Three names mysteriously removed from Khashoggi intelligence report after initial publication
(CNN)Shortly after the US intelligence community published its long-awaited report on Friday afternoon on the Saudis who were responsible for the death of Jamal Khashoggi, it was taken down without explanation and replaced with another version that removed the names of three men it had initially said were complicit.
The
quiet switch by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
went largely unnoticed as the outcry grew that the Biden administration
was failing to punish the prince in any way, despite having just
declared in no uncertain terms that MBS was responsible.
The first link to the report that was sent out by ODNI went dead. It was then replaced with a second version
that removed three of the men it had just announced "participated in,
ordered, or were otherwise complicit in or responsible for the death of
Jamal Khashoggi."
The
Office of the Director of National Intelligence declined to clarify why
the names were originally on the list and what roles, if any, they may
have had in Khashoggi's killing.
"We
put a revised document on the website because the original one
erroneously contained three names which should not have been included,"
an ODNI spokesperson told CNN.
A
senior administration official had argued on Friday afternoon before
the change was noticed that the report contained no new information.
"This
[is] information that has been known to the U.S. government and briefed
to select committees and members of Congress over one year ago," the
official said.
Yet three of the names that ODNI had first listed had not previously been mentioned in reports about Khashoggi's death.
The White House referred requests for comment to the ODNI.
Biden had said during the presidential campaign he would make Saudi Arabia "the pariah that they are."
"Historically,
and even in recent history-- democratic and republican
administrations-- there have not been sanctions put in place for the
leaders of foreign governments s where we have diplomatic relations and
even where we don't have diplomatic relations," White House press secretary Jen Psaki told CNN on Sunday. "We believe there is more effective ways to make sure this doesn't happen again."
The
first of the three names removed is Abdulla Mohammed Alhoeriny, who has
not been previously connected with Khashoggi's death.
According
to a person familiar with the inner workings of Saudi intelligence,
he's the brother of General Abdulaziz bin Mohammed al-Howraini, a
minister who is in charge of the powerful Presidency of State Security
which oversees multiple intelligence and counterterrorism agencies.
Abdulla (as it's spelled by ODNI) appears in Saudi reports as the
assistant chief of state security for counterterrorism.
The
two other names that appeared in the unclassified intelligence report
and then disappeared are Yasir Khalid Alsalem and Ibrahim al-Salim. It
was not immediately clear who they are.
The
three men are not among the 18 who have been sanctioned by the US for
Khashoggi's murder. Those 18 were listed in the revised intelligence
report, whose file name on the ODNI website includes "v2," clearly
indicating it's the second version.
The
initial intelligence report appears to have been online for several
hours before ODNI took it down, according to the Wayback Machine
internet archive. The discrepancy between the two lists of names was
noticed on Capitol Hill and clarification has been asked of ODNI, a
House Intelligence Committee official said. A spokesperson for the
Senate Intelligence Committee declined to comment.
The
report, which was declassified by Director of National Intelligence
Avril Haines, assessed that the Crown Prince, known as MBS, approved the
operation in Istanbul to "capture or kill" Khashoggi.
The
report concludes with a list of names -- first 21, then 18 when it was
revised -- who US intelligence has "high confidence" were involved in
the grisly murder but does not assess whether they knew that the
operation would lead to his death.
Seventeen
Saudis had already been sanctioned for the murder by the US Treasury
Department. An eighteenth, a former senior intelligence official, was
added Friday. The force that serves as the protective detail for MBS,
known as the "Tiger Squad," was also sanctioned.
The State Department also announced 76 unnamed Saudis would be barred from the United States under a "Khashoggi Ban."
The Saudi government immediately responded to Friday's report and criticized its conclusions.
"The
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia completely rejects the negative, false and
unacceptable assessment in the report pertaining to the Kingdom's
leadership, and notes that the report contained inaccurate information
and conclusions," a statement read.
Biden
said over the weekend that more announcements regarding Saudi Arabi
would be coming Monday. The White House clarified his comments, saying
the State Department would provide more details about the announcements
already made.
"The
recalibration of relations with Saudi Arabia began on January 20th and
it's ongoing. The Administration took a wide range of new actions on
Friday," a White House official said. "The President is referring to the
fact that on Monday, the State Department will provide more details and
elaborate on those announcements, not new announcements."
No comments