Trump Admin Is Going to Take Saudis at “Their Word” on Pensacola Terrorist Attack

A treacherous attack on US officer candidates on US soil and Trump' first reaction is to run interference for the Saudis with the press

Trump’s fourth National Security Advisor, Robert O’Brien, appeared on Face the Nation yesterday, and he made a number of troubling statements that reflect some of the biggest flaws with the administration’s foreign policy. When he was asked about the Pensacola attack and the shooter’s possible terrorist ties, he said this:

So, my point is it looks like terrorism. We’ll have to see what the FBI investigation shows, what his motivations were. The Saudis have promised full cooperation with the investigation. We’re going to take them at their word [bold mine-DL].

Why would our government take the Saudis at their word? The Saudi government has spent the last several years routinely lying about their responsibility for war crimes in Yemen. They have funneled U.S.-made weapons to militias and designated terrorists as part of their war effort in direct violation of the agreements they made with the U.S. They lied for weeks about what Saudi agents had done to Jamal Khashoggi, and they have spent more than a year denying the crown prince’s obvious role in that murder.

The Saudi government has given the U.S. promises and assurances in the past that proved to be worthless. Why is this time any different? No one can seriously take the Saudi government at their word at this point, so it is significant that this is the administration’s position. The administration’s credulity when it comes to Riyadh’s promises and statements is itself discrediting.

Source: The American Conservative


The president’s response to the Pensacola Naval Air Station shooting reflects his ugly habit of shielding Saudi Arabia from all criticism:

When a Saudi Air Force officer opened fire on his classmates at a naval base in Pensacola, Fla., on Friday, he killed three, wounded eight and exposed anew the strange dynamic between President Trump and the Saudi leadership: The president’s first instinct was to tamp down any suggestion that the Saudi government needed to be held to account.

Hours later, Mr. Trump announced on Twitter that he had received a condolence call from King Salman of Saudi Arabia, who clearly sought to ensure that the episode did not further fracture their relationship. On Saturday, leaving the White House for a trip here for a Republican fund-raiser and a speech on Israeli-American relations, Mr. Trump told reporters that “they are devastated in Saudi Arabia,” noting that “the king will be involved in taking care of families and loved ones.” He never used the word “terrorism.”

What was missing was any assurance that the Saudis would aid in the investigation, help identify the suspect’s motives, or answer the many questions about the vetting process for a coveted slot at one of the country’s premier schools for training allied officers.

Or, more broadly, why the United States continues to train members of the Saudi military even as that same military faces credible accusations of repeated human rights abuses in Yemen, including the dropping of munitions that maximize civilian casualties.

The Pensacola shooting was a treacherous attack carried out by a member of the Saudi military against U.S. officers on American soil.

The only reason that this man was in the U.S. at all was so that he could receive pilot training that he would probably have gone on to use in the service of the kingdom’s despicable bombing campaign in Yemen.

The attack calls into question the Saudi military’s vetting of its own officers and the U.S. military’s scrutiny of the officers that it accepts into its training programs. This Saudi officer should never have been in the U.S., and it is a serious failure by both governments that he was allowed to participate in this program.

It is one more example of why providing training to Saudi officers in the U.S. is a mistake. There should be serious consequences for future U.S.-Saudi cooperation, and there must be a thorough investigation to determine what went wrong on our government’s end that this person was accepted into the training program and granted entry into the U.S.

At the very least, we would expect the president and the Secretary of State to express their condemnation and outrage at the murders of American servicemen before they echoed the official talking points from Riyadh, but with this administration the main concern is to cover for the Saudis first. The article quotes Bruce Riedel:

But even stranger, said Mr. Riedel, was “the president’s parroting of the Saudi line” before learning the results of an investigation into whether the gunman acted alone, or had allegiances to Al Qaeda or terrorist groups.

This is the latest in a series of episodes in which the president parrots the Saudi line, because he has been determined to appear subservient before the Saudi government whenever there has been an opportunity to do so.

One might think that an attack on a U.S. military base by a Saudi officer would be an occasion when he would make an exception, but it is not. It is all very well that the Saudi government expresses condolences for the attack, but the president shouldn’t be acting as their mouthpiece.

The president should be demanding answers from them instead of running interference for them with the press. The article goes on to quote Aaron David Miller:

“If Trump wants to convey condolences from Saudi King Salman, fine,” Mr. Miller wrote on Twitter after the shooting. “But you don’t do it on day — Americans are killed — untethered from a message of ironclad assurances from King to provide” whatever cooperation is necessary to understand the gunman and his motives. “Otherwise Trump sounds like what he has become — a Saudi apologist.’’

There are hardly any foreign governments that the president refuses to criticize publicly, but he won’t say a word against the Saudi government no matter what happens.

It was despicable when he recited Saudi propaganda to keep support for the war on Yemen going, and it was outrageous when he tried to help the Saudi government cover up their role in murdering Jamal Khashoggi, and it is disgusting that he still goes out of his way to protect them after this attack.

The current noxious U.S.-Saudi relationship should have been ended years ago, and this attack and the president’s shameful rush to side with the Saudis are the latest reminders why it must end.

Source: The American Conservative

4 Comments
  1. CHUCKMAN says

    Judging by what I see in the news, the Saudi was just behaving as so many Americans do.

    Mass shootings are as common as stop lights at intersections in the United States.

    What’s terror got to do with any of it?

    1. Canosin says

      wrong Sir….. it’s a terrorist attack….. Saudis were filming the shootings….. they knew all along what was going to happen…..

      1. CHUCKMAN says

        You missed my point, completely. I won’t bother explaining.

        Th truth be told, worrying about whether a specific act was terror is much like the Scholastics counting angels on the head of a pin. It’s almost laughable. A search for more headline propaganda.

        It makes no difference to anyone what was going on inside the head of a killer. Some people just kill, and their “reasons” wouldn’t even make sense to many.

        Almost by definition, all killers are insane, either temporarily or clinically.

        The only genuine, unarguable terror we see in today’s world is America’s state terror. And it is on a massive scale.

        Just in the Mideast Neocon Wars, it is responsible for about 2 million deaths and millions of desperate refugees seeking to avoid bombing and destroying some well-run states who were not at war with anyone.

        Just in Afghanistan the morons in Washington have bombed peasants for 18 years to achieve nothing.

        They are still at it, having squandered enough money to rebuild many of America’s own crumbling cities.

        They had no clear purpose at the start. The Taliban are not terrorists and were not responsible for 9/11.

        And by the way, those truly responsible for 9/11, were never even named, let alone being dealt with in any way.

        As I said, killing always involves a form of madness.

  2. Séamus Ó Néill says

    Reading this inane garbage one would thing that America is a paragon of virtue, that’s not the genocidal international war criminal that the rest of the world knows. America is as involved in Yemen as Saudi, so no amount of crocodile tears will change that. Not trying in any way to trivialise the brutal butchering of Jamal Khashoggi, but America carries out assassinations in it’s own country, of its own citizens on a daily basis.

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