Ignatius: What did U.S. spy agencies know about threats on Khashoggi, and when?

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during his visits in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Tuesday.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during his visits in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Tuesday.

WASHINGTON - Saudi Arabia must conduct a serious, no-holds-barred investigation of the apparent gruesome murder of Washington Post contributor Jamal Khashoggi. The kingdom's relationship with America, and its access to global financial markets, hangs in the balance.

But in the meantime, the Senate and House intelligence committees should begin an urgent oversight investigation of what U.S. spy agencies knew about threats against Khashoggi - and also into their broader reporting and analysis on Saudi Arabia and its headstrong Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

This congressional probe should focus first on the intelligence agencies' "duty to warn" Khashoggi about any lethal threat, because his American residency qualified him as a "U.S. person" for whom such a warning was required. The inquiry should look, too, for any hint that American intelligence about MBS has been skewed by the Trump White House for political reasons. And the probe should examine the larger problem of American visibility into the kingdom, which has too often been a black hole for our spy agencies.

photo David Ignatius

A congressional inquiry would blunt an apparent White House effort to put a lid on Saudi-related information. Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., complained Wednesday: "I suppose they don't want us to see the intel."

The bottom line: Saudi Arabia is at an existential tipping point. The U.S. urgently needs to understand how the kingdom got into this grisly mess, and where it's going.

This congressional probe should be secret, because it would involve highly sensitive information. The committees should review every Saudi-related item included in the President's Daily Brief since Trump took office. If the brief missed important developments, why? Did the CIA prepare a psychological profile of MBS? What did it say? Did the intelligence community augment its collection as reports emerged about Khashoggi's death? Did the White House or National Security Council make any special tasking requests? Did Trump or his aides ignore or dismiss any vital intelligence?

Here are some specific questions I hope would guide the committees' inquiry:

» From King Salman's accession in January 2015, what was the role of the Allegiance Council, the body that supposedly oversees Saudi political transitions? What did the CIA know about the council's quick ratification of MBS' elevation to deputy crown prince in April 2015 and to crown prince in June 2017?

» When MBS replaced Mohammed bin Nayef as crown prince, did U.S. intelligence have advance warning? Did the close personal relationship between MBS and Trump's son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner affect U.S. assessment of the putsch against MBN, a longtime CIA partner? Did the pro-MBS tilt affect U.S. intelligence collection or analysis in any other ways?

» When the Saudis tried to arrest and kidnap from overseas a prominent businessman critical of MBS in the summer of 2016, was U.S. intelligence aware?

» When Maj. Gen. Ahmed al-Assiri became deputy chief of intelligence last year, he moved into MBS' inner circle. What did U.S. intelligence do after it learned last month that Assiri was organizing a "tiger team" for covert special operations? What does the intelligence community know about reported Saudi plans this week to identify Assiri as the culprit in Khashoggi's death?

» Saudis tell me that those who oppose MBS are quietly rallying around Prince Ahmed, the last remaining son of the founding King Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud. Have U.S. intelligence agencies provided the White House any assessments about Ahmed's views and political prospects? Would he stabilize the kingdom after the MBS earthquake, or produce greater instability?

These are intrusive questions, but that's the essence of good oversight. The congressional intelligence committees were created for moments like this. A U.S. person appears to have been brutally murdered in Istanbul. What did U.S. intelligence know, and when did it know it?

Washington Post Writers Group

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