Trump’s Self-Damning Response to a Legitimate Question

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2025/11/trump-mbs-saudi-arabia-khashoggi/684978/?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=the-atlantic&utm_content=edit-promo

Posted by theatlantic

3 comments
  1. Graeme Wood: “At an Oval Office meeting yesterday between the American president and the ruler of Saudi Arabia, Mary Bruce of ABC News asked a series of questions that Donald Trump deemed ‘horrible,’ ‘terrible,’ and ‘insubordinate.’ Bruce’s first question concerned possible conflicts of interest involving the Trump family’s business in Saudi Arabia. ‘I think the broadcasting license should be taken away from ABC because your news is so fake,’ [Trump] replied. The other questions (not even questions, really—Trump interrupted Bruce before she could finish her sentence) related to Saudi Arabia’s involvement in the 9/11 attacks and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s alleged role in the 2018 dismemberment of the Saudi political operative and *Washington Post* columnist Jamal Khashoggi. Khashoggi, Trump said, ‘was extremely controversial,’ and ‘a lot of people didn’t like’ him. Trump scolded Bruce for ‘embarrassing’ MBS, as he is universally known, with the question.

    “For decades, one of the forlorn liberal desires was for Saudi Arabia to modernize, secularize, and become more American. MBS has made transformational progress in this regard. He granted women the right to work, drive, and live lives independent of men; curtailed persecution of all people by religious fanatics; and brought in Western entertainers such as Louis C.K., famous for violating the ancient Wahhabi prohibition against masturbating in front of unrelated women in hotel rooms. These transformations have been unaccompanied by the expansion of political rights. Such rights as exist are those granted, always provisionally, by the crown prince, and they do not include the right not to be dismembered for opposing the crown prince’s policies.

    “Yesterday’s meeting was a grim update on the status of the political change in the two leaders’ respective countries. First there was the general implication that MBS is now welcome back in Washington …

    “The more interesting aspect of the meeting, however, was the shift in tone. MBS replied to Bruce’s question about Khashoggi politely, if inadequately. His reply was an abbreviated version of [what he told me](https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2022/04/mohammed-bin-salman-saudi-arabia-palace-interview/622822/) when I asked him a similar question about Khashoggi in 2021. (That was the last time he granted an extended interview to an American journalist.) He said that Khashoggi’s death was painful—for him, the crown prince—and that it was regrettable but not his fault. He said that such an event would not happen again and added, when I followed up, that he would not have killed Khashoggi, because Khashoggi was not important enough to merit a death order. If he were to kill his enemies, he said, there were ‘a thousand’ whom he would have killed before he got around to Khashoggi. Even after this ‘embarrassing question,’ as Trump put it yesterday, MBS let me pester him for another hour, sometimes answering tartly when the questions were impertinent but never threatening to cut the conversation short, or throw my tape recorder or me into a wood chipper. In the Oval Office, one could fault MBS for answering insufficiently about Khashoggi, but one could not fault him for failing to answer at all, or for acting as if an impertinent question constituted lèse-majesté.

    “Trump saw things differently, and in that sense his response was the more loathsome of the two. Even though he was not the one in the room in line for a throne, Trump replied with regal offense. The threat to take away ABC’s broadcasting license for ‘embarrassing’ MBS is of course outrageous. But the tone was in some ways the most self-damning aspect of his response, because, unlike MBS’s, it was brittle and aggrieved, and conveyed a sense that asking a hard question could get a commoner put in the stocks.”

    Read more: [https://theatln.tc/QKplMG5m](https://theatln.tc/QKplMG5m)

  2. When asking inconvenient questions becomes illegal or results in penalties, we might not be living in a democracy anymore.

  3. Mods feel free to remove this low effort comment, but that Louis C.K. line is *really* good.

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