Jamal Khashoggi's final months as an exile in the long shadow of Saudi Arabia
Source: Washington Post
Jamal Khashoggis final months as an exile in the long shadow of Saudi Arabia
By Souad Mekhennet and Greg Miller December 21 at 7:01 PM
Jamal Khashoggi had been in the United States for only a few months when the forces he had fled in Saudi Arabia made clear that he would never fully escape.
He was at a friends home in suburban Virginia in October 2017 when his phone lit up with an incoming call from Riyadh. On the line was Saud al-Qahtani, a feared lieutenant of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
The royal heir and his henchman were at that point in the early stages of a brutal crackdown in the kingdom arresting rivals, torturing enemies and silencing critics. Khashoggi had previously been banned from writing or even tweeting, but fear that worse could be in store had prompted him to seek refuge in the United States.
Qahtani was uncharacteristically amiable on the call. He told Khashoggi that public comments praising Saudi reforms, including a decision to allow women to drive, had pleased the crown prince. He urged Khashoggi to keep writing and boasting about Mohammeds achievements. While the conversation was cordial, the subtext was clear: Khashoggi no longer lived under Saudi rule, but the countrys most powerful royal was monitoring his every word.
Khashoggi reacted with a combination of the nerve and trepidation that would define the remaining months of his life. He challenged Qahtani about the plight of activists he knew had been imprisoned in the kingdom, according to a friend who witnessed the exchange. But even as he did so, the friend said, I saw how Jamals hand was shaking while holding the phone.
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