Trump & # 039; not satisfied & # 039; with Saudi Arabia's response to Khashoggi's...
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Trump & # 039; not satisfied & # 039; with Saudi Arabia's response to Khashoggi's...
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Trump & # 039; not satisfied & # 039; with Saudi Arabia's response to Khashoggi's assassination
President trump says he is "not satisfied" with Saudi ArabiaThe response to the assassination of Jamal Khashoggi, days after the country admitted that the Washington Post columnist died at his consulate in Istanbul, said it was part of an interrogation.
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"I'm not satisfied with what I heard," Trump told reporters at the White House On Monday, adding that the Saudis should speed up their investigation after they said they might need a month: "That's a long time, there's no reason for that, be faster."
Seventeen days after the journalist and the real insider disappeared in Turkey, Saudi Arabia pleaded guilty to the death of Khashoggi on Friday. But they said it was part of an intelligence operation to convince Khashoggi to return home to the kingdom that was not authorized by the high-ranking Saudi leadership and made a mistake after Khashoggi tried to leave, was put in a stranglehold and died.
AP
In this archive photo of January 29, 2011, Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi speaks on his cell phone at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
While the explanation has been rejected by many United States officials and members of Congress as little credible, Trump retained the trial on Monday until the top intelligence officials in the United States could return from a trip to the region. The CIA did not return a request for comment, but sources told ABC News that director Gina Haspel had traveled to Turkey on Monday.
"We have people in Saudi Arabia now, we have intelligence people in Turkey, and we are going to see what we have, tomorrow we will know a lot," he said, adding that he had spoken with Crown Prince Mohammed bin. Salman again, the young leader said that it was the real power behind the throne. He is suspected of being responsible for launching the conspiracy against Khashoggi, although Saudi Arabia denies it.
The president would not say if he believes those denials in an interview with USA Today, but added that he still believes it was "a plot that went wrong."
Trump's more rigid tone, however, was tempered by his continued defense of economic relations between the United States and Saudi Arabia and his expressed desire not to mess with that.
"I do not want to lose all the investment that is being made in our country, I do not want to lose a million jobs, I do not want to lose $ 110 billion in terms of investment," he said.
During his visit to Saudi Arabia in May 2017, Trump signed an agreement with the Saudis for them to buy $ 110 billion of weapons from the United States, although so far only $ 43 billion have been detailed.
Trump's son-in-law and chief counsel, Jared Kushner, who has a close relationship with the Crown Prince, issued the same warning on Monday and said the administration was still "in the investigation phase."
"Obviously, we're getting as much data as we can from the different places, and then we'll determine which ones are credible, and then, after that, the president and the secretary of state will make a decision about what we think is credible and what actions we believe that we should take, "he said during a forum organized by CNN.
But he also emphasized being "focused on what is good for the United States, what are our strategic interests."
To that end, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin met with the Crown Prince on Monday. Although he canceled his participation in a major Saudi investment forum, he still traveled to the capital, Riyadh, to talk about "combating the financing of terrorism, implementing sanctions against Iran, Saudi Arabia's economic problems and Khashoggi's investigation", according to his spokesman Tony Sayegh.
US diplomacy came when Turkey intensified its investigation on Monday, looking for a car belonging to the Saudi consulate, but was found in a parking lot in Istanbul. CNN also aired a surveillance video that, according to Turkish authorities, showed that one of the key suspects, dressed in Khashoggi's clothes, left the back of the consulate shortly after he was killed. The suspect is reportedly now in Saudi custody.
It was another report that quoted anonymous Turkish authorities who have systematically leaked the details of the investigation to the press to put pressure on Saudi Arabia and the United States. But on Tuesday that will change when Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has an important speech before Parliament.
Hasan Jamali / AP, ARCHIVE
Jamal Khashoggi, then general manager of a new Arabic news channel, speaks during a press conference in Manama, Bahrain, on December 15, 2014.
In the first official comments of the Turkish government, Erdogan said he will reveal the details of Turkey's investigation into the plot against Khashoggi: "It will be revealed in full nakedness."
Erdogan's spokesman, Ibrahim Kalin, said on Monday that while "Turkey's main objective, duty and responsibility is to illustrate the incident in all its parts," Saudi Arabia remains "an important country for us. fraternal and friendly ... Of course, we do not want this to be damaged. "
But in what could be a mockery of Erdogan's speech, the spokesman for his political party was much more difficult and called the Saudi operation "brutally planned." [killing] and efforts were made to cover it up. When we see him through this framework, it's a very complicated murder. "
Ben Gittleson of ABC News contributed to this report.
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