It appears that murdering their columnists is a bridge too far for the Washington Post editorial board:
The Washington Post told a prominent Republican lobbyist he’d lose his gig as a contributing opinion writer unless he stopped lobbying for Saudi Arabia, a spokesperson for the newspaper confirmed Tuesday.
The ultimatum came after the disappearance of Jamal Khashoggi, a U.S. permanent resident who was a columnist for the Post and wrote critically of the Saudi government. Khashoggi was last seen entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul earlier this month, and allegations that he was killed by Saudi authorities have strained the U.S. relationship with Saudi Arabia.
The lobbyist, Ed Rogers, the chairman of the BGR Group, writes for the newspaper’s PostPartisan blog.
Kristine Coratti Kelly, a spokeswoman for the Post, confirmed that the newspaper told Rogers he’d no longer be able to contribute if he continued to lobby for Saudi Arabia. She declined to comment further.
Lobbying for the slaughter and starvation of hundreds of thousands of Yemenis, that’s fine, but murder one Post columnist, that is simply beyond the pals.
As Ian Walsh so pithily notes:
It’s not that Kashoggi’s death isn’t a crime, but that any number of nameless people can be killed, raped, and tortured, and elites don’t care. It’s only when it’s one of them that they care.
Normal people are nothing–less than nothing–to our elites.
But they take care of their own.
But still, we’re going to help the House of Saud starve, bomb, and burn civilians throughout Yemen.
This is a relationship that is not in the long term interest of the United States.