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| Trumps Defense of MBS: What It Reveals About U.S. Intelligence and Power Politics |
I read about President Trump’s meeting with the Saudi crown prince, and what stood out to me was the sharp gap between what Donald Trump said in public and what U.S. intelligence had already concluded about the murder of Jamal Khashoggi. In the Oval Office, he backed Mohammed bin Salman and said the crown prince knew nothing about the killing. But the intelligence assessment made it clear that MBS approved an operation to capture or kill Khashoggi, based on his tight command over Saudi security services and the involvement of his trusted protective unit.
To me, the logic behind that assessment is
straightforward. MBS runs the security state with a firm grip, signs off on
major actions, and keeps close control of the people who would have been
involved. It is hard to imagine such a sensitive and risky mission happening
without his say-so. That view isn’t fringe either. It has been broadly accepted
by regional experts and policy analysts, even though Saudi Arabia disputes it.
What strikes me most is not just the
disagreement between Trump and the intelligence community, but the way the
moment played out. The president publicly sided with the crown prince while
leaving the intelligence findings unacknowledged, which sent a signal far
beyond that room. It suggested that political alignment or personal rapport
could outweigh formal assessments and the gravity of a journalist’s killing.
It reminded me a bit of my spy thriller
novel Mission of Vengeance,
where CIA spymaster Corey Pearson is guided by a president who refuses to back
U.S. intelligence policies that prop up dictators and tyrannical regimes, which
makes the contrast in real life all the more striking.
When I think about this from a national
security angle, the implications feel pretty direct. If the United States
signals that certain partners can cross major lines without consequence, it
weakens the country’s credibility when trying to deter similar behavior from
rivals. It also muddies the values it claims to defend. Allies start to wonder
what the standards really are, and adversaries take note when power seems to
carry impunity.
For America, strong security doesn’t come
only from military strength or strategic ties. It also comes from the
consistency of its principles and the reliability of its word. When the United
States speaks clearly, acts consistently, and backs its intelligence, it can
rally allies and set boundaries that others respect. When those signals get
mixed, the country loses leverage. In a world already tilting toward more
aggressive state behavior, that loss has a way of coming back to bite.
Robert
Morton is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence
Officers (AFIO) and writes about the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC). He also
writes the full-length Corey
Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series, which blends his knowledge of real-life
intelligence operations with gripping fictional storytelling. His thrillers
reveal the shadowy world of covert missions and betrayal with striking realism.

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