This Article is From Aug 07, 2020

Ex-Saudi Intel Officer Alleges Crown Prince Ordered His Killing In Canada

Saad Aljabri, a close US intelligence ally, asserted in a lawsuit that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has targeted him and his family for his knowledge of damaging secrets.

Ex-Saudi Intel Officer Alleges Crown Prince Ordered His Killing In Canada

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was accused of targeting an ex-Saudi intel officer.

Highlights

  • Ex-Intel officer Saad Aljabri is now living in exile in Toronto
  • Aljabri says prince, his allies pressured him to return to Saudi Arabia
  • He has filed federal lawsuit in Washington

A former top Saudi intelligence officer and close U.S. intelligence ally has accused Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of targeting him for assassination and taking his children hostage because he has knowledge of damaging secrets about the prince's rise to power.

In a federal lawsuit filed in Washington on Thursday, Saad Aljabri said "there is virtually no one that Defendant bin Salman wants dead" more than him because of his relationship with the American government as "a longtime trusted partner of senior U.S. intelligence officials."

Aljabri - now living in exile in Toronto - is "uniquely positioned to existentially threaten Defendant bin Salman's standing with the U.S. Government," the lawsuit said.

In a detailed complaint running more than 100 pages, Aljabri alleges that the Saudi leader orchestrated a conspiracy to kill him in Canada that parallels one that resulted in the death and dismemberment of Jamal Khashoggi, the dissident Saudi columnist and Washington Post contributor. The CIA has assessed that Mohammed likely ordered Khashoggi's killing himself, The Post previously reported.

Aljabri says the prince and his allies pressured him to return to Saudi Arabia, with Mohammed sending agents to the United States to locate Aljabri and having malware implanted on his phone. When Aljabri was ultimately located, Mohammed sent a "hit squad" to kill him, the lawsuit asserts. The team was stopped by Canadian customs officials who, in a grisly echo of the Khashoggi case, were found carrying forensic tools that could have been used to dismember a corpse, Aljabri alleges.

Since March, Saudi authorities have arrested and held one of Aljabri's sons, Omar, 22, and a daughter, Sarah, 20, the suit alleges. Aljabri's brother has also been arrested, and other relatives detained and tortured inside and outside of Saudi Arabia, the lawsuit said, "all in an effort to bait [Aljabri] back to Saudi Arabia to be killed."

A spokesman for the Saudi Embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment about the lawsuit. Some of Aljabri's allegations have previously been reported by The Post and The New York Times.

Such explosive claims from a once-high-ranking Saudi official, whom the CIA credits with helping save American lives from terrorist attacks, could further strain Washington's battered relationship with Riyadh. After Khashoggi's death in 2018, Democratic and Republican lawmakers once counted as stalwart allies of the kingdom have turned away from the young crown prince and threatened to upend decades of economic and security cooperation between the two countries.

Mohammed has sought to rehabilitate his standing on the world stage. He has benefited from the support of President Donald Trump, who has refused to accept the CIA's assessment that Mohammed probably ordered Khashoggi's death. Trump has said the crown prince has assured him that he had nothing to do with what the U.S. president has called "an unacceptable and horrible crime."

Aljabri, represented by the Jenner & Block law firm, alleges in the lawsuit that Mohammed believes Aljabri "is responsible" for the CIA's conclusion and sees him as an impediment to further consolidating his power in Saudi Arabia and with the U.S. intelligence community.

Aljabri was a close aide to deposed crown prince Mohammed bin Nayef, who was perhaps the CIA's most trusted ally in the kingdom. Mohammed ousted bin Nayef in 2017 in a maneuver that Aljabri says "appeared to receive political cover from President Trump."

Current and former officials familiar with the CIA's assessment in Khashoggi's death, and who spoke on the condition of anonymity to freely discuss sensitive information, said they were skeptical that Aljabri had played such a key role, but did not doubt Mohammed might believe otherwise.

Several officials described Aljabri as a valuable partner to U.S. intelligence operations who modernized Saudi's counterterrorism capabilities after the 9/11 attacks, cracked down on al-Qaida in the kingdom and pursued it into Yemen. Aljabri has been credited for overseeing a network of informants who exposed a 2010 plot by al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula to send bombs concealed in computer printer cartridges on American cargo planes bound for Chicago, saving hundreds of lives.

