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Trump thanks Saudi Arabia for cheap oil after giving the kingdom a pass on Khashoggi's murder

Alex Lockie   

Trump thanks Saudi Arabia for cheap oil after giving the kingdom a pass on Khashoggi's murder
Politics3 min read

trump saudi arabia sword dancing

Thomson Reuters

US President Donald Trump dances with a sword as he arrives to a welcome ceremony by Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud at Al Murabba Palace in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on May 20, 2017.

  • President Donald Trump thanked the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for keeping oil prices low a day after he refused to blame Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman for having his critic, Jamal Khashoggi, murdered in Turkey.
  • Maintaining low oil prices has become a key issue for Trump as he reimposes sanctions on Iran's oil sector after withdrawing from the multi-national nuclear pact.
  • Saudi Arabia has crucially raised oil output to keep prices down while Trump hits Iran with sanctions.
  • But Trump's near exoneration of Saudi Arabia's monarchs in the killing has met with bipartisan disgust.

President Donald Trump thanked the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for keeping oil prices low a day after he refused to blame Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman for having his critic, Jamal Khashoggi, murdered in Turkey.

"Oil prices getting lower. Great! Like a big Tax Cut for America and the World. Enjoy! $54, was just $82. Thank you to Saudi Arabia, but let's go lower!" Trump tweeted on Wednesday.

Maintaining low oil prices has become a key issue for Trump as he reimposes sanctions on Iran's oil sector after withdrawing from the multi-national nuclear pact.

Read more: Trump's manic statement letting Saudi Arabia off the hook for Khashoggi reveals a dark US secret

The sanctions could have caused a spike in oil prices, which US consumers would have felt at the pump, but Saudi Arabia, a US ally and Iran's bitter regional foe, has picked up oil output and successfully counteracted any price surge.

Trump's thank you note to Saudi Arabia comes one day after he issued a bizarre statement on whether Saudi's current ruler may have ordered the brutal execution of a US resident.

"[I]t could very well be that the Crown Prince had knowledge of this tragic event - maybe he did and maybe he didn't!" Trump's exclamation-ridden statement read.

A Washington Post report last week said the CIA concluded with "high confidence" that the crown prince directly ordered for Khashoggi's killing.

Trump's statement opened with a condemnation of Iran's regional activity, including their role in the bloody seven-year-long war in Syria.

In it, Trump also made dubious statements about the impact on the US economy from arms sales to Saudi Arabia and repeatedly gave the kingdom the benefit of the doubt and ascribed to them the best of intentions in the horrific conflict in Yemen.

The statement drew nearly universal, bipartisan condemnation as being indelicate and an abdication of the US's mandate to promote human rights worldwide.

Relying on Saudi Arabia to avoid oil price spikes may have tied Trump's hands

But on managing the re-imposition of Iran sanctions, Trump has greatly succeeded. He managed to avoid the spike in oil prices by coordinating with Saudi Arabia and granting waivers to some of Iran's biggest oil clients.

Read more: Trump has his cake and eats it too with sanctions tanking Iran's economy and oil staying low

The waivers allowed countries to purchase oil from Iran and leave the money in an escrow account.

But according to Tony Badran, an Iran expert at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, the reliance on Saudi Arabia in easing a potential oil spike may have tied Trump's hands in dealing with Khashoggi's murder.

"If you are trying to impose oil sanctions while giving waivers and trying to do it in a way that doesn't destabilize markets, the last thing you'd want to do is create a massive crisis in Saudi Arabia," Badran told Business Insider.

Turkish media and intelligence leaks have fanned the flames of the Khashoggi saga for over a month now, which Sanam Vakil, a senior consulting research fellow in Chatham House's Middle East North Africa Programme, told Business Insider may have served as a warning for Trump not to overly rely on the kingdom.

"For [Turkish President Recip Tayyip Erdogan] this is an opportunity to remind Washington that all is not well in the house of Saud, and they shouldn't put all their eggs in one basket," Vakil said.

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