval cleric viewed as the spiritual forefather of Wahhabism, the conservative interpretation of Islam that is the founding tenant of the kingdom.

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Khashoggi then served as media advisor to Turki, the former spy chief, who was at the time the ambassador to the United States.

Khashoggi returned to Al Watan in 2007, where he continued his criticism of the clerics as the late King Abdullah implemented cautious reforms to try to shake their hold. Three years later, he was forced to resign again after a series of articles criticizing Salafism, the ultraconservative Sunni movement from which Wahhabism stems.

In 2010, Saudi billionaire Alwaleed bin Talal tapped him to lead his new TV station, touted as a rival to Qatari-funded Al Jazeera, a staunch critic of the kingdom. But the new Al Arab station, based in Bahrain, was shut down hours after it launched, for hosting a Bahraini opposition figure.

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Khashoggi’s final break with the Saudi authorities followed the “Arab Spring” protests that swept through the region in 2011, shaking the power base of traditional leaders and giving rise to Islamists, only to be followed by unprecedented crackdowns on those calling for change. Siding with the opposition in Egypt and Syria, Khashoggi became a vocal critic of his own government’s stance there and a defender of moderate Islamists, which Riyadh considered an existential threat.

“This was a critical period in Arab history. I had to take a position. The Arab world had waited for this moment of freedom for a thousand years,” Khashoggi told a Turkey-based Syrian opposition television station last month, just days before he disappeared.

He also criticized his government’s diplomatic break with Qatar and war in Yemen as well as Riyadh’s policy toward its archenemy, Iran, whose influence has grown in Yemen and Syria.

In the Sept. 23 interview, he called Saudi Arabia’s foreign policy “narrow-minded,” and ridiculed its crackdown on political Islam, urging the kingdom to realign its policy to partner with Turkey, a close Qatar ally.

“Saudi is the mother and father of political Islam. It is based on political Islam,” Khashoggi said. “The only recipe to get Iranians out of Syria — it is not Trump or anyone else — it is through the support of the Syrian revolution…. Saudi Arabia must return to supporting the Syrian revolution and partnering with Turkey on this.”

Just over a week later, on Oct. 2, he disappeared while on a visit to the consulate in Istanbul for paperwork to marry his Turkish fiancee. The consulate insists the writer left its premises alive, contradicting Turkish officials.

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Before his disappearance, Khashoggi had been living since last year in the U.S. in self-imposed exile, after he fled the kingdom amid a crackdown on intellectuals and activists who criticized the policies of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

“As of now, I would say Mohammed bin Salman is acting like Putin. He is imposing very selective justice,” Khashoggi wrote in the Post last year after he fled the kingdom, saying he feared returning home.

He described “dramatic” scenes of arrest of government critics accused of receiving Qatari funding. They included a friend of Khashoggi’s who had just returned from a trip to the U.S. as part of an official Saudi delegation.

“That is how breathtakingly fast you can fall out of favor with Saudi Arabia,” he wrote.

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