Former Saudi spy accuses MBS hit squad of attempting to kill him
A former top Saudi intelligence officer claims that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) sent a hit squad to kill him in Canada 13 days after the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, according to documents filed in the United States federal court.
In a 106-page lawsuit (PDF) filed with the US District Court
in Washington, DC on Thursday, Saad al-Jabri, a permanent resident of Canada,
alleged that Prince Mohammed dispatched a group of hitmen, known as the Tiger
Squad, to assassinate him.
He claims that his close ties with the US intelligence
community and deep knowledge of the young prince's activities have rendered him
one of the aspiring monarch's key targets.
"Few places hold more sensitive, humiliating and
damning information about Defendant bin-Salman than the mind and memory of Dr.
Saad - except perhaps the recordings Dr. Saad made in anticipation of his
killing," reads the lawsuit.
"That is why Defendant bin Salman wants him dead - and
why Defendant bin Salman has worked to achieve that objective over the past
three years," the lawsuit alleges.
Members of what the documents call bin Salman's
"personal mercenary group, the Tiger Squad" arrived at Toronto
Pearson Airport on tourist visas in mid-October 2018, roughly two weeks after
Khashoggi's killing at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.
"Carrying two bags of forensic tools, and complete with
forensic personnel experienced with the clean-up of crime scenes - including an
instructor in the exact same criminal evidence department as the forensic
specialist who dismembered Khashoggi with a bone saw - the Tiger Squad
Defendants attempted to enter Canada covertly, traveling on tourist visas and
seeking to avert the detection of Canadian border security by entering through
separate kiosks," the lawsuit alleges.
Several intelligence agencies, including the CIA, have
concluded that MBS ordered Khashoggi's killing - accusations that Riyadh has
denied.
According to the lawsuit, al-Jabri's targeting is part and
parcel of MBS's campaign to stifle dissent.
The lawsuit further alleges that Bader Alasaker, the head of
his private office and executive director of the Prince Mohammed Bin Salman bin
Abdulaziz Foundation (also known as the MiSK Foundation), cultivated a network
of "covert agents whom he has deployed to target individuals who undermine
Defendant bin Salman in the United States".
MiSK is Prince Mohammed's charitable organisation that aims
to develop Saudi youth to contribute to the country's future economy through
education, creative and digital media, technology, culture and arts
initiatives.
MiSK is known for sending Saudi students to prestigious
universities in the US through fellowships.
Regarding covert operations, the lawsuit alleges that an
unidentified defendant, John Doe 1, "conducted physical surveillance of a
family apartment of Dr. Saad at the Mandarin Oriental in Boston, Massachusetts
n or around September 2017, and attempted to access Dr. Saad’s residence
there", as part of the plot.
The lawsuit says the plan to kill al-Jabri, a dual citizen
of Saudi Arabia and Malta, was thwarted after members of the Tiger Squad group,
despite attempting to enter Canada through different kiosks, failed to convince
agents with the Canadian Border Agency that they did not know each other.
The suit asserts that MBS had ordered the detention of two
of al-Jabri's children who have gone missing in mid-March and that other
relatives have also been arrested and tortured "all in an effort to bait
Dr. Saad back to Saudi Arabia to be killed".
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