INTERNATIONAL: With the Saudi government's acknowledgement that exiled journalist Jamal Khashoggi was killed by government officials on Oct. 2, the weeks-long saga shifted to whether the United States and other governments would accept the story offered by Riyadh – and whether sanctions Trump is trying to forestall may yet be imposed. Trump said the explanations offered by the Saudis amounted to "deception" and "lies." But at the same time, the president defended Saudi Arabia as an ally and suggested Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman may not have ordered Khashoggi's murder (The Washington Post). The killing was among topics Trump discussed with French President Emmanuel Macron by phone on Sunday, according to the White House. The location of Khashoggi's corpse, reportedly dismembered and disposed of, was unclear, and Turkey's vivid account of what took place, based on evidence it says it gathered about the journalist's death, remains pending (The New York Times). U.S. lawmakers over the weekend dismissed as not credible the Saudi government's account of an accidental death resulting from a struggle and fistfight inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul earlier this month (The Hill). Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) called for the expulsion of the Saudi ambassador (The Hill). © Twitter
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who flew to Saudi Arabia for a scheduled and unrelated meeting of an anti-terrorist financing group, said the Saudi's fistfight explanation was a "good first step but not enough." He also said proposals for U.S. sanctions are premature (Reuters). The Associated Press: Khashoggi's murder may put Trump's ambitions for a Middle East peace plan in a deep freeze. *** Russia: The United States is taking a suddenly tough posture with Russia on several fronts, including a clash over a 31-year-old nuclear treaty, as well as accusations of ongoing election meddling. National security adviser John Bolton is in Moscow to confer with President Vladimir Putin and Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev (The Hill). On the agenda: Trump's decision to pull the United States out of a 1987 treaty negotiated by former President Reagan to eradicate mid-range nuclear missiles (Reuters). "Russia has not, unfortunately, honored the agreement, so we're going to terminate the agreement and we're going to pull out," the president told reporters on Saturday. Russia slammed the decision to walk away from a landmark Cold War-era treaty that eliminated nuclear missiles from Europe (Politico Europe) and warned of retaliation (Reuters), calling the move "blackmail." Trump has said he wants to meet again with Putin next year to build on their bilateral summit in Helsinki in July. Russia's warning that Trump's decision was "very dangerous" underscored rapidly souring relations between the two nuclear superpowers (The Financial Times). Republican lawmakers on Sunday criticized the administration's decision to jettison the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty, known as the INF Treaty (The Washington Post). Meanwhile, the United States assailed ongoing election interference by Russia, Iran and China (The Hill). And the Justice Department charged a Russian woman with interfering in the U.S. midterm elections (The Hill). The criminal complaint against Elena Alekseevna Khusyaynova, announced on Friday, alleged that Russians are continuing to use techniques seen during the 2016 presidential election aimed at influencing voter perceptions. There is no evidence that vote tallies in the midterm contests, now under way, have been compromised, the government said (The Associated Press). © Getty Images
*** Mexico, the border and immigrants: Trump continues to threaten extraordinary measures to try to stop thousands of Central American migrants who are trekking through Mexico toward the border with the United States, chanting that they seek to flee violence and poverty in Honduras and Guatemala. "I will seal off the border before they come into this country and I'll bring out our military, not our reserves," Trump said on Saturday. Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have commended the Mexican government for trying to halt or slow the caravan. Mexico is working to process hundreds of migrants seeking refugee status. Sympathetic Mexicans are offering the Central American immigrants food, water and clothing along their route (The Associated Press). |
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