Adnan R. Khan: In backing the Saudi Crown Prince Trump continues his dismantling of a rules-based world order
Tag Archives: Jamal Khashoggi
How Turkey is playing Saudi Arabia
Adnan R. Khan reports from Istanbul on why Turkey is turning up the pressure on its stronger Middle East rival over the killing of Jamal Khashoggi
By failing to apply Magnitsky sanctions, Canada fails the memory of Jamal Khashoggi
Opinion: Canada’s implementation of Magnitsky laws, which would punish foreign human-rights abusers, is falling behind—meaning dissidents and journalists remain at risk
How soft power has spared Saudi Arabia fallout from the Khashoggi killing
Jen Gerson: Mohammed bin Salman has clearly decided that transforming a false-front economy requires tyranny. Lucky for him, his kingdom has purchased the world’s compliance
The Khashoggi killing has done what the deaths of 60,000 people could not
Terry Glavin: It took the slaying of a celebrity journalist for western governments to face up to Saudi Arabia’s brutality. Are they outraged enough to pursue meaningful change?
The death of Jamal Khashoggi and the weaponization of diplomacy
Adnan R. Khan: Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Russia have all started using diplomatic missions as tools to silence critics. It’s a dangerous, historic shift.