Today the Senate passed "a resolution condemning Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) for the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi" and a second resolution "that would require the US to end its military support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen." The vote "reflected the frustration senators from [both] parties have with the vast human suffering from the war and President Donald Trump's embrace of the crown prince despite widely-accepted evidence from US intelligence agencies that he ordered the killing of Khashoggi." (CNN) But is Trump's stance on Saudi Arabia fundamentally so different from his predecessors? "The tribalism infecting US domestic politics has unfortunately crept deep into the foreign-policy discourse as well," writes John Hannah in Foreign Policy. Judgments of the Trump administration's approach to Saudi Arabia, its role in the Yemen war, and MBS are a case in point. "Maintaining the US-Saudi relationship has been a consistent priority of administrations from both parties. There may be much to dislike about Trump's… crass transactionalism" and "backhanded dissing of his own intelligence community's assessment that [MBS] likely had foreknowledge of the killing" of Khashoggi. But "Trump's bottom line—choosing not to rupture either Washington's relationship with Riyadh or ability to continue working with [MBS], who will likely be leading Saudi Arabia for decades to come—should hardly come as a shock." "It's a near certainty that every one of Trump's modern predecessors would have landed in more or less the same place," Hannah writes. "Their language would have conveyed greater moral outrage. Some may have opted temporarily to suspend the sale of this or that weapons system. But the odds are very high that all of them would have been extremely leery of… destabilizing the relationship or the kingdom itself... It would be healthy if Trump's critics acknowledged that reality up front." |
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