WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Korker said Wednesday that a meeting would be held in Congress on Wednesday to discuss the relationship with Saudi Arabia and the war in Yemen after a night full of angered lawmakers condemning Saudi Arabia.

In an article on the Congressional website "Roll Cool," Coker said the meeting would be held today, with all senators interested in the killing of Saudi journalist Khashoggi, the Saudi-UAE war in Yemen, and the future of US relations with Saudi Arabia and arms deals.

The Senate has voted to pass a bill ending US military support for the war in Yemen for discussion in the House Foreign Affairs Committee. The bill prohibits the government from providing military support to Saudi Arabia in connection with the war in Yemen, and requires the White House to obtain Congress's prior approval. He wanted to intervene in the war or provide support for Saudi Arabia.

The correspondent said that this meeting may be a first step by members of the Council to punish Saudi Arabia, especially those who expressed last night their conviction of the involvement of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in the killing of Khashoggi.

The correspondence did not rule out the meeting as a message to the White House, which repeatedly tried to remove the charge from Mohammed bin Salman, but the insistence of some senators and their pressure on President Donald Trump forced him to bow in part.

Last week, Central Intelligence Agency director Gina Haspel missed a Senate statement delivered by Foreign Secretary Mike Pompeo and Defense James Matisse on Saudi Arabia, where some saw Trump as the reason for her reluctance to participate, Her testimony in a closed session last night.

After her testimony yesterday, senior Republican and Democratic members of the closed-door session came out to express their conviction that the Saudi crown prince was involved in Khashoggi's death and vowed to hold him accountable, including Kruker, Lindsey Graham, Chuck Schumer, Bob Menendez, Richard Blumenthal, Rand Paul and Richard Chebey.