Should U.S.-Saudi Alliance Be Saved?

Guest Post by Pat Buchanan

Should U.S.-Saudi Alliance Be Saved?

Over the weekend Donald Trump warned of “severe punishment” if an investigation concludes that a Saudi hit team murdered Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

Riyadh then counter-threatened, reminding us that, as the world’s largest oil exporter, Saudi Arabia “plays an impactful and active role in the global economy.”

Message: Sanction us, and we may just sanction you.

Some of us yet recall how President Nixon’s rescue of Israel in the 1973 Yom Kippur War triggered a Saudi oil embargo that led to months of long gas lines in the United States, and contributed to Nixon’s fall.

Yesterday, a week after Jared Kushner had been assured by his friend Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman that Khashoggi walked out of the consulate, Trump put through a call to King Salman himself.

According to a Trump tweet, the king denied “any knowledge of whatever may have happened ‘to our Saudi Arabian citizen.'”

Trump said he was “immediately” sending Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Riyadh to meet with the king on the crisis. The confrontation is escalating. Crown Prince Mohammed and King Salman have both now put their nation’s honor and credibility on the line.

Both are saying that what the Turks claim they can prove — Khashoggi was tortured and murdered in the consulate, cut up, and his body parts flown to Saudi Arabia — is a lie.

For Trump and the U.S., this appears a classic case of the claims of international morality clashing with the claims of national interest.

The archetype occurred in the mid-1870s when Ottoman Turks perpetrated a slaughter of Bulgarian Christians under their rule.

Former Prime Minister William Gladstone set Britain ablaze with a pamphlet titled, “The Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East,” calling for the expulsion of the Turks from Europe.

Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli and Queen Victoria were apoplectic. For they were relying on the Turks to block the encroachment of Czarist Russia into the Eastern Balkans and down to the Turkish Straits.

Disraeli prevailed. The Brits put morality on the shelf.

For the U.S., morality and interests collided when FDR recognized the Bolshevik regime of Joseph Stalin in 1933, even as Stalin’s agents were starving to death millions of Ukrainian peasants and landowners.

Foreign policy moralists also took a holiday to cheer Nixon for flying to Peking and toasting Mao Zedong, even as Chairman Mao’s Red Guards were carrying out the national pogrom known as the Cultural Revolution.

Questions arise: If Khashoggi was assassinated and the order came from the royal family, does that make the Saudis morally unacceptable to us as allies or partners in the Middle East? And if it does, how do we justify our Cold War ties to autocrats such as Chile’s Gen. Pinochet, South Korea’s Gen. Park Chung-hee, the Philippines’ Ferdinand Marcos, or the Shah of Iran?

How did Franklin Roosevelt handle such associations? “He may be an SOB,” FDR said of one Caribbean dictator, “but he’s our SOB.”

During World War II, when the Germans uncovered in the Katyn Forest a vast gravesite containing the remains of thousands from Poland’s officer corps, dating to Stalin’s occupation, Poles in Britain came to Prime Minister Churchill to ask for an investigation.

Churchill, for whom Stalin was by now an indispensable ally, replied dismissively: “There is no use prowling round the three-year-old graves of Smolensk.”

Nor is it only during wartime that the U.S. has associated with authoritarians with repellent human rights records.

The U.S. maintains a treaty alliance with the Philippines of President Rodrigo Duterte, who has approved the extrajudicial killing of drug dealers, thousands of whom have been murdered.

Gen. el-Sissi came to power in Cairo in a military coup that ousted an elected government headed by a leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, who is, along with thousands of Brotherhood members, now in prison.

Since the coup attempt in NATO ally Turkey in 2017, President Recep Erdogan has imprisoned thousands, including more journalists than any country on earth.

Last week came reports that China has arrested the head of Interpol, and has indeed been operating an archipelago of re-education camps in its west to purge the ethnic and religious beliefs of the Uighur people.

As for Saudi Arabia, members of Congress are said to be readying sanctions to impose on the Saudi regime if it is proven Khashoggi was killed on royal orders.

However, which would be a greater violation of human rights: the sanctioned killing of a political enemy of the regime or 10,000 dead Yemenis, including women and children, and millions facing malnutrition and starvation in a Saudi war of aggression being fought with the complicity and cooperation of the United States?

Rather than resist Congress’ proposed sanctions, President Trump might take this opportunity to begin a long withdrawal from decades of entanglement in Mideast wars that have availed us nothing and cost us greatly.

Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of “Nixon’s White House Wars: The Battles That Made and Broke a President and Divided America Forever.” 

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11 Comments
Morality does NOT suck Donkey Balls.
Morality does NOT suck Donkey Balls.
October 16, 2018 8:05 am

Morality always takes a backseat unless it’s profitable. Like bad money chases out good money so do bad policies chase out the good.

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 16, 2018 8:56 am

Trump is smart. He will leverage this against the Saudis. More money for military parts or a reduction in oil prices to the US.

