Trump Was
Watching a U.F.C. Fight in Miami While Iran Talks Collapsed
On his
way to Florida, President Trump said it did not matter to him if a deal with
Iran was reached or not: “We win, regardless,” he said.
Katie
Rogers
By Katie
Rogers
Katie is
a White House correspondent. She traveled to Miami with President Trump.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/11/us/politics/trump-ufc-iran-war.html
Published
April 11, 2026
Updated
April 12, 2026, 12:08 a.m. ET
On
Saturday evening, as Vice President JD Vance took a podium in Pakistan and said
no deal had been reached to end the war in Iran, President Trump was in Miami
watching a mixed martial arts fight.
Mr. Trump
spent several hours orbited by Secretary of State Marco Rubio; a few of his
children; some Ultimate Fighting Championship officials; Sergio Gor, the U.S.
ambassador to India; the recording artist Vanilla Ice; Dan Bongino, the former
deputy director of the F.B.I.; and the manosphere shepherd Joe Rogan.
He was
surrounded by people, but Mr. Trump was somehow an isolated figure. People
mostly circulated around him, checking in with updates and then leaving again.
For the most part, Mr. Trump sat and impassively watched blood and saliva
sprayed out from the fighters beating each other silly in front of him.
It was
unclear whether the president knew that negotiations had failed by the time he
entered the arena for the U.F.C. event to a Kid Rock song and thunderous
applause. He wasn’t tapping away on his phone — he left that to Mr. Rubio, who
at one point leaned over to show the president his screen — and he didn’t
betray disappointment or anger. He offered tight smiles for the cameras
instead, and a thumbs-up for the winners.
In fact,
on his way to Florida, Mr. Trump had told reporters that it did not matter to
him if a deal with Iran was reached or not: “We win, regardless,” he said.
“We’ve defeated them militarily.” Which sounded a lot like everything he had
said before negotiations began.
The
political reality facing Mr. Trump is grim, just as the economic reality facing
Americans appears to be getting worse. Inflation is rising. Gas prices are
eating into American paychecks, a direct result of a war Mr. Trump ordered. The
president has responded to the pressure by attacking his critics and
threatening his adversaries.
There was
a widespread outcry from Democrats and some of his longtime supporters over his
threat to wipe out the entire civilization of Iran. Democrats in Congress,
alarmed by Mr. Trump’s behavior, want to see him impeached and they are
questioning his mental fitness for office. They want to see his physician give
Mr. Trump a complete cognitive exam, and then they want to interview the
physician.
All of
that awaits Mr. Trump back in Washington. But on Saturday night, in his adopted
home state, he spent his time in an arena where people treat him like one of
the prize fighters when he walks into the room.
After a
week spent largely out of sight but lashing out at his enemies on social media,
Mr. Trump’s resurfacing at a match seemed designed to provide him with a
soothing balm of male aggression, musky sweat, and cheering supporters — not
unlike one of his political rallies, just with shirtless fighters.
Round
after round, fight after fight, Mr. Trump watched as pairs of competitors
sparred in a cage covered in ads for Monster energy drinks, assorted crypto and
betting sites, and Bud Light beer. The floor was stained with splotches of
dried blood from the first match of the evening, when a fighter took a hard hit
to the forehead.
At one
point, the “Mortal Kombat” theme song played as Mr. Rubio and the president
leaned in to speak to each other. At another, the arena crowd watched an
advertisement for a U.F.C. fight scheduled at the White House this summer.
“History is made by revolutionary ideas” was one tagline from the commercial,
which featured several exterior shots of the White House.
Mr.
Trump’s eldest daughter, Ivanka, and younger daughter, Tiffany, kept close
throughout the evening, as did Donald Trump Jr., the president’s eldest son,
and his fiancée, Bettina Anderson. The Trumps stood and posed for photos with
supporters who approached them, waved their fists, and at times threw back
their heads in laughter. One family member missing was Ivanka Trump’s husband,
Jared Kushner, who was in Pakistan with Mr. Vance and Mr. Trump’s peace envoy,
Steve Witkoff.
At the
moment Mr. Vance began briefing the news media in Pakistan, Mr. Trump was
standing still at the side of the cage with his hands at his sides as a winning
fighter cheered. He and Mr. Rubio were looking up toward a large screen and
watching a video montage of the fighter’s greatest hits as Mr. Vance said, “the
bad news is that we have not reached an agreement.”
In
Pakistan, Mr. Vance did not say if the Strait of Hormuz would be open for oil
traffic to pass through. White House officials did not answer questions about
whether a shaky cease-fire with Tehran would hold. They all deferred to Mr.
Trump to decide what was next.
As the
night grew late on Saturday and the war once again seemed poised to spin out of
Mr. Trump’s control, the vice president departed Pakistan without an agreement.
The president stayed seated in Miami, his eyes trained on the men punching and
kicking each other in a bloodstained cage.
Katie
Rogers is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.


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