The
Senate cast two historic votes Thursday to end U.S. participation in
the Saudi-led war effort in Yemen and condemn the Saudi crown prince as
responsible for the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, delivering
clear political rebukes of President Trump’s continued embrace of the
kingdom.
The unanimous vote to hold Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman responsible for Khashoggi’s murder reflects the
extent to which senators of both parties have grown tired of Trump’s
continued defense of Mohammed’s denials. It also puts significant
pressure on leaders in the House — where the president’s Saudi policy is
a much more partisan issue — to allow members to cast a similar vote
condemning the crown prince before the end of the year.
Regardless,
the two Senate votes Thursday set the stage for broader strategic
debates about Saudi policy when Congress regroups next year.
Just
before the Senate voted to condemn Mohammed over Khashoggi’s murder,
senators voted 56-to-41 vote to end U.S. participation in the Saudi-led
campaign in Yemen by invoking the War Powers Resolution — the first time
a chamber of Congress has ever done so.
More
importantly, the 56-vote majority — a figure that includes seven
Republicans — suggests that Saudi critics will still have a majority
next year to challenge Trump on Saudi policy. Both Republicans and
Democrats have said they plan to pursue sanctions against Saudi
officials involved in Khashoggi’s murder, to stop the transfer of
nondefensive weapons until Saudi forces withdraw from Yemen, and other
measures to restrain a crown prince whom many lawmakers see as out of
control.
“Today we tell the despotic regime in
Saudi Arabia that we will not be part of their military adventurism,”
said Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who co-sponsored the Yemen resolution
with Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah). “Today, for the first time, we are going to
go forward . . . and tell the president of the United States, and any
president … that the constitutional responsibility of making war rests
in the United States Congress, not the White House.”
The votes came just hours after
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis briefed
House lawmakers behind closed doors — a meeting from which Republicans
and Democrats emerged urging very different responses to Saudi Arabia and its crown prince.
A
recent CIA assessment found Mohammed was probably responsible for the
killing of Khashoggi, a Washington Post contributing columnist, in a
Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2.
“They
have to be held responsible,” Rep. Eliot L. Engel (D-N.Y.), the incoming
chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said after the
briefing, referring to Mohammed and Saudi King Salman.
But
there remain Republicans in the House who defend the crown prince — and
those who think that even if he should be called out for his
involvement in Khashoggi’s death, the punishment should stop there.
“We
recognize killing journalists is absolutely evil and despicable, but to
completely realign our interests in the Middle East as a result of
this, when for instance the Russians kill journalists . . . Turkey
imprisons journalists?” Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) said. “It’s not a
sinless world out there.”
That
stands in sharp contrast to the Senate, where several Republicans have
been encouraging a broad response to Saudi Arabia over not just
Khashoggi’s killing and the Yemen war, but the Kingdom’s blockade in
Qatar, its recent detainment of Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri, and
a slate of human rights abuses they say have compromised the U.S.-Saudi
alliance.
Trump
has refused to condemn Mohammed for the killing of Khashoggi, a Saudi
national. Pompeo has echoed Trump’s stance in public interviews, and
behind closed doors as well, lawmakers said.
“All
we heard today was more disgraceful ducking and dodging by the
secretary,” said Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Tex.), who supports bringing up a
War Powers resolution in the House to cut off U.S. support for the
Saudis’ Yemen war effort. On Wednesday, the House narrowly voted to
block rank-and-file members from demanding a floor vote on any such
Yemen resolution, after leaders slipped in a rule change to do so into
an unrelated agricultural bill.
House leaders
also met with CIA director Gina Haspel on Wednesday to hear the details
of Khashoggi’s slaying. But they emerged offering few details about the
briefing — or about what step House Democrats would take, once they
assume the majority in January, to pursue more punitive measures against
Saudi Arabia, beyond holding hearings.
In the
Senate, meanwhile, both Republican and Democratic lawmakers are making
plans to capitalize on the Yemen resolution vote with further measures
next year — including sanctions on Mohammed and the other Saudis
implicated in Khashoggi’s killing, and an order to halt all nondefensive
weapons transfers to Saudi Arabia until hostilities in Yemen cease.
“The
current relationship with Saudi Arabia is not working for America,”
Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) said Wednesday, in comments to reporters
about what next steps senators planned to take to address Saudi policy.
“I’m never going to let this go until things change in Saudi Arabia.”
WP
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