Equally significant is Riyadh’s continued reluctance to join
the Abraham Accords despite persistent pressure from the United States. Several
Gulf states now appear increasingly cautious about unconditional alignment with
Washington’s regional priorities.
Against this backdrop, the renewed legal attention to the
Jamal Khashoggi case in France carries significance beyond the human rights
dimension alone. A French anti-terrorism judge has been tasked with
investigating allegations linked to Khashoggi’s killing inside the Saudi
consulate in Istanbul in 2018 — years after Turkey transferred proceedings to
Saudi authorities and the United States effectively closed related civil
litigation by granting immunity protections to MBS.
There is no evidence of direct political coordination behind
the French inquiry. Yet, in geopolitics, timing often shapes perception as much
as facts themselves. The reopening of a dormant controversy at a moment of
visible divergence between Washington and Riyadh inevitably invites broader
strategic interpretation.
Whether the renewed focus on Khashoggi is purely judicial or
partly geopolitical may become clearer in the months ahead, particularly if
tensions between the United States and Saudi Arabia continue to widen.

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