Pompeo Says Sanctions on Khashoggi Killers Weeks Away

Sec. of State Mike Pompeo speaking at the 2012 CPAC in Washington, D.C. Photo: Gage Skidmore

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said it may take “a handful more weeks” before Washington will impose sanctions on individuals responsible for the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

The murder has placed strain on the decades-old alliance between the United States and Saudi Arabia and tarnished the image of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s de facto ruler.

“We’re continuing to understand the fact pattern,” Pompeo said Thursday during an interview with Missouri-based KMOX news radio.

“We are reviewing putting sanctions on the individuals that we have been able to identify to date that have – that were engaged in that murder.

“It’ll take us probably a handful more weeks before we have enough evidence to actually put those sanctions in place, but I think we’ll be able to get there,” he said, adding that President Donald Trump had vowed accountability for all involved in the “heinous crime.”

Pompeo emphasized, as Trump has, that “not only do we have important commercial relationships, but important strategic relationships, national security relationships with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and we intend to make sure that those relationships remain intact.”

Pompeo’s statements came on the same day the Washington Post’s editorial board called for accountability and urged readers not to forget about the slaying of their former employee.

“Much about [the killing] remains undisclosed, including what happened to Mr. Khashoggi’s body, which has not been returned to his family,” the editorial board wrote.

“Rather than answer those questions, the Saudi government — and its de facto accomplices in the Trump administration — have gone silent, evidently hoping that demands for accountability will fade away.”

Though there remain important unanswered questions about Khashoggi’s murder, the Post pointed out that what happened to the journalist inside the consulate “is not a mystery.”

“Experts on Saudi Arabia are virtually unanimous in saying that such an audacious mission must have been known about, and most likely was ordered, by … Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman,” the editorial board wrote.

Yet there is no indication that the U.S. government has any plans to probe bin Salman’s role in the killing or call for a truly independent investigation.

“The Saudis are deflecting questions by pretending to investigate what happened,” the Washington Post said. “Worse, rather than demand a genuinely independent investigation, the Trump administration is playing along.”

Speaking at a journalism awards ceremony Thursday, Fred Ryan, Publisher and CEO of the Washington Post, urged the Trump administration to take a tougher line.

“When officials of our government are asked about consequences for Jamal’s murder, they often talk about ‘balancing our interests in the area,'” he said.

“The ‘Khashoggi incident’ is viewed in some respects as a ‘complication’ in a far more important strategic relationship.

“But Jamal’s death is more than a ‘complication.’ It is vicious, state-sponsored murder of an innocent journalist,” he added, calling on the government to suspend arms deals with Riyadh and not resume “business as usual” with the kingdom.

“If those who persecute journalists get away with their crimes — and are allowed to continue with business as usual — it only invites more of the same,” he said.

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