Bewilderment in Saudi Arabia
                                               Tehran (Basirat) :Saudi Arabia’s royal court is discussing the potential for a change in the line of succession, with the U.S. government wanting "direct involvement” in the process, a Western intelligence source has told Middle East Eye.         
                                           
          
Speaking on condition of anonymity, the source described the "Saudis being in 
disarray” as pressure continues to mount on Riyadh over the suspected murder of 
journalist Jamal Khashoggi inside the kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul.
The case has cast scrutiny on Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman, with 
Middle East Eye reporting this week that seven members of bin Salman’s personal 
security detail are among 15 men named by Turkish officials as suspects in the 
murder investigation. 
The source said U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was sent to Riyadh this week 
as part of a plan for the Trump administration to involve itself in discussions 
over any potential change in the line of succession.
The source said that U.S. President Donald Trump wanted bin Salman to remain in 
power, but Pompeo considered him as "volatile” and wanted him to be replaced.
MEE understands that the British foreign office is having internal discussions 
to prepare for possible scenarios including a change to the line of succession 
in Saudi Arabia.
A source inside the foreign office, also speaking on condition of anonymity, 
said that Simon Collis, the British ambassador in Riyadh, had not met with bin 
Salman since Khashoggi’s disappearance on October 2 because Saudi officials 
remained confused about how to address the ongoing situation.
Fallout from the crisis has also led to King Salman dispatching his most trusted 
aide, Prince Khalid al-Faisal, governor of Mecca, to Istanbul, according to 
Reuters, as world leaders piled pressure on the Persian Gulf kingdom to account 
for Khashoggi's alleged death. 
On Friday, Jeremy Hunt, the British foreign secretary, told BBC radio that the 
UK government was waiting to see how the Saudis reacted before it decided what 
its own response would be.
"Part of our reaction will depend on the Saudi reaction, and whether we sense 
that they are taking it as seriously as we are taking it," Hunt told the Today 
Program on Radio 4.
Analysts and Saudi dissidents, however, have cast doubt on the likelihood of bin 
Salman being removed from the succession completely. 
One Saudi dissident who has close ties with the royal family told MEE that the 
family would stick together to avoid an "internal conflict" inside the kingdom.
He added that members of the family believe that the crown prince will 
eventually become king, and would want to "stay on his good side" as a 
consequence.
"The royal family will not side with anyone else. They will stick together for 
two reasons. Firstly, the family believe that MBS will be king so that they will 
have to stay on his good side. Secondly, if they start an internal conflict, the 
whole country will collapse and none of the members of the royal family will 
want this," the dissident said.
Bin Salman was appointed as crown prince, the heir to the throne, by King Salman 
in June last year after his father removed his nephew Muhammad bin Nayef from 
the role.
Since 2015, bin Salman has also been the minister of defense, with control of 
Saudi Arabia's armed forces, while he also controls the country's economic 
affairs as head of the Council for Economic Affairs and Development.
Andreas Krieg, an assistant professor at King’s College London specializing in 
Persian Gulf security issues, said many in Washington were predicting that bin 
Salman’s brother, Khalid bin Salman, who was Saudi’s ambassador to the U.S., 
would be appointed as the deputy crown prince.
But he said it would take an "actual coup” within the palace for Muhammad bin 
Salman to be removed from the line of succession. Krieg is a former military 
advisor to Qatar, which is currently being blockaded by Saudi Arabia.
"In DC the talk is about Khalid becoming a deputy crown prince to show the world 
that MBS is basically opening up his autocratic and self-centered leadership to 
include others and create more accountability,” Krieg told MEE, referring to the 
crown prince by an acronym.
"There will be a lot of talk in the family of how to deal with the MBS issue as 
he has somewhat become a liability. But there is a realization that there is 
really no one left in the old guard that could really challenge him. He has 
created a regime that is somewhat bulletproof from opposition outside the Bani 
Salman (the children of King Salman).
"It would have to be an actual coup within the palace to get rid of him.”
Trump, who is facing mounting pressure at home to take action against Saudi 
Arabia over Khashoggi’s suspected killing, said on Thursday that the country 
would face "severe” consequences if it was proven that Saudi officials had 
played a role in his death. 
Asked whether Khashoggi was dead, Trump said: "It certainly looks that way to 
me.”
Following meetings with King Salman and Muhammad bin Salman in Riyadh earlier 
this week, Pompeo said on Tuesday that the Saudi leaders had "strongly denied 
any knowledge of what took place in their consulate in Istanbul”.
Bruce Riedel, a fellow at the Brookings Institute and former CIA analyst, told 
MEE that the Trump administration would not break from MBS due to his closeness 
to Jared Kushner, Trump’s Middle East envoy and son-in-law, despite misgivings 
within the State Department.
"The U.S. is aware of the considerable anxiety in the royal family about MBS and 
possibly plotting to remove him from the line of succession,” said Riedel.
"Pompeo owes his position to Trump. He may have doubts about MBS and not want to 
be seen as complicit in a cover-up but he won’t break with his boss.”
Krieg also believes that the prospect of U.S. sanctions being imposed on Saudi 
Arabia remains unlikely.
"The Trump administration has made its peace with him (MBS) and apart from some 
face-saving measures will not impose sanctions as it stands,” said Krieg. 
"Pressure in DC comes from the Senate and Congress but Trump seems to ignore 
them at this point."
Source: kayhan.ir/en