Those who have spoken on Aljabri's behalf include Michael Morell, an acting director of the CIA under President Barack Obama, and George Tenet, who served as CIA director during the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations. Aljabri and bin Nayef also had a close relationship with former CIA director John Brennan, who was also a chief of station in Riyadh.

"In all of my years at CIA, but most especially when I served as director of the CIA Middle East Division, I never worked with any foreign official who had a better understanding of counterterrorism than Dr. Saad," said Daniel Hoffman, who retired from the agency in 2017. "He justifiably deserves significant credit for building the U.S.-Saudi counterterrorism partnership following 9/11 to the close partnership on which our national security so deeply relies today. He was key to disrupting numerous al-Qaida plots, which would have caused significant destruction and casualties in the U.S."

In a July 7 letter to Trump, four senators called Aljabri "a close U.S. ally and friend" and said the United States had "a moral obligation to do what it can to assist in securing his children's freedom."

"The Saudi royal family is holding Sarah and Omar Aljabri as hostages," Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., ranking member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, wrote with Sens. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., chairman of the Foreign Relations human rights subcommittee, Tim Kaine, D-Va., and Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. "For a government to use such tactics is abhorrent. They should be released immediately."

Foreign leaders are typically immune from civil suits in U.S. courts while in office. However, Aljabri sued under the Alien Tort Statute and a 1991 law called the Torture Victim Protection Act, which provides recourse in U.S. courts for violations of international law and for victims of "flagrant human rights violations," including torture and summary execution abroad.

The suit also names as defendants Bader Alasaker, who heads the prince's private office and travels regularly to the United States; former Saudi officials linked to Khashoggi's death, the prince's MiSK Foundation, which Aljabri alleged deployed a network of agents to hunt him; as well as alleged agents and hit team members. The foundation did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Aljabri's son Khalid, 36, a cardiologist who moved from Boston to be near his father in Toronto, said in an interview that his father has been an ally of the U.S. government since the 2001 terrorist attacks.

"His main goal was the safety of his beloved country Saudi Arabia and its allies," his son said.

Aljabri stepped down in 2016 and "did not have any kind of experience working with the Trump administration," Khalid Aljabri said, adding, "I think honestly the Trump administration has a role in resolving this whole situation and doing the right thing by securing the release of my siblings."

In a letter Thursday responding to concerns raised by U.S. senators, the State Department called Aljabri "a valued partner" to the U.S. government and said it would work with the White House to resolve the situation "in a manner that honors Dr. Aljabri's service to our country."

"Any persecution of Dr. Aljabri's family members is unacceptable," Acting Assistant Secretary Ryan Kaldahl wrote.

He said the department has repeatedly requested that Saudi authorities clarify the nature of his children's detentions and "will continue to urge their immediate release, absent sufficient and compelling justification."

Aljabri's allegations also underscore strains in relations between Canada and Saudi Arabia. In August 2018, Saudi Arabia expelled Canada's ambassador and recalled its own envoy from Ottawa and thousands of government-funded Saudi students after Canada's then-Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland called for the release of civil society and women's rights activists arrested in the kingdom.

Canada imposed a moratorium on new arms-exports permits to Saudi Arabia partly in response to Khashoggi's killing. The halt was lifted this April, after Canada secured improvements to a highly secretive $10 billion contract to sell Riyadh light armored vehicles, though current Foreign Minister François-Philippe Champagne told reporters then that Saudi Arabia's human rights record "remains troubling."

The suit states that on about Oct. 15, 2018, Canadian border officials intercepted a hit team from the prince's personal mercenary group, known as the Tiger Squad, on their way to kill Aljabri.

The alleged plot was foiled when Ontario airport customs officials became suspicious of the men, who initially claimed not to know one another, and then questioned them. A lawyer from the Saudi embassy was called, and Canada eventually deported all but one of the alleged hit team members back to Saudi Arabia.

Saudi officials have accused Aljabri and bin Nayef of misspending billions of dollars in operational funds to enrich themselves and of sympathizing with the Muslim Brotherhood.

In the lawsuit, however, Aljabri claims that over a 39-year long government career, it was he who was privy to Prince Mohammed's "covert political scheming . . . corrupt business dealings" and use of personal mercenaries.

"Few places hold more sensitive, humiliating, and damning information about Defendant bin Salman than the mind and memory of Dr. Saad - except perhaps the recordings Dr. Saad made in anticipation of his killing," the suit asserted.

The Washington Post's Amanda Coletta and Karen DeYoung contributed to this report.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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