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Missing journalist Jamal Khashoggi had a complicated past involving interviews with Osama bin Laden and close ties to the Saudi royal family

John Haltiwanger   

Missing journalist Jamal Khashoggi had a complicated past involving interviews with Osama bin Laden and close ties to the Saudi royal family

Jamal Khashoggi

Chris McGrath/Getty Images

Jamal Khashoggi is featured on a poster during a protest organized by members of the Turkish-Arabic Media Association at the entrance to Saudi Arabia's consulate on October 8, 2018 in Istanbul, Turkey.

  • Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi had a long, complicated career before he went missing in early October after entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.
  • Khashoggi went from interviewing Osama bin Laden in the 1980s to becoming one of the most prominent journalists in his country to living in self-imposed exile.
  • Some on the right in the US have attempted to portray Khashoggi as an extremist due to his interview with Osama bin Laden and ties to the Muslim Brotherhood.
  • There's no strong evidence Khashoggi was sympathetic to terrorism.

Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi had a long, complicated career before he went missing in early October.

Khashoggi, who was a US resident and wrote for The Washington Post, disappeared on October 2 after entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul to obtain documents to marry his fiance. He is now feared dead.

Based on the nature of his disappearance and claims from Turkish officials, it's widely believed that Khashoggi was killed in the consulate by his own government. Turkish officials say his body was dismembered and flown back to Saudi Arabia.

His case has put an uncomfortable spotlight on the Saudi royal family. It has also placed President Donald Trump in a precarious position regarding the US government's close ties to the Saudi kingdom.

Saudi Arabia has vehemently denied any involvement in Khashoggi's disappearance and claimed he left the consulate, though it has provided no evidence to back up this assertion.

Prior to his disappearance, Khashoggi had been writing op-eds for The Washington Post and was living in Virginia. He was in self-imposed exile and was often critical of the Saudi government his writing, but it wasn't always this way.

Khashoggi's interview with Osama bin Laden in the 1980s launched his career

Khashoggi studied at Indiana State University and after graduating returned to Saudi Arabia to work for an English-language newspaper.

This was in the early 1980s, when the mujahideen were waging jihad against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan with the support of the CIA. Khashoggi was reportedly strongly on the side of those fighting against the Soviets.

A young Osama bin Laden, who was among the US-backed militants fighting the Soviets, invited Khashoggi to Afghanistan to do an interview. Khashoggi enthusiastically accepted.

Khashoggi was hardly unique in terms of his general sympathies for the mujahideen at the time, even if he controversially posed for a photo with an assault rife in his hands (there's no evidence he actually fought in any capacity).

"He was there as a journalist first and foremost, admittedly as someone sympathetic to the Afghan jihad, but so were most Arab journalists at the time - and many Western journalists," Thomas Hegghammer, who interviewed Khashoggi about his time in Afghanistan, told The New York Times.

Some on the right in the US have attempted to portray Khashoggi as an extremist

Some on the right have suggested that the narrative surrounding Khashoggi as a defender of democracy and freedom of expression is overblown, and have pushed a conspiracy theory that the story surrounding his disappearance is meant to damage US-Saudi relations and help Iran.

In recent days, there have been attempts by some American conservatives to characterize Khashoggi as an extremist due to his expressed sympathies for bin Laden's cause during the 1980s as well as his ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, but colleagues of his told The New York Times these are "all lies."

Kashoggi seemed quite disturbed by bin Laden's embrace of terrorism over the course of the 1990s that led up to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Not long after 9/11, Khashoggi wrote, "Osama bin Laden's hijacked planes not only attacked New York and Washington, they also attacked Islam as a faith and the values of tolerance and coexistence that it preaches." He was also critical of conspiracy theories emanating from within the Saudi kingdom about the attacks, which were aimed at downplaying the fact that 15 of the 19 hijackers were from Saudi Arabia.

When bin Laden was killed by the US in 2011, Khashoggi lamented bin Laden's transition from fighting for what he felt was a just cause against the Soviets to embracing "hatred" in the years that followed.

At the time, Khashoggi tweeted, "I collapsed crying a while ago, heartbroken for you Abu Abdullah (a nickname for Osama bin Laden). You were beautiful and brave in those beautiful days in Afghanistan, before you surrendered to hatred and passion."

Khashoggi once had a close relationship with the Saudi royal family

Khashoggi's time in Afghanistan and subsequent coverage as a foreign correspondent launched him into an accomplished career as a journalist and editor in Saudi Arabia.

The media in Saudi Arabia is closely controlled by the Saudi royal family, so as he climbed the ladder of the country's media world, he became closer with its ruling class.

As he rose in prominence, Khashoggi served as a royal adviser, and at times traveled with King Abdullah. Due to a close relationship he had with Prince Turki al-Faisal, the Saudi intelligence chief, it's rumored that Khashoggi also worked as a Saudi spy.

Khashoggi was a vocal supporter of democracy, and he was troubled when Saudi Arabia worked against uprisings in the Arab world during the Arab Spring. But he maintained a strong relationship with the royal family, even as he was often critical of it. Khashoggi did find himself out of a job on more than one occasion for his outspoken tendencies, but he was often rehired.

Things began to change for Khashoggi in 2015 when King Salman rose to power and gave an inordinate amount of influence to his son, Mohammed, who would eventually be named crown prince and heir to the throne in 2017.

'In America, you take freedom for granted'

In June 2017, Khashoggi left Saudi Arabia amid Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's efforts to consolidate power, which involved the arrest of fellow princes and prominent businessmen. Some of Khashoggi's friends were arrested.

Six months before his departure, the royal family banned Khashoggi from writing after he was critical of President Donald Trump and the Saudi government's apparent trust in the US leader, which seemed to be the final straw for him.

"We never had freedom of the press in Saudi Arabia, it's true," Khashoggi said in a March 2018 interview with Columbia Journalism Review. "But also we were never ordered or told to impose certain ideas. ... This is new."

Khashoggi said he decided to leave Saudi Arabia because he began to fear for his safety.

"I'm a believer in free journalism, despite all the limitations we had. I always pushed the envelope, I always wanted to have more space," Khashoggi said. "I was so insulted when the royal court called me and told me that I am not allowed to write. ... In America, you take freedom for granted."

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