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		Trump support for Saudi prince leaves 
		Turkey with tough choices 
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		 [November 29, 2018] 
		By Orhan Coskun and Dominic Evans 
 ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Eight weeks since the 
		killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in 
		Istanbul, U.S. President Donald Trump's unwavering support for the 
		kingdom's powerful crown prince has left Turkey in a bind.
 
 The longer it confronts Saudi Arabia over who exactly ordered the 
		operation, the more it risks looking isolated as other countries put 
		aside their misgivings and return to business with the world's biggest 
		oil exporter.
 
 A prolonged standoff with Riyadh could also jeopardize Turkey's own 
		fragile rapprochement with Washington, if it forces Trump to choose 
		sides between the rival regional powers.
 
 Turkey's dilemma comes to a head this week at the G20 summit of the 
		world's main economies, where President Tayyip Erdogan and Saudi 
		Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman could meet, according to 
		Turkish officials.
 
 Without naming him, Erdogan has repeatedly suggested the prince has 
		questions to answer over the killing, while one of his advisers has said 
		bluntly that Saudi Arabia's de facto ruler has Khashoggi's blood on his 
		hands.
 
 But Erdogan has avoided talking about Khashoggi's death in recent 
		speeches, raising questions about whether he may soften his stance 
		towards the 33-year-old heir to the throne who could be running Saudi 
		Arabia for several decades to come.
 
 
		
		 
		"A meeting may take place. A final decision has not been made yet," 
		senior political source said, shortly before Erdogan's departure for the 
		summit in Argentina.
 
 "Saudi Arabia is an important country for Turkey ... Nobody wants 
		relations to sour because of the Khashoggi murder."
 
 Erdogan has good relations with the Saudi monarch, King Salman, but ties 
		have been strained by recent Saudi moves including the blockade of 
		Qatar, championed by Salman's son.
 
 Analysts say Erdogan sees Saudi assertiveness under the prince as 
		challenging Turkey's influence in the Middle East.
 
 It was the steady drip of evidence from Turkish officials - furious over 
		what they said was a gruesome and carefully planned assassination in 
		their country - which fuelled global outrage at Saudi Arabia and Prince 
		Mohammed.
 
 Erdogan said the hit was ordered at the highest levels of Saudi 
		leadership, and the CIA assessed the prince was directly behind it, 
		despite vehement Saudi denials.
 
 But nearly two months since Khashoggi was killed and his body 
		dismembered by a team of 15 Saudi agents, Western powers have taken 
		little action against Saudi Arabia, a big buyer of Western arms and a 
		strategic ally of Washington.
 
 The most concrete U.S. step so far was a decision in mid-November to 
		impose economic sanctions on 17 Saudi officials, including the prince's 
		senior aide, Saud al-Qahtani.
 
 Meanwhile Trump has stood by the crown prince, saying he does not want 
		to jeopardize U.S. business and defying intense pressure from lawmakers 
		to impose broader sanctions on Saudi Arabia.
 
 SECOND THOUGHTS?
 
 On Wednesday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary 
		Jim Mattis said there was no direct evidence connecting Prince Mohammed 
		to Khashoggi's murder, and that any downgrading of U.S.-Saudi ties in 
		response would hurt U.S. security.
 
		That clear message from the Trump administration may be forcing Turkey 
		to think again.
 "Initially the objective was to pressure Trump to drop his relationship 
		with MbS," said Sinan Ulgen, a former Turkish diplomat and analyst at 
		the Carnegie Europe think tank, referring to the crown prince.
 
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			Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman arrives at Ministro 
			Pistarini in Buenos Aires, Argentina, November 28, 2018. Argentine 
			G20/Handout via REUTERS 
            
			 
            "On the contrary, Trump seems to have decided to consolidate that 
			relationship, and that's why there had to be a reassessment in 
			Ankara about how to manage this," he said.
 Ulgen said Erdogan's priority was to safeguard the modest recovery 
			in relations with Washington since a Turkish court last month freed 
			a U.S. pastor who had been detained for two years on terrorism 
			charges.
 
 "Turkey doesn't want to endanger the political capital that it 
			earned in Washington by pushing too far (on Khashoggi). That's the 
			main motivation," he said.
 
 Bolstered by Trump's support, Saudi officials have insisted that 
			Prince Mohammed did not know in advance about the operation, and 
			Foreign Minister Adel Jubeir said last week Turkish authorities had 
			told Saudi officials that they were not accusing the crown prince of 
			involvement.
 
 Saudi Arabia's official news agency said trade ministers from the 
			two countries met in Istanbul on Wednesday and would encourage Saudi 
			investment in Turkey, and Turkish companies to take part in projects 
			in Saudi Arabia.
 
 Any change in Turkey's approach would likely be gradual. Erdogan 
			made no mention of Saudi Arabia when he spoke to reporters as he 
			left Istanbul airport on Wednesday night, but he may still choose 
			not to meet the prince in Argentina.
 
 "Saudi Arabia has yet to make a satisfactory statement regarding the 
			murder in Istanbul," said Ilter Turan, a professor of political 
			science at Turkey's Bilgi University.
 
 "The Turkish government is still working on the investigation ... 
			It's possible to say that it's a little too early for a meeting."
 
            
			 
            
 Another Turkish official said the government was still assessing the 
			Saudi request for a meeting. If the two men do hold talks in Buenos 
			Aires, the conversation would be broadly the same as the phone call 
			they held a month ago, he said.
 
 "Turkey will repeat its current position at the meeting, if there is 
			one," the official said. "Turkey wants all those responsible for the 
			murder to be brought to justice, and it's not asking for a 
			punishment for Saudi Arabia."
 
 "It's not realistic to expect a major improvement from that meeting, 
			but a contact will have been made"
 
 (Additional reporting by Tulay Karadeniz; Editing by Giles Elgood)
 
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