One of the stories that I got sick and tired of hearing over and over again was the Saudi Arabian murder of Muslim Brotherhood Op and Washington Post crank Jamal Khashoggi. I really don’t care what the Saudis did to him, he was not born in America, and certainly wasn’t pro-American with his biased views. Being a Muslim Brotherhood op only ads to me caring less about Khashoggi. Now, even the left wing Washington Post that just couldn’t stop pumping out sob stories about Khashoggi has finally been forced to admit the truth. Khashoggi was a paid Qatari intelligence asset.
Jamal Khashoggi Was A Paid Qatari Intelligence Asset |
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A lot of people have been highly skeptical of the way the Washington Post and its fellow outlets have treated the story of Jamal Khashoggi. He is the Washington Post opinion writer who was killed by Saudi Arabian operatives at their consulate in Istanbul. Regardless of the facts and circumstances, a couple of things have been clear from the beginning. First, the Turkish government has used Khashoggi’s death as the core of a full-bore information operation designed to stop US-Saudi cooperation in the Middle East. Second, the Washington Post, for reasons they haven’t fully disclosed, elected to make the death of this op-ed writer a cause célèbre in a way they never did when Obama’s BFFs, the Iranian mullahs, held their Tehran bureau chief Jason Rezaian in prison. In fact, you’d be excused for thinking we were back in the bad old days of yellow journalism when William Randolph Hearst wired his illustrator in Cuba (oddly enough, Frederic Remington), “You furnish the pictures and I’ll furnish the war.”
Anyone who has dug into the the story knows that Khashoggi was not some latter day Arab democrat. In his younger days he traveled with Osama bin Laden and was sympathetic to him and to al Qaeda. He was a hard core Muslim Brotherhood operative and used his writing to serve as their apologist. He was the kind of anti-Semite you’d expect to have that pedigree. Though he was touted by the Washington Post as being in favor of a free press in the Arab world, that concept was not one we’d recognize. He’d recently complained that the Saudi government was allowing papers to say positive things about Israel.