For
Trump, Adulation and No Risk of Protests Made the Gulf a Dream Trip
At every
step of President Trump’s whirlwind tour, he has been treated with the kind of
honor and respect he has long desired.
Luke
Broadwater Jonathan Swan
By Luke
Broadwater and Jonathan Swan
Luke
Broadwater and Jonathan Swan traveled with President Trump around the gulf
region to report on his first major foreign trip.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/17/world/middleeast/trump-uae-qatar-saudi-arabia.html
May 17,
2025, 12:01 a.m. ET
In Saudi
Arabia, he received a standing ovation from business elites as he announced the
lifting of sanctions on Syria.
In Qatar, he
took home an investment pledge of billions of dollars in American goods and
services.
In the
United Arab Emirates, he was awarded the country’s highest civilian honor.
If President
Trump has been dogged at home by backlash over his tariff policies, protests
over his immigration crackdown and questions over his ethics, a week in the
Arabian Peninsula produced nothing but wins for the president.
“The last
four days have been really amazing,” Mr. Trump said on Thursday, as he was
leaving a palace in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, where he had just been
feted. He added, looking rueful, “Probably going back to Washington, D.C.,
tomorrow.”
On Friday,
the president reflected on his trip on Air Force One: “The respect shown to our
country was incredible. Nobody’s treated like that. Nobody’s treated well like
that.”
At every
step of Mr. Trump’s whirlwind tour of the Middle East, he was treated with the
kind of honor and respect he has long desired. Escorts of fighter jets.
Extravagant welcoming ceremonies. Red and lavender carpets. Arabian horses.
Glitzy chandeliers. Camels. Sword dancers. White marble palaces. In the United
Arab Emirate of Dubai, the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, lit up
with an image of the American flag. All in his honor.
“As a
construction person, I’m seeing perfect marble. This is what they call
perfecto,” Mr. Trump said at one point, admiring the royal court in Doha, the
capital of Qatar. “We appreciate those camels. I haven’t seen camels like that
in a long time.”
Such a
welcome would have been unlikely in most other corners of the world, where
governments, including the United States’ closest allies, are reeling from Mr.
Trump’s aggressive tariffs and bellicose rhetoric toward Canada, Greenland and
Panama.
But in the
gulf, Mr. Trump’s every move was lauded.
Mr. Trump
was able to announce what he said was more than $2 trillion in economic
investments between the United States and the three nations he visited: Qatar,
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, each longtime purchasers of American
military equipment.
Mr. Trump
said that the investments from those three nations could reach as high as $4
trillion — roughly the size of all their sovereign wealth funds combined. While
much of that total comes in the form of long-term pledges that may or may not
materialize and counts some deals that were already underway, leaders of the
gulf nations were all too happy to supply Mr. Trump with the eye-popping
figures.
At a
business event in Abu Dhabi on Friday, Mr. Trump was treated to a tour of deals
underway between American and Emirati companies, including purchases of Boeing
jets and G.E. engines.
Mr. Trump
marveled at the wealth of his hosts, who can pay upfront for whatever deals
they undertake.
“They don’t
say ‘subject to financing,’” Mr. Trump said. “They have no problem.”
At each step
of the trip, Mr. Trump surrounded himself with friendly audiences and often
turned his events — such as a stop at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, the largest
U.S. military facility in the Middle East — into campaign-style rallies:
blasting his favorite playlists (“Gloria,” of course), bashing Democrats and
falsely claiming he had won the 2020 election.
Speaking to
American troops as their commander in chief, he was greeted with chants of
“U.S.A.”
“We won
three elections, OK? And some people want us to do a fourth. I don’t know. I’ll
have to think about it,” Mr. Trump told the troops, yet again floating the idea
of an unconstitutional third term in office. “The hottest hat is, it says,
‘Trump 2028.’ We’re driving the left crazy.”
If Mr. Trump
hoped to avoid controversy about his family’s business dealings in the region,
the gulf leaders helped with just that — highlighting deals with private firms
that are unrelated to Mr. Trump’s personal business interests. There was no
visit to the site of the Trump Organization’s deal with a Saudi real estate
company to build a residential high-rise in Jeddah; no presentation of a $400
million luxury jet that Mr. Trump is seeking as a gift from Qatar; and no
promotion of the Abu Dhabi-backed fund that is making a $2 billion business
deal using the Trump firm’s digital coins.
