Billionaire investor Prince Alwaleed bin Talala, at least ten princes, and more than a dozen former ministers were among those arrested in Saudi Arabia on Saturday as part of a so-called “anti-corruption” initiative that critics argued is part of a thinly veiled “power grab” by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
“His supporters in Washington have not blinked.”
—Ryan Grim, The Intercept
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“At 32, the crown prince is already the dominant voice in Saudi military, foreign, economic, and social policies, stirring murmurs of discontent in the royal family that he has amassed too much personal power, and at a remarkably young age,” the New York Times notes.
King Salman ordered the creation of the “anti-corruption committee”—which is headed by Prince Mohammed—just hours before the arrests began. “The scale and targets of Saturday’s purge…dwarfed anything seen in Riyadh in recent years, deliberately targeting figures deemed previously to be untouchables,” observed the Guardian‘s Martin Chulov.
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