Former Saudi official alleges Prince Mohammed forged king’s signature on Yemen war decree
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A former Saudi official on Monday alleged that Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman forged his father’s signature on the royal decree that launched the kingdom’s yearslong, stalemated war against Yemen’s Houthi rebels. The kingdom has described al-Jabri as “a discredited former government official.” Al-Jabri, a former major general and intelligence official who lives in exile in Canada, has been in a long dispute with the kingdom as his two children have been imprisoned in a case he describes as an attempt to lure him back to Saudi Arabia. Now I am a father doing everything possible to secure the release of his children.” His allegation comes as Prince Mohammed serves as Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader, often meeting leaders in place of his father, 88-year-old King Salman. Prince Mohammed’s assertive behavior, particularly early in his ascension to power around the beginning of the Yemen war in 2015, has extended to a wider crackdown on any perceived dissent or power base that could challenge his rule. Al-Jabri first told the BBC a “credible, reliable” official linked to the Saudi Interior Ministry confirmed to him that Prince Mohammed signed the decree declaring war in place of his father. Later, al-Jabri told the AP that he had reached a deal with U.S. counterparts in the then-Obama administration for Saudi Arabia to launch “an aerial bombardment campaign to eliminate Houthi threats, establish deterrence and force a political process without a ground intervention.” His former boss, Saudi Arabia’s then-Interior Minister Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, then chaired a meeting in Saudi Arabia formalizing that plan. Prince Mohammed bin Salman, however, responded with “visible displeasure” at that meeting and said he could beat the Houthis in two months in a ground offensive, al-Jabri claimed. “Surprisingly, a royal order was later issued, overriding the agreed plan and authorizing a ground operation — without the king’s knowledge and with a forged signature,” al-Jabri told the AP. Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, who later served as a crown prince for King Salman, was a trusted confidant of the U.S. in the battle against al-Qaida militants in the kingdom after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. King Salman replaced the crown prince for his son in 2017, and Prince Mohammed bin Nayef is believed to have been held under house arrest. Al-Jabri sued Prince Mohammed bin Salman in U.S. federal court, alleging the crown prince sought to have him killed after he fled abroad. I have no doubt about that.” He described his fears that the crown prince still wants him killed as his adult children Sarah and Omar remain imprisoned in the kingdom, something he reiterated to the AP. “Staying quiet has only made matters worse, so I had no option but to speak out for the well being of my children and my country,” al-Jabri told the AP. – This Summarize was created by Neural News AI (V1). Source: https://apnews.com/563c0b2909a6adbc95863b5bb8de51fb