“I really
don’t know anything about it,” he said. “But I’m a big crypto fan, I will tell
you.”
If a
Democratic president did what Mr. Trump has done — praising a former jihadist,
welcoming Qatar’s friendship with Iran and accepting a “gift” of a $400 million
airplane — Republicans would have been howling in protest and ordering up
congressional investigations. What transpired, instead, was mostly an
uncomfortable silence.
A few Trump
allies, like Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri and the far-right activist Laura
Loomer, made clear they did not like the plane gift, but contorted themselves
to express their discomfort in ways that would be least likely to offend Mr.
Trump. Ms. Loomer preceded her criticism by saying she would “take a bullet”
for the president, and Mr. Hawley avoided the implication of corruption and
simply said he would prefer “if Air Force One were a big, beautiful jet made in
the United States of America — that would be ideal.”
Mr. Trump’s
declaration that the United States was shifting its policy toward the Middle
East away from judgment and confrontation toward peace and profit was praised
repeatedly.
“It’s
crucial for the wider world to note this great transformation has not come from
Western interventionists or flying people in beautiful planes, giving you
lectures on how to live and how to govern your own affairs,” Mr. Trump said at
a gathering of Saudi royalty and business elites in Riyadh.
Even back
home in the United States, Democrats and Republicans approved of Mr. Trump’s
announcement that he was removing sanctions from Syria in an effort to give the
war-torn country a fresh start.
“We commend
President Trump’s decision to lift all sanctions on Syria,” the leaders of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Jim Risch, Republican of Idaho; and Jeanne
Shaheen, Democrat of New Hampshire, said in a joint statement.
The trip was
intended to deliver a series of economic, diplomatic and public relations wins
for the countries involved, said Andrew Leber, an assistant professor at Tulane
University in Louisiana, who focuses on the U.S.-Saudi relationship.
Saudi Arabia
got the opportunity to highlight the changing nature of its society and
economy, and present itself as a leader in global affairs, both in terms of
business opportunities and diplomacy. Mr. Trump got a trip that essentially
could not go wrong for him, Mr. Leber said.
“This was
the one place that’s guaranteed to give him a very enthusiastic, warm and
tightly controlled welcome,” Mr. Leber added. “If he went anywhere in Latin
America, there would be protests. If he went anywhere in Europe, there would be
protests. This is a place that’s going to speak with him and deal with him on
very transactional terms, that’s going to put on a big show and where there’s
not going to be any domestic protests whatsoever.”
That was
indeed the case, as gulf leaders adopted Mr. Trump’s favorite phrases. Each
nation talked about their trade deficits with the United States and how they
buy more from the United States than they sell — a favorite topic of the
president’s.
At a
business forum in Saudi Arabia, panelists talked of “making aviation great
again,” playing off Mr. Trump’s campaign theme.
At the meeting in Abu Dhabi on Friday, Mr. Trump
walked into a large rotunda where five large screens showed various kinds of
investment — starting with “Making Energy Great Again.” There, he was gifted a
box containing a drop of oil.
In Doha,
Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, the emir of Qatar, adopted Mr. Trump’s energy
slogan, “Drill, baby, drill.”
“The U.S.
and Qatar are feeding and fueling the world,” the emir said, before turning to
Mr. Trump. “Glad to have you back on board.”
Mr. Trump is
also a relief for gulf leaders: They now have a U.S. president who breezes past
their human rights records as he chases high-dollar deals.
“Governments
and publics throughout the gulf like Trump a lot,” said Jon B. Alterman, a
global security expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in
Washington.
“They feel
Western liberals want to shame them on their domestic issues, everything from
L.G.B.T. rights to abuse of migrant workers,” Mr. Alterman added. “While there
certainly are rising liberal voices in the gulf, most people there see Trump as
a common-sense, like-minded leader.”
As he ended
his trip in Abu Dhabi on Friday, Mr. Trump worried aloud to the news media that
whoever becomes president after him would get credit for the deals once they
reach fruition.
“I’ll be
sitting home, who the hell knows where I’ll be, and I’ll say, ‘I did that,’” he
said. “Somebody’s going to be taking the credit for this. You remember, press,”
he said, pointing to himself, “this guy did it.”
Luke
Broadwater covers the White House for The Times.
Jonathan
Swan is a White House reporter for The Times, covering the administration of
Donald J. Trump.
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