Saudis may blame intelligence official for Khashoggi killing: Post

IANS  |  Istanbul 

The rulers of are considering blaming a top intelligence official close to Crown for the killing of Jamal Khashoggi, the Post reported.

The plan to assign blame to Maj. Gen. Ahmed al-Assiri, a to the crown prince, would be an extraordinary recognition of the magnitude of international backlash to hit the kingdom since the disappearance of Khashoggi, a prominent Saudi dissident, it said.

A resident of and contributor to The Post, was last seen entering the here on October 2. based its report after speaking to three people with knowledge of the Saudi plans.

Blaming Gen. Assiri could also provide a plausible explanation for the apparent killing and help deflect blame from the crown prince, who agencies are increasingly convinced was behind Khashoggi's disappearance, the daily said.

Turkish officials have said they possess evidence showing that 15 Saudi agents assassinated and dismembered in the consulate.

After two weeks of blanket denials and mounting pressure from and Washington, said it would conduct its own investigation to determine who was responsible, said.

But even with the investigation still ostensibly underway, the Saudis are already pointing to Gen. Assiri as the culprit, it said.

Whether that move will be enough to calm the international crisis and what it may mean for Mohammed, the kingdom's day-to-day ruler, remain to be seen, said.

Gen. Assiri, who previously served as the for the Saudi-led military intervention in Yemen, is close enough to the crown to have easy access to his ear and has considerable authority to enlist lower-ranking personnel in a mission.

The Saudi rulers are expected to say that Gen. Assiri received oral authorization from Prince Mohammed to capture for an interrogation in Saudi Arabia, but either misunderstood his instructions or overstepped that authorization and took the dissident's life, according to two of the people familiar with the Saudi plans, the Post said.

"Even in this scenario, however, Prince Mohammed would still have ordered an operation to abduct a resident of the US, apparently only on the basis of his public criticism of Saudi leaders," it said.

--IANS

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First Published: Fri, October 19 2018. 15:10 IST