Trump has also put the EU in a bind over NATO defense spending. Pony up !

unit472
unit472
October 16, 2018 12:14 pm

Kashoggi was a Saudi intelligence operative masquerading as a WaPo columnist. A sort of Peter Strzok or Chris Steele. When you operate in an absolute monarchy and get on the wrong side of the ruling family bad things can happen.

Mature people have to put those things aside when dealing with other powers. Kim Jong Un murdered his uncle and half brother. Do we refuse to deal with him? Of course not. The Chinese have apparently abducted the President of Interpol. Where is the outcry over that?

If the Saudi’s had been smart they would have “Obama’ed” Kashoggi and dismembered him with a Hellfire missile fired from a drone and no one would have cared. Just another two faced towelhead caught double dealing.

Excommunicated
Excommunicated
October 16, 2018 12:41 pm

Trump has promised “severe punishment” will be handed out to Riyadh if it turns out that the country is responsible for the alleged killing of the journalist – but that harsh comment has been tempered by other less angry statements which indicate that the US president is not quite serious about doling out any kind of consequences. After all, there are other things on Trump’s mind, far more important than the fate of one journalist.

Referring to a $110 billion weapons deal previously signed by Riyadh and Washington and noting that Khashoggi was not a US citizen, Trump told journalists last week that he didn’t really want to stop “massive amounts of money” from being poured into the US from Saudi Arabia. “It would not be acceptable to me,” Trump said.

In other words, if Saudi Arabia really did send a team to torture, kill and dismember Khashoggi – a journalist who wrote for the Washington Post – weapons sales are still more important. Even the sale of weapons which are being used by Riyadh to continually slaughter civilians in Yemen during a war that threatens to create the worst famine in 100 years, according to the UN.

So much for the notion that the US really cares about standing up for human rights around the world. As is so often the case, when human rights conflict with war and money, war and money win – and not just under Trump, as some journalists have been quick to suggest. Past presidents kowtowed to Saudi Arabia – Trump is just honest about it.

Stucky
Stucky
October 16, 2018 12:53 pm

Trump thinks the Fat Fuck Mentally Ill Cocksucker from North Korea …. a creature from hell who imprisons, tortures, and murders many thousands of his own people …. is now just a swell terrific super-duper guy.

Just to stay CONSISTENT, I think Trump himself should fly to Saudi Arabia and lick the Crown Price’s asshole.

Stucky
Stucky
  Stucky
October 16, 2018 12:56 pm

On a more serious note ….

It doesn’t matter what we “should” do.

What we WILL do is based on the principle below … taught by Jeebus in the Sermon on the Mount;

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Per/Norway
Per/Norway
  Stucky
October 16, 2018 2:53 pm

“a creature from hell who imprisons, tortures, and murders many thousands of his own people” interesting choice of words coming from a murican,, something something beam in your own eyes etc…

Stucky
Stucky
  Per/Norway
October 16, 2018 5:00 pm

” ….. interesting choice of words coming from a murican,, something something beam in your own eyes etc…” ———- Per/Norway

Oh, cool!! A big bad PUSSIFIED fag boy from Norway!

We are humbled by your words of wisdom.

Now …. go fuck off and take care of your women!! (IF you have the balls, fag boy).

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Boat Guy
Boat Guy
October 16, 2018 2:11 pm

Saudi Arabian royal oil family has bent American citizens over the barrel and raped them enough considering it was with the full cooperation of our government officials .
Let’s see a better deal at the pump for average Americans and the Saudis can eat the corn we use to fuck up our fuel economy and engines !

KeyserSusie
KeyserSusie
October 17, 2018 12:04 pm

Reading my Turkish tea leaves still tells me the release of the American religious minister and the ‘missing in action’ WaPo reporter are entwined. quid pro quo

Most here would not mind a Saudi WaPo reporter being sanctioned, I suspect in my usual ways.

KeyserSusie
KeyserSusie
October 18, 2018 8:27 am

“The archetype occurred in the mid-1870s when Ottoman Turks perpetrated a slaughter of Bulgarian Christians under their rule.”

When I took an adventure to Sophia in 1975, crossing the Turkish border late at night, bribing the guards at the border checkpoint and using my Turkish military card for identification, I discovered the most devout Christians I have ever seen. On almost every corner of the capital city there were men in trench coats and fur caps emblazoned with a red star. As my crew visited a domed orthodox church I could see that the attendees at the church were filled with true reverence. Their faith appeared to be the source of comfort and protection from the godless government and remnants of Turkish repressive attitudes. The citizens warmly greeted us everywhere we went. Their stoic stern faces lighting up with the visitation of Americans.

My neighbors recently attended a wedding of Syrian Catholic Christians here in Florida. The ex Catholic wife who lives next door, now Methodist, said she had never seen such devout Catholics, as they played the religious matrimonial rituals to the max. It was serious business. She was surprised as she had not thought of Christians in Syria or other Middle Eastern countries. I think we forget or ignore the importance of the Christianity as a refuge from discrimination in places where religious discrimination and bigotry is common.