Commentary: Saudi First foreign policy comes back to bite Trump


Trump's policy of following Prince Salman's lead has backfired spectacularly.

Prince Mohammed Bin Salman

Julian Perquet writes in Al Monitor, “Mounting evidence that Saudi Arabia is behind the disappearance of regime critic Jamal Khashoggi has laid bare the risks of a US Middle East policy aligned closely with Riyadh. From the war in Yemen to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Washington has invested heavily in a relationship built largely on the personal bond between Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and presidential son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner. With Prince Mohammed widely suspected of having ordered Khashoggi’s murder inside a diplomatic facility on NATO soil, that strategy is now in jeopardy.”

“Many critics have argued that President Donald Trump’s silence on human rights abuses in the Gulf and around the world “emboldened” the prince’s worst impulses — notably in an editorial in The Washington Post where Khashoggi had been an opinion columnist during his exile in the United States. Others point to Trump’s awe at his grandiose reception in Riyadh, his first foreign trip, as well as his family business’ opaque deals with Saudi Arabia as leaving the impression — unwittingly or not — that the kingdom could act with impunity.”…

Donald Trump

“Beyond the personalities involved, however, the Khashoggi affair also raises questions about US Middle East policy writ large. Washington now champions the stability of the Sunni Gulf powers in the face of internal and external threats, real and perceived, above all else, largely deferring to the region’s autocrats as to how they want to deal with them.” (more…)

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