Norms Impact
Vindman demands release of Trump-Mohammed bin Salman call after Khashoggi murder: ‘You will be shocked’
A former NSC reviewer says a post-assassination call transcript is being kept from the public as the president publicly clears a foreign leader U.S. intelligence linked to a killing.
Nov 19, 2025
⚖ Legal Exposure
Sources
Summary
Rep. Eugene Vindman says he reviewed a post-Khashoggi phone call between President Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and is demanding the transcript’s release, calling it “shocking.” The presidency is being used to publicly exonerate a foreign leader despite U.S. intelligence concluding he likely approved an operation to capture or kill a U.S. resident journalist. The practical consequence is a heightened risk that sensitive diplomacy and accountability mechanisms are shielded from public scrutiny when they implicate presidential conduct and foreign abuses.
Reality Check
Hiding a potentially consequential presidential communication while publicly rehabilitating a foreign leader tied by U.S. intelligence to a journalist’s killing invites a precedent where executive secrecy becomes personal protection, not national security—and that weakens our ability to hold power to account. On the facts provided, the more immediate exposure is not a clean federal charging theory, but a grave governance breach: normalization of impunity and the use of presidential voice to negate official intelligence findings. If the withheld call involved any exchange of governmental protection or congressional pressure in return for benefits, it could implicate federal bribery and honest-services corruption statutes (18 U.S.C. §§ 201, 1346), but those elements are not established here. What is established is a pattern of shielding and dismissal that erodes the core anti–quid-pro-quo and transparency norms our system relies on to protect citizens’ rights.
Legal Summary
The described conduct raises significant investigative concern: a purportedly “problematic” post-Khashoggi call and Trump’s later claim he protected MBS from congressional pressure suggest potential abuse of presidential influence. However, the article does not allege any thing-of-value, exchange, or concrete obstructive acts sufficient to support a prosecutable bribery or conspiracy theory on the current record. The principal exposure is a serious irregularity warranting scrutiny, contingent on what the call transcript and related actions show.
Legal Analysis
<h3>18 U.S.C. § 201(b) — Bribery of a public official (quid pro quo)</h3><ul><li>Article context alleges a “shocking” Trump–Mohammed bin Salman call after Khashoggi’s murder and includes Trump’s later statement to Bob Woodward that he “saved” the crown prince and got Congress to “leave him alone,” suggesting potential official-action advocacy benefiting a foreign leader.</li><li>However, the article provides no facts of any payment/thing-of-value to Trump or a U.S. official linked to the call or to the alleged protective actions; the transcript is not disclosed.</li><li>Gap: absent a described thing-of-value and specific official act tied to an exchange, core §201 bribery elements are not established on the provided facts.</li></ul><h3>18 U.S.C. § 371 — Conspiracy to defraud the United States (impairing lawful government functions)</h3><ul><li>Vindman alleges the call was among the “most problematic,” and Trump’s comments indicate he intervened to reduce congressional pressure on MBS, which could be construed as impairing oversight or policy processes if done through deceptive means.</li><li>Gap: the article does not allege deception, an agreement with others, or concrete steps taken to obstruct lawful functions beyond generalized claims of intervention.</li></ul><h3>52 U.S.C. § 30121 — Foreign national contributions/solicitations (election-related thing of value)</h3><ul><li>The article analogizes to the Zelensky call (impeachment context), but does not allege Trump sought election assistance, opposition research, or any “thing of value” from MBS.</li><li>Gap: no election-related solicitation described; only foreign-policy/oversight implications tied to Khashoggi.</li></ul><h3>Ethics/abuse-of-power concerns (non-criminal on these facts)</h3><ul><li>Trump’s public defense of MBS and claim he “saved his ass” by getting Congress to back off, if accurate, raise serious concerns of improper favoritism and politicized use of presidential influence regarding accountability for Khashoggi’s killing.</li><li>But without disclosed transcript content or a transactional benefit to the U.S. official, the conduct as presented reads as potential abuse-of-power/irregular influence rather than a provable bribery scheme.</li></ul><b>Conclusion:</b> The article establishes a serious investigative red flag involving potential misuse of presidential influence to shield a foreign leader, but it does not provide facts showing a money/access/official-action quid pro quo or other completed criminal elements; exposure is primarily procedural/abuse-of-power pending the transcript and corroboration.
Media
Detail
<p>Rep. Eugene Vindman (D-Va.), a former National Security Council staffer in Trump’s first administration, publicly urged President Trump to release the transcript of a phone call Vindman says occurred with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman after the 2018 assassination of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.</p><p>Vindman said he reviewed many presidential calls and identified two as the most problematic: the 2019 call with Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky that led to Trump’s first impeachment, and a separate call with the Saudi crown prince after Khashoggi’s killing. Vindman did not provide details of the Saudi call but told CNN and stated on the House floor that the public and Khashoggi’s family “deserve to know what was said,” adding online, “You will be shocked by what you hear.”</p><p>Vindman’s demand followed Trump hosting the crown prince at the White House and defending him to reporters, including asserting the crown prince “knew nothing about it,” despite U.S. intelligence concluding the crown prince likely approved the operation.</p><p>The White House dismissed Vindman’s request in a statement from communications director Steven Cheung.</p>