Saudi crown prince ordered Khashoggi dead, CIA concludes

Image: Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al Saud
Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al Saud arrives for a meeting inside 10 Downing Street, Central London. Copyright Will Oliver EPA file
Copyright Will Oliver EPA file
By Josh Lederman and Dennis Romero with NBC News U.S. News
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'The claims in this purported assessment are false,' said the Saudi ambassador to the U.S., the crown prince's brother.

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The CIA has concluded that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ordered the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, according to a person briefed on the CIA's assessment.

The CIA declined to comment Friday night.

The Washington Post, citing people familiar with the matter, first reported the assessment, stating that the CIA made its conclusion with "high confidence." Khashoggi, a U.S. resident from Saudi Arabia, was a Washington Post opinion contributor critical of the crown prince's regime.

NBC News was unable to confirm the agency's description of its confidence level. Other details of the report, including that Prince Khalid Bin Salman, brother of the crown prince, told Khashoggi in an intercepted phone call that the he should go to the consulate in Istanbul to get the divorce document he was seeking, also could not be immediately confirmed.

Mohammed Al-Shaikh
Jamal KhashoggiMohammed Al-Shaikh

Khashoggi was killed after he entered that consulate Oct. 2.

NBC News reported previously that Khashoggi met with Prince Khalid Bin Salman, Saudi ambassador to the U.S., at the Embassy in Washington months before he was killed.

That meeting came as the Saudi government was trying to lure him back to Saudi Arabia -- at first peacefully, and then through force — ending in his murder in the Istanbul consulate.

Khalid bin Salman responded to the Post's report via Twitter: "As we told the Washington Post the last contact I had with Mr. Khashoggi was via text on Oct 26 2017. I never talked to him by phone and certainly never suggested he go to Turkey for any reason. I ask the US government to release any information regarding this claim."

And the Saudi Embassy in Washington said in a statement, "The claims in this purported assessment are false. We have and continue to hear various theories without seeing the primary basis for these speculations."

NBC News had also reported previously that the U.S. intelligence community believes it's unlikely that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman could have had no connection to Khashoggi's death.

The CIA's assessment will likely add pressure on the Trump administration to unleash further punishment on Saudi Arabia despite the president's cordial ties to the royal family there.

On Thursday the United States announced sanctions against 17 Saudi Arabian officials in response to the killing.

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